N. York N. Eng. R. R. Co. v. Comstock

22 A. 511, 60 Conn. 200, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 4, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 22 A. 511 (N. York N. Eng. R. R. Co. v. Comstock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. York N. Eng. R. R. Co. v. Comstock, 22 A. 511, 60 Conn. 200, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 24 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

This is a complaint for an injunction to prevent the defendants from crossing the railroad track of the plaintiff. The following is a brief statement of the material facts contained in the finding.

The land in question, now occupied by the plaintiff's railroad tracks, was formerly owned by William G. Comstock, the father of the defendants, who derived title by deed from him, and it formed part of one contiguous tract of land forty-four rods wide, and extending easterly from Main Street in East Hartford about two hundred rods. In 1875 the Connecticut Central Railroad Company took, by condemnation for railroad purposes, a strip of land, including that now in question, extending northerly and southerly through said entire track, dividing it into two nearly equal parts, and leaving no access to that part lying east of the railroad, except by crossing the railroad; and when the tracks were laid on the strip of land so condemned the Connecticut Central Railroad Company constructed suitable crossings at two places where said Wm. G. Comstock, Sen., had been accustomed to pass from one part of the tract to the other, and these crossings were maintained by the Connecticut Central Railroad Company as long as it continued to run and operate the road, and have since been maintained by the plaintiff corporation until August, 1888, and said William G. Comstock, Sen., while he continued owner of the tract was, and the defendants since they acquired title have been, accustomed at all times when they had occasion for farm purposes to cross the railroad upon the two crossings mentioned until the date last referred to.

In October, 1875, the Connecticut Central Railroad Company *Page 207 mortgaged its railroad, including this land, to secure certain bonds, and in 1887 the treasurer of the state foreclosed the mortgage, and the title became absolute in him. In December, 1887, the state treasurer by good and sufficient deed conveyed all the right, title and interest that formerly belonged to the Connecticut Central Railroad Company in said railroad and in said land to the plaintiff corporation, which has ever since owned and operated the railroad over the land in question.

In the year 1888 a new highway was laid out and opened for public travel, extending from Main street easterly along the south line of the defendants' land, which highway crosses the railroad in the immediate vicinity of the southerly crossing previously maintained by the railroad companies for the use of the defendants, but since that time it has not been used by these defendants.

The other farm crossing near the center of the above tract of land remained, and was used by the defendants as before, until a short time before the commencement of this suit, when the plaintiff took up the crossing and erected a fence on the sides of its railroad tracks to prevent the defendants from crossing. But the defendants insisted upon their right to use the crossing near the center of their land, and tore down the fence so erected by the plaintiff, and have since continued to use it as before.

In the proceedings to condemn the land for railroad purposes no reference of any kind was made to the farm roads which William G. Comstock, Sen., had been accustomed to use on the land, nor to any future use of the same.

The court further finds that "no evidence was offered to prove that the use of said farm crossing" (referring to the central one,) "as it had been heretofore used by the defendants, was unreasonable or inconsistent with the plaintiff's use of said strip of land as it has been accustomed to operate its railroad, or that the use of the farm crossing by the defendants will in the future interfere in any way with the use of the same land by the plaintiff corporation for railroad purposes." *Page 208

The general question arising upon these facts is, whether the defendants have a right to have the crossing in question kept open and maintained for their use?

Upon what foundation can any such right rest in this case? The defendants do not claim to have gained a right to cross by adverse user, for the time is inadequate to confer such a right; neither do they claim a right of way of necessity, for in 1888 a highway was laid out and opened for public use along the south line of the land in question, and it is obvious that any point on the entire tract may be reached from this highway without crossing the railroad at all, and the most remote point is distant only forty-four rods.

The argument in behalf of the defendants, although stated in different forms, seems to be based principally upon the assumption that when land is taken under the power of eminent domain for railroad purposes, no exclusive right to the possession and control is thereby vested in the railroad company, but that there is left in the original landowner, not only the fee subject to the easement, but also a right to use the same hind in any manner not inconsistent with the railroad purposes for which the land was condemned, and that the question whether the landowners' proposed use is inconsistent or not with the use for which the land was condemned, is a question of fact to be determined by the evidence in the particular case. The special finding in the case at bar, that no evidence was offered to show such inconsistent use, renders it probable that the trial judge may have accepted this idea as the basis of his judgment for the defendants.

The defendants cite Imlay v. Union BranchR. R. Co., 26 Conn., 255, as supporting their contention. It does not seem to us to furnish such support. The question in that case was whether the location of a railroad upon a public highway amounted to the imposition of a new servitude, in addition to and distinct from the other, so that the owner in fee was entitled to compensation therefor. The able discussion of the question by STORRS, C. J., was directed solely to the point that a taking of land for railroad purposes was *Page 209 a very different thing from a taking for highway purposes, and the conclusion reached was that on that account the landowner was entitled to compensation. In the argument for the defendants in that case as in this, the rights retained by the landowner after condemnation of his land for railroad purposes were illustrated by reference to the rights of an adjoining owner in the highway. The opinion in that case shows that such an argument must be misleading. But it may be suggested that the object of citing that case was to show the principle there laid down and applied, namely, "that when land is condemned for a special purpose, on the score of public utility, the sequestration is limited to that particular use. Land taken for a highway is not thereby convertible into a common; as the property is not taken, but the use only, the right of the public is limited to the use — the specific use for which this proprietor has been deprived of a complete dominion over his own estate."

We have no fault to find with the principle here laid down, but the question recurs — what are the purposes for which land is condemned by a railroad company, as in this case? To us it seems obvious that there is little analogy between the case of a highway and a railroad, but in most respects there is contrast rather than analogy, for in the case of a highway the use is general and open to all, including the adjoining landowner as part of the public, but the public have no exclusive right to occupy any particular part or put any permanent structure upon the way. It is taken simply for public travel over it, while on the other hand a taking for railroad purposes is necessarily peculiar, permanent and exclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A. 511, 60 Conn. 200, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-york-n-eng-r-r-co-v-comstock-conn-1891.