Inhabitants of Orono v. Bangor Railway & Electric Co.

74 A. 1022, 105 Me. 428, 1909 Me. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 A. 1022 (Inhabitants of Orono v. Bangor Railway & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inhabitants of Orono v. Bangor Railway & Electric Co., 74 A. 1022, 105 Me. 428, 1909 Me. LEXIS 108 (Me. 1909).

Opinion

King, J.

On report. An appeal by the inhabitants of the town of Orono from a decision of the Board of Railroad Commissioners apportioning to that town a part of the expense of certain repairs upon the bridge therein across the Stillwater branch of the Penobscot river, over which bridge the street railroad of the defendant passes.

The statute under which the decision was made (chap. 51, sect. 75, R. S.) is as follows: "Bridges erected by any municipality, over which any street railroad passes, shall be constructed and maintained in such manner and condition, as to safety, as the board of railroad commissioners may determine. Said board may require the officers of the railroad company and of the municipality to attend a hearing in the matter, after such notice of the hearing to all parties in interest as said board may deem proper. Said [431]*431commissioners shall determine at such hearing the repairs, renewals or strengthening of parts, or if necessary, the manner of rebuilding such bridge, required to make the same safe for the uses to which it is put. They shall determine who shall bear the expenses of such repairs, renewals strengthening or rebuilding, or they may apportion such expense between the railroad company and the city or town, as the case may be, in such manner as shall be deemed by the board just and fair, and shall make their report as hereinafter provided.”

March 4, 1908 the Board of Railroad Commissioners, upon petition of the, defendant, and after notices to.all parties in interest and hearings, made their decision (so far as material here) "that the Bangor Railway and Electric Company shall repair the bridge under the direction of the Railroad Commissioners, so as to nlake it safe for the passage of cars and teams and carriages over it. We estimate the cost of repairing the bridge to the satisfaction of the Board of Railroad Commissioners, to be in the neighborhood of six thousand dollars, and we apportion the expense between the municipality and the railroad company as follows: The Bangor Railway and Electric Company shall repair the bridge, and the town of Orono shall pay said Bangor Railway and Electric Company towards said repairs, when the Board of Railroad Commissioners shall 'have given its certificate of safety, the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars.”

The bridge was originally built as a toll bridge by the Proprietors of the Stillwater Bridge, a corporation chartered and organized under chapter 390 of the Private and Special Laws of Maine, approved February 13, 1826, by which it was provided that "the tolls shall commence on the day when said Bridge is first opened for passengers and continue for and during the term of thirty years next ensuing.” It does not appear when the bridge was "first opened for passengers.” By an Act of the legislature, approved April 1, 1854, all rights under the charter were extended ten years, and authority was granted to the company to sell and to the town of Orono to buy the bridge at any time during the extension. Again, by an Act approved February 24, 1865 the charter was extended thirty years more, with provisions under which the bridge [432]*432could be sold to the town during that period. And, lastly, by an Act approved February 7, 1887 the charter was further extended for twenty years; "and all the rights, privileges, immunities and liabilities granted and insured, by the act of incorporation of said Proprietors, approved February thirteen eighteen hundred and twenty-six, by the act of extension approved April one eighteen hundred and fifty-four, and by the further act of extension approved February twenty-four eighteen hundred and sixty-five, are hereby continued and extended for said period of twenty years,” which language is sufficient, to' extend all the provisions for sale of the bridge as specified in the extensions referred to. This Act, however, did not go into effect until thirty days after the recess of the legislature passing it, or until April 17, 1887. The appellants' introduced some evidence tending to support the claim that the extension granted by the Act approved February 24, 1865 expired by limitation in March 1887, and they maintain that because of such expiration of its chartered rights the bridge company became thereby divested of all its rights and property in the bridge, which then became and has continued to be the property of the State, and therefore that no title to the bridge was acquired by the town under the attempted purchase of it from the bridge company as hereinafter noted.

At a meeting of the inhabitants of Orono legally called for the purpose a committee, appointed at the ‘previous annual meeting to negotiate a trade, if possible, with the Stillwater Bridge Company for the purchase of the bridge, made report recommending its purchase and that $500 be at once expended on it in repairs. The report was accepted. The town voted to buy the bridge and raised money for that purpose and to repair it. By deed dated May 7, 1889 the Proprietors of the Stillwater Bridge conveyed to the Inhabitants of Orono "The bridge of the said Proprietors over the Stillwater river in said town of Orono including piers, abutments, and all property of said Proprietors appurtenant to and connected with said bridge, together with all rights and franchises.” Subsequently the selectmen of Orono granted permission to the Bangor, Orono & Oldtown Railway Company, the predecessor of the defend-. [433]*433ant, to run its cars across this bridge, and this permission was approved by a voté of the town at its annual meeting held March 18, 1895. It is unquestioned that this bridge forms a part of a highway in the town of Orono, and that the town has kept the bridge in repair since its purchase in 1889. So much for the history of the bridge and its maintenance to the present time.

1. The first reason of appeal is predicated upon the contention that the statute here invoked "is by its terms applicable only to bridges ‘erected’ by municipalities,” and as this bridge was not "erected” by the town of Orono the Board of -Railroad Commissioners had no jurisdiction. We think this contention is not tenable.

It will be conceded that the letter of the language used imports the meaning attributed to it by appellants, "but the literal import of language used in statutes is, often, seemingly at variance with what was obviously intended. In such case the intention, and not the literal import is to govern.” Seiders v. Creamer, 22 Maine, 559. The meaning and intent of this statute is more readily perceived, perhaps, if the purposes to be accomplished by it are considered. Under statutory provisions street railroads were permitted to pass along and over our highways and bridges which our municipalities were then maintaining safe and convenient only for travellers with their horses, teams and carriages. Hence aróse a necessity that all the bridges in our highways over which any street railroad passes should be made and maintained sufficiently strong for this added use. To secure a prompt and efficient fulfillment of this necessity the statute in question was passed, giving the board of railroad commissioners full and complete control over the construction and maintenance, as to safety, of such bridges, with power to place the burden of the expense thereof upon those who ought justly to bear it.

It was obviously the intention of this statute to include in its provisions all highway bridges which municipalities were bound to maintain and keep in repair, and over which any street railroad passes, and full effect should, be given to that intention.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A. 1022, 105 Me. 428, 1909 Me. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-orono-v-bangor-railway-electric-co-me-1909.