In Re Pawtucket & Central Falls Grade Crossing Commission

113 A. 465, 43 R.I. 528, 1921 R.I. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 12, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 113 A. 465 (In Re Pawtucket & Central Falls Grade Crossing Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Pawtucket & Central Falls Grade Crossing Commission, 113 A. 465, 43 R.I. 528, 1921 R.I. LEXIS 14 (R.I. 1921).

Opinion

Stearns, J.

This cause is before this court on a question of law of doubt and importance arising before trial, which was duly certified to this court by the Superior Court.

The petitioner, Armour & Company, conducts a wholesale provision business near Dexter street in the city of Pawtucket on premises which it owns, and which adjoin a spur track formerly operated by the N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Co., under lease from certain railroads, owners thereof. This spur track had been used for a number of years by *529 petitioner and others doing business in the vicinity for the receipt and shipment of various commodities.

In 1912 the legislature passed an act (Chap. 896, Pub. Laws) to abolish certain grade crossings at Pine, Dexter and Broad streets in Pawtucket and at certain other highways in the city of Central Falls. The object of the act, as stated therein, was to assure the safety of the public. The act provided for the appointment of a commission, the ascertainment of and procedure for the collection of damages, and the apportionment of the cost of the changes between the railroads and the municipalities. Certain parts of this act were construed by this court, and the act was held to be constitutional in an opinion entitled, In re Pawtucket & Central Falls Grade Crossing Commission, 36 R. I. 200.

Thereafter Armour & Company and certain other parties brought a bill in equity in the Superior Court to enjoin the removal of the spur track at Dexter street. Petitioners claimed the act did not authorize the removal of the spur track and that the procedure directing removal by the commission was improper, also that the act was unconstitutional because no provision for compensation was made therein for the damages suffered by petitioners. This court in Armour & Co. v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Co., 41 R. I. 361, held the act was constitutional and was a valid exercise of the police power by the legislature, to assure the public safety; that the act authorized the removal of the spur track and that any loss or inconvenience suffered by petitioner as a consequence thereof, was not the loss of any property right for which petitioner was entitled to compensation; that petitioner’s enjoyment of the peculiar advantages of the use of the spur track by reason of its location in a particular place was not a property right of petitioner and that the removal thereof caused it no legal damage.

After the argument of the cause in this court and prior to the decision thereof, Chapter. 896 was amended by Chapter 1705 of the Public Laws, entitled “An act conferring additional powers and duties upon the Pawtucket and Central *530 Falls Grade Crossing Commission.” Section 1 of the amendment provides that the powers and duties of the Grade Crossing Commission created under the provisions of Chapter 896 are hereby defined as including the power and duty to eliminate all grade crossings mentioned in Chapter 896, expressly including the removal of all main tracks, switches, spur tracks or other tracks which cross at grade any of said public highways. By Section 2 the commission is directed to remove from any of said highways all tracks now remaining at grade thereon "exercising the powers and duties enumerated by and following the directions of Chapter 896 of the Public Laws and all acts in amendment thereof.” Section 4 provides: “Any damages which may be caused by the completion of the elimination of said grade crossing, and by the removal of said track or tracks, shall be primarily paid by the City of Pawtucket, and shall be included in, and form a part of, the total actual cost of the elimination and alteration of grade crossings as required by Chapter 896 of the Public Laws, and all acts in amendment thereof and in addition thereto; any persons sustaining legal damage by reason of the completion of said elimination of any such grade crossing, and by the removal of any track, shall present his claim by filing the same in the office of the said Clerk of the City of Pawtucket within sixty days after the first publication of said notice.” Provision is then made if the city fails to satisfy the claim, that the commission shall assess damages and any party aggrieved by such assessment may have such damages determined by a jury of the Superior Court on petition.

Petitioner followed the statutory procedure and not having received any damages either from the city or the commission filed a petition in the Superior Court for assessment of damages by a jury. In a bill of particulars, filed by order of court, petitioner states that its claim is for damage to its wholesale provision business conducted on its premises above referred to, and that the sum claimed is its estimate of the amount required to make it whole for the additional *531 expense of carrying on business in said locality because of the removal of the spur track. The commission thereupon moved that the petition for jury trial be denied and dismissed for the reason that the only damage, if any, suffered by petitioner was indirect and consequential damage and not legal damage; that Chapter 896 and amendments confer a right to an award of damages to such persons only as suffer “legal damages.”

The question certified to this court is as follows: “Does the petition of Armour & Company for jury trial, with the accompanying bill of particulars, set forth circumstances which either, by virtue of the common law, or by virtue of the provisions of Chapter 896 of the Public Laws passed by the General Assembly of the State of Rhode Island, at its January Session, A. D. 1912, and the acts in amendment thereof, particularly including Chapter 1705 of the Public Laws, passed by the General Assembly aforesaid at its January Session, A.' D. 1918, entitle said Armour & Company to have the question of its alleged damage submitted to a jury?”

(1) The petitioner in this cause is not entitled to compensation by any constitutional provision or by the common law. This is admitted, but petitioner claims a right of recovery is given him by statute, by Section 4, Chapter 1705. It is argued that at the time of the passage of this amendment, the question of the authority of the commission to remove the spur tracks and the failure' to provide compensation for the kind of damages suffered by petitioner were the only objections, which could be raised to the completion of the work of the commission in the abolition of grade crossings. Such being the case and in view of the time of the passage of the amendment, we are asked to find an intention on the part of the legislature to confer the right to compensation claimed by petitioner in order to prevent further delay and obstruction in the proposed changes; and it is claimed that by the use of the words ‘ ‘ any damages which may be caused,” etc., the legislature intended to provide for compensation *532 for damages other than those of the kinds specified in the original act. As stated by petitioner in its brief the legislature could hardly have used broader or less restricted language than “any damages which may be caused,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 465, 43 R.I. 528, 1921 R.I. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pawtucket-central-falls-grade-crossing-commission-ri-1921.