Furhman v. State, No. 0059350 (Jan. 26, 1993)

1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 682
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1993
DocketNo. 0059350
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 682 (Furhman v. State, No. 0059350 (Jan. 26, 1993)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furhman v. State, No. 0059350 (Jan. 26, 1993), 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 682 (Colo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiffs, Liba H. Furhman, Mayor of the Town of New Milford and the Town of New Milford have appealed from the final decision and order CT Page 683 of the Department of Transportation dated March 3, 1992. The Town of New Milford is the real party in interest in this matter.

The Town of New Milford is the owner of a tract of land consisting of approximately 6.50 acres. This property is subject to an operating easement in favor of Consolidated Rail Corporation (hereafter "Conrail") which permits Conrail to maintain railroad tracks upon and to traverse the property in a north-south direction in connection with its rail operations.

The property is situated at the gateway to New Milford's town green and business district. Record, Item 12, pp. 1-3. The Town has restored the old railroad station situated on the property; and a substantial portion of the remaining property on both the east and west sides of the railroad tracks is used for parking. Persons who park on the west side of the railroad tracks regularly walk across the tracks to reach the commercial establishments located to the east on Railroad and Bank Streets. Record, Item 13, p. 2. No established crossing for such purpose exists, however; and due to the condition of the tracks and surrounding ground, the publics haphazard crossing of the tracks is considered by the Town to be not only inconvenient but also unsafe.

On April 26, 1991, the Town of New Milford and Conrail entered into a license agreement which would permit the construction of a ten (10) foot wide timber and asphalt pedestrian grade crossing over the tracks of Conrail's operating easement.1 By said agreement, the Town agreed that the crossing would be used only for pedestrian access to the Town's parking lot and for no other purpose.2 By said agreement, the Town recognized the paramount rights of Conrail in and to its operating easement. Record, Item 4, par. 6. Additionally, the Town recognized that its right to maintain the pedestrian grade crossing was terminable at any time by Conrail on thirty (30) days notice. Record, Item 4, par. 12(a).

Paragraph 7 of the license agreement (Record, Item 4) imposed upon the Town the requirement of protecting the crossing from the standpoint of safety. It also imposed upon the Town the financial burden of any protection devices that might be required by federal, state or local authority.

On August 6, 1991, the then mayor of the Town, Walter J. Rogg, sent a letter to the Department of Transportation requesting advice as to the types of safety devices that would be required for the pedestrian crossing. Record, Item 5. In response to said request, on September 5, 1991, the Department of Transportation initiated proceedings under Section 13b-343 of the General Statutes to prescribe the nature of the warning devices to be installed at the pedestrian crossing. Record, Item 6. After a public hearing CT Page 684 was held on October 28, 1991, and after oral argument held on January 16, 1992, the Department of Transportation issued its final decision on March 3, 1992.

By its final decision, the Department ordered the Town to install two sets of flashing lights, one set east, one set west on one stanchion which is also to include a pedestrian gate and bell. The Town is also ordered to install a second pedestrian gate on the opposite side of the tracks. These devices are to be wired to a "live island circuit", which, in turn, is to be incorporated into a warning system to be installed by others at Bridge Street. Finally, the Town was ordered to install a fence on the west side of the tracks to both the north and the south of the proposed grade crossing. Record, Item 13, pp. 4-5. The cost to the Town of installing the ordered protective devices is estimated by the Department of Transportation to be approximately $150,000.00. Record Item 13, p. 2, Item 8.

The Town's right to install a pedestrian grade crossing upon its property is established by a special act adopted by the legislature in 1989. Special Act 89-32, Section 2 provides:

. . .that the town of New Milford is authorized to enter into an agreement with Conrail for the construction of a pedestrian, at grade crossing from the municipal parking lot to the railroad station and to Railroad and Bank Streets, and that the town of New Milford and Conrail may enter into an agreement that would allow New Milford to assume responsibility for the costs of maintaining the crossing and for any liability for damages to persons or property as a result of using such crossing. . . .

Special Act 89-32, Section 2, further provides that:

[s]uch crossing shall be subject to provisions of sections 13b-342 to 13b-347, inclusive, of the general statutes.

Record, Item 3.

In response to Mayor Rogg's request for advice as to the types of safety devices that would be required for the pedestrian crossing, the Department of Transportation initiated proceedings under Section 13b-343 of the General Statutes to prescribe the nature of the warning devices to be installed.

Section 13b-343 provides in relevant part as follows: CT Page 685

The commissioner of transportation, when requested in writing by the selectmen of any town, the mayor and common council of any city or the warden or burgesses of any borough to order gates, a flagman or electric signals or other signal device to be installed and maintained at any railroad crossing where a railroad crosses a public highway at grade within such town, city or borough, shall hold a hearing thereon or may, on his own motion, hold such hearing, first giving the town, city or borough wherein the crossing is located, and the company operating the railroad, reasonable notice thereof. If the commissioner upon such hearing finds that public safety requires it, the commissioner shall order such company to install and maintain at such crossing, gates, a flagman or such electric signals or other signal device as may be approved by the commissioner, or to do any other act deemed necessary by the commissioner for the protection of the public. . . .If any such company fails to comply with any such order of the commissioner made pursuant to this section, it shall forfeit to the state the sum of fifty dollars for each day of such failure.

The Department of Transportation erred in relying upon the provisions of Section 13b-343 to order the Town to install the specified devices as part of its pedestrian grade crossing. A Section 13b-343 proceeding may be initiated by a town when that town seeks to require a railroad, as a matter of public safety, to install protective devices at a grade crossing. In this case, the Town of New Milford did not initiate proceedings under Section 13b-343. To the contrary instead of seeking an order requiring the installation of protective devices consisting of gates and electrical signalling devices, the Town requested that it not be required to install gates or signals at the proposed pedestrian grade crossing. Record Item 12, pp. 3-4.

Section 13b-343 contemplates that an order issued pursuant to its provisions shall be directed against the railroad company whose rail line is crossed by the grade crossing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furhman-v-state-no-0059350-jan-26-1993-connsuperct-1993.