New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Bridgeport Traction Co.

32 A. 953, 65 Conn. 410, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 8, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 32 A. 953 (New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Bridgeport Traction Co.) 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
New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Bridgeport Traction Co., 32 A. 953, 65 Conn. 410, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 24 (Colo. 1895).

Opinions

Baldwin, J.

The plaintiff’s complaint is in the nature of a pure injunction bill. It avers that it sends about two hundred regular trains of cars daily, some of which carry the mails of the United States, and the rest passengers and freight, across Fairfield avenue in the city of Bridgeport, at grade; that the defendant threatens to obstruct the plaintiff’s right of way by forcibly laying tracks for an electric railway over said crossing and upon the plaintiff’s tracks; and that if such new tracks are so laid and used, it will seriously impair the plaintiff’s power to fulfill its chartered purposes, disarrange its train service, put it to great additional expense in the operation of its road, and greatly endanger the lives of the passengers and employees on all trains crossing such avenue. The defendant’s answer admits the character and extent of the plaintiff’s business, as alleged, but sets up a grant by the last General Assembly of express authority to construct the crossing in question, at grade.

It appears by an agreed statement of facts (made subject to the opinion of the court as to their relevancy) that Fair-field avenue was a public highway long before the plaintiff’s railroad was constructed, and that the proposed crossing by the defendant’s railway “ impairs the property of the plain[423]*423tiff, interferes with the accustomed and necessary operation of its road, and endangers the lives of its passengers and employees. But the defendant does not intend to injure the property of the plaintiff, or interfere with the accustomed and necessary operation of its road, or endanger the lives of its passengers, and will not, except such as naturally follows from the location and operation of its trolley road across the tracks of the plaintiff at grade.”

These facts are relevant and material to the issue. They show that the proposed crossing, if constructed, will interfere with the necessary operation of the plaintiffs road, and endanger the lives of all whom it transports across Fairfield avenue in the two hundred trains which daily pass there. It would be difficult to make out a stronger ease for the interposition of a court of equity, if it has the power to interpose. Only by an injunction can the defendant be prevented from setting up across the tracks of a steam railroad iu constant use, an obstruction of: a continuing character, which would daily put in peril hundreds or thousands of human lives.

It is argued that the plaintiff’s claim is in substance simply one for an injunction against threatened trespasses, or repeated obstructions of a right of way, and that it is not claimed that the defendant is not pecuniarily responsible for any damage it may do, nor that the plaintiff will be exposed to irreparable injury. But the plaintiff holds its right of way charged with the performance of a public trust for its continuous use for public accommodation. Gates v. Boston New York Air Line R. R. Co., 53 Conn., 333, 341, 343. Its railroad is a great avenue of communication between one part of the State and another, and between this and other States. Any impediment to its safe and proper use is a matter of public concern, not to be measured by money, or dealt with on the footing of a claim for damages.

If erected without authority from the State, it may be that the State’s attorney might properly sue for an injunction; but the same remedy would be open to the plaintiff, for it suffers a special injury, and is charged by the State with a [424]*424special duty of maintaining its road at this crossing in uninterrupted use under safe conditions. Borough of Stamford v. Stamford Horse R. R. Co., 56 Conn., 381, 395; Frink v. Lawrence, 20 Conn., 120.

As the plaintiff has stated a case sufficient to support its action, we are brought to the consideration of the merits of the defense founded on a legislative grant.

In June, 1893, the East End Railway Company owned and operated a horse railroad in Bridgeport and Stratford, under a charter granted many years before, which railroad crossed the tracks of the plaintiff’s railroad at grade, upon a highway known as Seaview avenue. By an amendment to this charter, approved June 28th, 1893, it was authorized to extend its lines in each town by laying tracks through certain designated streets, “ and also from Stratford avenue on and along Pembroke street, across the tracks of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company at grade, until said tracks are elevated, to Old Mill Green; subject to such regulations and restrictions as to said railroad crossing as the board of railroad commissioners may at any time order upon the application of either of said companies ; and from the lower bridge westerly, over and under the tracks of said railroad to the junction of Fairfield avenue and Water street; provided, however, that when said railway company shall abandon its present crossing with its tracks at grade with the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company at Seaview avenue, in the city of Bridgeport, it may cross the tracks of said steam railroad at grade at or near the junction of Fair-field avenue and Stratford avenue, at the southerly end of the railroad station of said steam railroad in the city of Bridgeport; subject, however, to such regulations and restrictions as the railroad commissioners may at any time order upon the application of either of said companies; and from the junction of Fairfield avenue and Water street southerly along Water street, westerly to Main street; * * * also from the northerly terminus of the line of said horse railway on East Main street across the tracks of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company at grade, until said [425]*425tracks are elevated, to the north side of East Washington avenue ; subject, however, to such regulations and restrictions as the railroad commissioners may at any time order, upon the application of either of said companies.” Special Acts of 1898, pp. 878, 879. This amendment also empowered the company to equip and operate its road with electric power, and to consolidate and make common stock with any other street railway company having lines in Bridgeport, or to transfer to it its property and franchises.

A horse railroad had been in operation in Bridgeport for many years, owned by the Bridgeport Horse Railroad Company. By an amendment to its charter, approved June 28th, this company was authorized to consolidate with any other street railway company; to equip its lines with electric power; and to extend them through various streets, among which were Congress street “ across the railroad tracks of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company at grade, until said grade crossing is abolished by the steam railroad company; * * * subject to such regulations and restrictions in the matter of crossing the tracks of said steam railroad at grade as the railroad commissioners may at any time make upon the application of either of said companies; ” and also North avenue, Broad street, Lafayette street, South avenue, and “Fairfield avenue in the western section of said city,” each of which five streets was crossed by the plaintiff’s steam railroad at grade, and in respect to each of which, the company was empowered to construct a grade crossing over such steam railroad, in the same words used regarding the Congress street crossing, and subject to the same restrictions.

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Bluebook (online)
32 A. 953, 65 Conn. 410, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-v-bridgeport-traction-co-conn-1895.