Montgomery v. Multnomah Railway Co.

11 Or. 344
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 Or. 344 (Montgomery v. Multnomah Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Multnomah Railway Co., 11 Or. 344 (Or. 1884).

Opinion

By the Court,

Lord, J.:

The existence of the plaintiffs’ ferry, known as the Albina [345]*345ferry, is admitted by the record. The petition of the defendants rests their application in chief upon the insufficiency of the facilities, as already existing and established, for the accommodation of the public in crossing the river, between the termini of the Albina ferry. As a link to connect the line of travel between these points, the averment is that the facilities are too limited to meet the present and growing demands of the public convenience. The order of the county court not only assumes the legal existence of the ferry, but undertakes, on account of the proximity of the Montgomery ferry, which its order licenses and establishes to accommodate the same line of travel, and the consequent liability apprehended in the exercise of its franchise of interfering with the passage of the boats of the Albina ferry and the approaches to its landings, to provide for its protection.

The view we take of the question to be adj udicated, as thus presented by the record, renders it unnecessary to notice some of the matters discussed in the briefs of counsel. We shall only examine the record for the purpose of determining whether the county court, to whom the law has confided the authority to grant licenses for establishing ferries upon the conditions therein expressed, has exceeded its jurisdiction, or exercised its functions erroneously upon the case made by the record in granting the Montgomery license. The exclusive right of the county court in a proper case to grant a ferry license, when satisfied the same is necessary for the public convenience, is not questioned. The contention is as to the limits within which this power or jurisdiction may be exercised with regard to a ferry already licensed and established. Our statute provides that the county court may grant a license to any person entitled and applying therefor, to keep a ferry across any lake or stream within its [346]*346respective county, upon being satisfied that a ferry is necessary at the point applied for, which license shall continue in force for a term to be fixed by the court, not exceeding five years. (Gen. L. Or., sec. 40, p. 731.) But it further provides that every person licensed to keep a ferry shall have the exclusive privilege of transporting all persons and property over and across the stream where such ferry is established, and shall be entitled to all the fare arising therefrom. (Id., sec. 51, p. 733.)

It- is argued that the exclusive privileges which attach to the grant of a license by virtue of this last clause, limit and restrict the jurisdiction of the county court in granting ferry licenses to such places only as will not affect injuriously an existing ferry licensed and established by its authority.

This proceeds from the theory that the jurisdiction conferred by the former provisions, and the restrictions placed upon its exercise by the latter, when taken and construed together, so as to give them one effect only, declares or adopts the common-law doctrine as applied to ferry franchises—an able and exhaustive resume of which may be found in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Story in the Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet., 506. It is also contended that the doctrine of the law as applied to ferries by the reasoning of the majority in the decision of the Warren Bridge case is not opposed to, but sustains and fortifies this construction. This position is that the plaintiffs failed in that case because their charter gave them no exclusive privileges, and the court held as against the public such privileges could not be implied, but e converso, where such privileges are expressly conferred the doctrine of the common law would apply,

On the other hand, it is contended that the “exclusive [347]*347privileges” conferred by our statute are confined to tbe ferry landings, the place “where such ferry is established,” and does not extend on each side so as to prevent the licensing of contiguous and rival ferries, when the county court is “satisfied” the public accommodation requires it; that, in effect, the statute but reiterates in express terms what was decided in the Warren bridge case, and confines the “exclusive privileges” to the landings, or place “where such ferry is established,” and that no exclusive privileges can be implied beyond this as against the public, or jurisdiction of the county court to license other ferries contiguous, whatever may be the effect of such competition in withdrawing tolls. In our judgment, the primary object to be accomplished by our statute in conferring jurisdiction upon county courts in their respective counties to establish roads and license ferries for the transportation of persons and property across streams which obstruct land travel using public ways, is to secure the public accommodation. For the attainment of this end, but as subordinate to it, when a ferry franchise is granted, the right to take lawful tolls is conferred as an equivalent for the obligations to accommodate the traveling public.

Although the taking of such tolls is jyrimti jwris and incident to the franchise, “a ferry isjpubliea juris, and cannot be created without a franchise,^and is a thing of public interest and use"(Att'y Gen. v. Boston, 123 Mass., 478.)

As a link in the chain of transportation on dry land, a ferry forms a part of a public highway, or a connecting link between places in which the public have rights, and as such it is a thing of public interest, and in which the public have the right of way or use on paying certain specified tolls? regulated and prescribed’by public authority. This is evi[348]*348dent from the nature of the franchise, and the uses and purposes for which ferries are licensed and established.

A ferry, says Mr.'Dane, vol. 2, p. 683, “forms a part of a public passage or highway wherever rivers or waters are to be passed in boats, and being a part of the highway, any obstruction of the use thereof is a nuisance.” (Angell on Highways, sec. 461.) The definition of a ferry, as given by Lord Abinger, in Huzzie v. Field, 2 C., M. & R., 432, 442, is this: A public ferry is a public highway of a special description, and its termini must be in places where the public have rights, as towns or vills, or highways leading to towns or-vills. In Newton v. Cabitt, Mills, J., in delivering the judgment of the court, said: “A ferry exists in respect of persons using a right of way where the line of way is across water. There must be a line of way on land coming to a landing place on the water’s edge,” etc.

In Burlington and Henderson Co. Ferry v. Davis, 48 Iowa, 133, the court says: “A ferry is in some sense an extension of a public road.” Mr. Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations, 593, says, in reference to the right of the states to lawfully establish ferries over navigable waters, that “this also is only the establishment of a public highway.” And in Sullivan v. Board of Supervisors,

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Bluebook (online)
11 Or. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-multnomah-railway-co-or-1884.