McRee v. . W. R. R. R. Co.

47 N.C. 186
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 47 N.C. 186 (McRee v. . W. R. R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McRee v. . W. R. R. R. Co., 47 N.C. 186 (N.C. 1855).

Opinion

* Judge Battle, being a stockholder in the Rail Road Company, took no part in the consideration and decision of this case. This was an action for a PENALTY, commenced before a justice of the peace by warrant, and brought to the superior court by an appeal, for the violation of an act of Assembly passed in 1766, entitled "an Act to encourage Benjamin Herron to build a bridge over the North East branch of the Cape Fear River." Among other things it is therein enacted as follows:

"Section first. "That when the bridge is built, the benefit thereof shall be vested in him, his heirs and assigns for ever."

Section 3rd. "That after the said bridge is built and completely ended as aforesaid, provided it be completed in four years after the passage of this Act, it shall not be lawful for any person whatever to keep any ferry, build any bridge, or set any person or persons, carriage or carriages, cattle, hogs, or sheep, over the said river, for fee or reward, within six miles of the same, under the penalty of twenty shillings proclamation money, for each and every offence, to be recovered by warrant by the said Benjamin Herron, his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns before any magistrate of the county *Page 187 of New Hanover, to be applied to the use of the proprietor of the said bridge at the time of the offence being committed."

It is admitted that the franchise granted by this act, was transmitted according to law, and was vested in the plaintiff at the time the acts complained of were done by the defendant.

The bridge was erected within the time prescribed by the act, and, with various intermissions, has been kept up as a toll bridge by B. Herron, and those claiming under him, until this time. Whenever the bridge was down, the proprietor kept a ferry-boat at the place which served as a means of transit in the absence of the bridge.

The bridge was not standing when the defendants erected their bridge, but was afterwards re-built, and was used till the year ____, when it was washed away, and since that time has not been re-built, and was not standing when this warrant issued.

The defendants pleaded specially the charter of the Wilmington, c., Rail Road Company of 1833, with its various amendments, applicable to the case, by which the defendants were authorised to make a rail road over this tract of country, and it is admitted that the bridge in question was erected by virtue of this charter, and as part of the rail road, and that this bridge is less than six miles of the bridge site of the plaintiff. The complaint is for carrying a passenger over the rail road bridge in the common passenger cars, for which twenty-five cents was charged and received by the company. Besides passing the bridge the passenger went nine miles on the train and no specific charge was made for passing the bridge. Nor was any specific charge ever made for persons passing the bridge as such.

It was agreed by the parties upon this state of the case, that if his Honor should be of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, judgment might be entered for the sum of two dollars; but if he should be of opinion with the defendants, that a judgment of non-suit be entered.

His Honor on considering the case agreed, gave judgment *Page 188 of non-suit against the plaintiff, from which he appealed to this Court. The broad question is, had the legislature power to authorise the company to build a bridge across the North East branch of the Cape Fear river, incontinuation, and as a part of the rail road — charging for persons and property carried along the road and making no charge for persons or property set over the river as an act of itself, i. e. (making no separate charge for setting persons or property over the river, and making no higher charge on that part of the road by reason of the river,) notwithstanding the franchise claimed by the plaintiff under the act of the Governor, Council, and Assembly of the colony of North Carolina, in the year 1766?

Admit that the act of 1766 is to be considered as a contract, by which the Governor, Council and Assembly of the Colony on the one part, agree to and with Benjamin Herron on the other part, that in consideration of the work and labor of the said Benjamin in building a bridge across the river, and keeping the same in repair, "the benefit thereof should be vested in him, his heirs and assigns forever," and they should forever have the right to take certain toll from all persons and property passing over the bridge, and that it should not be lawful for any person whatever to keep any ferry,build any bridge, or set any person or property over the river for fee orreward within six miles of the bridge, and for any violation of the rights of the said Benjamin, his heirs or assigns a penalty of twenty shillings proc. should be recoverable by them, c.

The first question is, was the meaning of the parties, and of course, the scope and operation of the contract, confined to the ferries, bridges, and other modes of setting persons and property over the river at that timeknown and in use? Or, was *Page 189 it the meaning of the parties, and was it in their contemplation to confer upon Herron, his heirs and assigns, a perpetual monopoly of setting persons and property over the river by means of his bridge, so that it should never thereafter be in the power of the Governor, Council and Assembly, no matter what might be the change in the condition of things, either in reference to the increased necessity for transports across the river or the improved modes of transportation, to authorise any other mode of crossing the river?

We should hesitate long before bringing our minds to the conclusion that the latter is the true construction of the contract; because it was unreasonable on the part of Herron, in consideration of the services that he was to perform, to exact any such stipulation; and because it was unreasonable on the part of the Governor, Council and Assembly in consideration of building a bridge, to confer a perpetual monopoly, and take from themselves and their successors, for all time to come, the power of doing that for which all governments are organised, — promoting the general welfare, by adopting such measures as a new condition of things might make necessary and taking advantage of such improvements and inventions as after ages might originate, for the benefit of the public; in other words, it is unreasonable to suppose that they intended to surrender the means by which they and their successors might, thereafter, be enabled to effect the purpose for which they were created and formed into a government.

Suppose, for instance two cities had grown up, one on either side of the river, so that the necessities of the public should call for a dozen such bridges, or the progress of science had called for a tunnel under the river, or a line of balloons over the river, or a rail road car rushing by steam from one extremity of the continent to the other, across the river, was it the meaning of the parties that the government tied its own hands, and disabled itself, for all time to come, from doing its duty? so as to exclude all idea of progress, in such-wise that the steam car must stop at the North East branch of the Cape Fear river, and all persons and property must be transported *Page 190 over the bridge of Benjamin Herron, after the manner, and in the way, such things were done in 1766!! A construction of the contract leading to this conclusion, is against reason.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.C. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcree-v-w-r-r-r-co-nc-1855.