Luzerne Township v. Monongahela Railways Co.

154 A. 26, 303 Pa. 37, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 19, 1931
DocketAppeal, 18
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 A. 26 (Luzerne Township v. Monongahela Railways Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luzerne Township v. Monongahela Railways Co., 154 A. 26, 303 Pa. 37, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 358 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

Plaintiff filed a bill for a mandatory injunction to compel the defendant to remove its railway tracks from the public highway in Luzerne Township, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, for a distance of 8,480 feet and to reconstruct the said township road between named points in the same manner as existed prior to the location by the defendant of its tracks thereon, or to reconstruct the highway between these points on the most favorable location, of a width of 33 feet, and in as perfect a manner as the original road, and also that the defendant be compelled to construct retaining walls to support the roadway to its full width and to afford protection from slides, etc.

The issue between the parties is this: Was the new road, built by the defendant company in 1902 as a substitute for the old road, “reconstructed in as perfect a manner as the old road,” as the Act of 1849, P. L. 79, required?

Appellant concedes that the defendant complied with that part of its statutory duty which requires the construction of the old road “on the most favorable location.” No question would have arisen at this late date in respect to the defendant’s fulfillment of the other part of its statutory duty if the advent of motor vehicles had not made the new road constructed twenty-nine years ago inadequate to present-day requirements. *40 The road under consideration recently became an important link in the system of state highways. The road constructed in 1902 satisfied the plaintiff; township at that time and for a long time thereafter, as is evidenced, (1) by the declaration of the township supervisors at that time to the effect that “everything is satisfactory; we take the road”; and (2) by the want of any official complaint or action by the plaintiff against the defendant on account of that new road, from October 20, 1902, when the road was completed, until the bill was filed early in 1929.

The following pertinent facts were established:

(1) In 1803, the road, which we will refer to as the “old road,” was laid out by viewers duly appointed; the court confirmed the viewers’ report for a road “to be built 33 feet wide.”

(2) The road was not actually built that wide. It was, in fact, a single-track dirt road, varying in width from 6 to 14 feet. The chancellor accurately sums up the evidence as to the old road, in his sixth finding of fact, as follows:

“6th. The said road, when appropriated by defendant, was an ordinary country road, with stone and dirt surface in the main, having a single-track roadbed, with space for vehicles to pass at different points along the road. It was in use throughout all seasons of the year, subject to some slides of dirt and rock, some of which were required to be moved to keep it passable, and others were such that traffic could and did pass over them, but none of them seriously delayed traffic; it was nearly level throughout, lying along and in close proximity to the river edge, and in times of high water portions of it were covered with water; it could have been widened at a reasonable expense.”

(3) The new road varies in width from 8 to 14 feet; it would require a large expenditure of money to widen it and to make it adequate to present-day traffic requirements, Guard rails are necessary to protect persons *41 using the highway, the old road had no such guard rails. The plaintiff has constructed guard rails on the new road. All of these facts were found by the chancellor and supported by sufficient proof.

It is clear that the practical question presented in this case is: Who is going to pay for the widening, improving and protecting the 8,480 feet of highway now required at the locus of this controversy? Appellant contends that it is the statutory duty of appellee to reconstruct the new road to the width of 33 feet. The old road was not so built, but was so “to be built.” The new road of 1902 was practically a duplication of the old road as it was in fact, but not as it was on paper. At the present time a road 33 feet wide has become necessary. Shall the defendant be compelled to build it? The phrase “in as perfect a manner as the original road,” as used in section 13 of the Act of 1849, P. L. 79, we interpret not as referring to the method of building the old road, but as requiring that the new road be the same sort or kind of road as the old road. Webster’s New International Dictionary gives as the first definitions of “manner” the following — “species, kind, sort.” As was said by Chief Justice Mitchell, in Commonwealth v. D., L. & W. R. R. Co., 215 Pa. 149, at 153: “What the railroad company does under this authority [Act of 1849] is not to give the Commonwealth a new road with a new title and new attributes, but the old road reconstructed. The site is necessarily changed, but in all other respects it is to be ‘the same,’ to wit: expressly upon the most favorable location and in as perfect a manner as the original road, and, by necessary implication, of the same other qualities, including width, actual and potential.” The Act of 1849 does not require that the reconstructed road shall be an exact replica of the old road in respect to its grade or other physical aspects. Such a requirement might be utterly impracticable because of the difference in the terrain on Avhich the neAV road was to be built. It does, however, require *42 that the new road, in location and width, shall be, as far as it is physically practicable, an adequate substitute for the old road appropriated by the railroad company.

The court below found from the evidence that the new road constructed by the defendant was of the same width actually as the old road, and the same width potentially as the old road. The court aptly said in its opinion dismissing plaintiff’s exceptions: “The potential width of the old road was thirty-three feet, and the potential width of the new road as located along the hillside was thirty-three feet, and still is thirty-three feet, as the testimony discloses that the matter had been taken into consideration at the time of the relocation. There is no contention here that there is not sufficient ground along the hillside upon which to build or construct a road thirty-three feet wide; in fact, the testimony all discloses that there is mote than that much ground along the way. The old road being thirty-three feet wide, the new road which was laid out to take its place still maintains that same width. It was actually opened, however, for a width of approximately fourteen to sixteen feet, which was wider than the old road. By the term ‘open and construct,’ as used, we mean the actual building of the roadway, not the construction of the potential width of the road...... We believe that the defendant company discharged its obligation when it reconstructed a new road to a potential width of thirty-three feet and actually opened the new road to a width of fourteen to sixteen feet and reconstructed the traveled way of the new road in as perfect a manner as the original road......At the time the old road was taken, it was an ordinary country road, probably not traveled extensively, and a new road was supplied which met the conditions as they existed at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 A. 26, 303 Pa. 37, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luzerne-township-v-monongahela-railways-co-pa-1931.