Commonwealth v. Temple

80 Mass. 69
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 Mass. 69 (Commonwealth v. Temple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Temple, 80 Mass. 69 (Mass. 1860).

Opinion

[74]*74This case was decided in June 1860.

Shaw, C. J.

Since horse railroads are becoming frequent in and about Boston, and are likely to become common in other parts of the Commonwealth, it s very important that the rights and duties of all persons in the community, having any relations with them, should be distinctly known and understood, in order to accomplish all the benefits, and, as far as practicable, avoid the inconveniences, arising from their use. This is important to proprietors and grantees of the franchise, who expend their capital in providing a public accommodation, on the faith of enjoying, with reasonable certainty, the compensation in tolls and fares, which the law assures to them; to all mayors, aider-men, selectmen, commissioners or surveyors specially appointed by law for the care and superintendence of streets and highways ; to all persons, for whose accommodation in the carriage of their persons and property these ways are especially designed; and to all persons, having occasion to use the ways through or across which these horse railroad cars may have occasion to pass. These railroads being of recent origin, few cases have arisen to require judicial consideration, and no series of adjudicated cases can be resorted to, as precedents, to” solve the various new questions to which they may give rise.

But it is the great merit of the common law, that it is founded upon a comparatively few broad, general principles of justice, fitness and expediency, the correctness of which is generally acknowledged, and which at first are few and simple ; but which, carried out in their practical details, and adapted to extremely complicated cases of fact, give rise to many and often perplexing questions; yet these original principles remain fixed, and are generally comprehensive enough to adapt themselves to new institutions and conditions of society, new modes of commerce, new usages and practices, as the progress of society in the advancement of civilization may require.

In the first place, all public easements, all accommodations intended for the common and general benefit, whatever may be their nature and character, are under the control and regulation of the legislature, exercising the sovereign power of the State [75]*75either by general law or special enactment. It may be done by a charter or special act of incorporation, as in case of a bridge over broad navigable waters; or, where the necessity for its exercise is of frequent recurrence, it may be by the delegation of power to special tribunals, or municipal governments, by general laws.

Again; where the entire public, each according to his own exigencies, has a right to the use of the highway, in the absence of any special regulation by law, the right of each is equal; but as two or more cannot occupy the same place at the same time with their persons, their horses, carriages and teams, or other things necessary to this use, each is bound to a reasonable exercise of his absolute right, in subordination to a like reasonable use of all others, and not to incumber it over a larger space, or for a longer time, to the damage of any other, than is reasonably necessary to the beneficial enjoyment of his own right. If an adjacent proprietor has occasion to stop at his own gate with a carriage or team, if he has occasion to deliver wood, coal or other necessaries, or, if he is a trader, to deliver or receive merchandise, he must place his team or carriage, for the time being, in such a manner as to obstruct the way for the use of others as little as is reasonably practicable, and remove the obstruction within a reasonable time, to be determined by all the circumstances of the case.

So in the actual use of the highway. Each may use it to his own best advantage, but with a just regard to the like right of others. Persons in light carriages, for the conveyance of persons only, have occasion, and of course a right, when not expressly limited by law, to travel at a high rate of speed, so that they do not endanger others. But all foot passengers, including aged persons, women and children, have an equal right to cross the streets; and all drivers of teams and carnages are bound to respect their rights, and regulate their own speed and movements in such a manner as not to violate the rights of such passengers. So in regard to the drivers of fast and slow carriages, each must respect the rights of the other. Take a single illustration ; if a heavily loaded ox team be passing along a street wide enough [76]*76only for one carriage, say fourteen feet, and other fast carriages follow, these last must, for the time being, be restrained in their speed, because this necessarily results from these circumstances — the narrowness of the way, and the ordinary slowness of the ox team ahead. If parties thus travelling in the same direction should come to a portion of the way wide enough for carriages to pass each other, say twenty feet wide, it is obvious that if the driver of the heavy team would turn to either side, it would give the fast team room to pass, whereas, if he should keep the middle, the five or six feet on either side would not permit any carnage to pass. Now, supposing no impediment should intervene, and no circumstance should render it dangerous for the driver of the slow team to bear off, in our opinion it would be his duty to do so, although it might suit his convenience better to keep in the middle ; and his refusal thus to bear off would be an abuse of his own equal and common right, for which, if injurious to another, an action would lie; and if it was a public highway, the party would subject himself to a public prosecution.

In some few cases, the regulation of the use of the highway is important enough to require a rule of positive law, requiring each traveller, when meeting, to turn to the right of the centre; in some states, to the left. But the circumstances under which travellers may be placed in relation to each other are so various, that it would be impracticable to prescribe any positive rule approaching nearer to certainty than the rule of the common law, that each shall reasonably use his own right in subordination to the like reasonable use of all others.

With this view of the law regulating the use of public ways, we will examine the present case, as it appears on the exceptions.

We understand that a horse railroad and cars are a modern invention, designed for the carriage of passengers, and, though not moving with the speed of steam cars, yet with the average speed of coaches, omnibuses and all carriages designed for the conveyance of persons.

The accommodation of travellers, of all who have occasion to use them, at certain rates of fare, is the leading object and public benefit, for which these special modes of using the high[77]*77way are granted, and not the profit of the proprietors. The profit to the proprietors is a mere mode of compensating them for theh* outlay of capital in providing and keeping up this public easement.

A franchise for the railroad, which the defendant was accused of obstructing, had been duly granted to the proprietors, which grant included the right to lay down tracks on a public highway, and also to use and maintain horse cars thereon for the carriage of passengers.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Mass. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-temple-mass-1860.