Petition of the Nashua Street Railway

41 A. 858, 69 N.H. 275
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 A. 858 (Petition of the Nashua Street Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of the Nashua Street Railway, 41 A. 858, 69 N.H. 275 (N.H. 1897).

Opinion

Chase, J.

Any five or more persons of lawful age may associate together by an agreement in writing to form a corporation for the carrying on of any lawful business, with certain exceptions, among which is the construction and maintenance of railroads. P. S., c. 147, s. 1. They become a corporation by force of their own acts in making the agreement, causing it to be recorded, and paying the required charter fee. lb., s. 4. The law assumes that there is public necessity for all corporations of this kind that people see fit to form.

*276 To create a corporation for tbe construction and maintenance of a steam railroad, twenty-five or more persons must be parties to the agreement, and they must obtain a decision of the court that the public good requires the proposed railroad. P. S., c. 156, ss. 1-18. In the granting of special charters for this purpose, the question of public necessity is determined by the legislature, but as this is impracticable in a general law, it is referred to the court. The question is a fundamental one, without a favorable determination of which the corporation cannot be formed. The route of the proposed railroad need not be particularly described in the agreement. It is sufficient to set forth its termini, its length as nearly as may be, and the names of the towns and counties through or into which it will extend, lb., s. 2. The description of routes in special charters is also general. For examples, see Laws 1883, cc. 193, 214, 218, 227, 229, 232, 244, 250. Hence, in all cases the road must be laid out after the corporation has been created; and procedure for the purpose is provided by chapter 158 of the Public Statutes. The laying out is a subsidiary matter that arises after incorporation, in the use of the corporate franchise.

The same method is adopted for the formation of corporations for the construction and maintenance of street railways, with the modification that the route of the proposed railway must be specifically set forth in the petition to the court, and the petitioners must obtain a decision that the public good requires a railway to be built upon that route. Laws 1895, c. 27, s. 3. Consequently, upon the formation of the corporation the route of its railway is definitely fixed or laid out. The decision of the fundamental question of public necessity for the corporation includes a decision of the subsidiary question relating to the laying out of the road. The only matter left undetermined is the location of the tracks within the limits of the highways in the specified route. In charters specially granted the routes of the proposed railways are more or less indefinite. Laws 1864, c. 3030, s. 1; 1870, c. 61, s. 1; 1871, c. 86, s. 1; 1878, e. 118, s. 1; 1881, c. 251, s. 1; 1883, c. 255, s. 1; 1885, c. 192, s. 1; 1887, c. 211, s. 1; lb., c. 219, s. 1; lb., c. 271, 5. 1; lb., c. 274, s. 1; 1889, e. 178, s. 1; lb., e. 218, s. 1; lb., c. 241, s. 1; 1891, c. 293, s. 1; 1893, c. 249, s. 1; lb., c. 250, s. 1; lb., c. 274, s. 1. The petitioner’s charter is a fair sample. It grants to the petitioner, “ power to construct, maintain, and use a railway . . . over, along, and upon such of the streets, highways, bridges, and lands in the city of Nashua ... as may be necessary to accommodate the public travel and transportation on the same, and as said grantees at their first meeting and from time to time thereafter shall determine.” In these cases, as in the case of steam railroad corporations, it was necessary that means should be provided for making the routes definite (Con *277 cord v. Horse Railroad, 65 N. H. 30); and so in all the charters except the three last granted, it is provided that the roads shall be laid out by the selectmen of the towns in which they are located, in like manner as highways are laid out. In one of the three excepted cases, the consent of the railroad commissioners to the location must be obtained in addition to such laying out, and in the other two cases the corporation is authorized to make the location after obtaining the consent of the railroad commissioners thereto, without the intervention of the selectmen or any other tribunal. The charters also provide that the selectmen shall locate the tracks within the highway limits. The rights and privileges of these corporations are more general or comprehensive than those. of corporations formed under the general law. The questions submitted to the selectmen or railroad commissioners arise when the corporations attempt to define their rights. They are subsidiary in character, not fundamental.

The question before the court is whether the legislature, by the act of 1895, intended to amend all outstanding charters, by substituting the court for the selectmen as the tribunal to decide this subsidiary question. It has already been seen that a particular duty is assigned to the court in the formation of railroad corporations (both steam and street) under the general law, namely, the legislative duty of determining the fundamental question whether the public good requires the corporation. No other duty was assigned to the court in the formation of steam railroad corporations. The performance of the duty in respect to street railway corporations necessarily lays out the route of the proposed railway because of the definiteness required in the course of the proceedings. The laying out is an incident to the determination of the fundamental question.

It is not provided in the act, in so many words, that the court shall lay out the roads of existing corporations. The allegation that such was the intent of the legislature is based wholly upon a parenthetical clause contained in section 5. The section relates to the location of railways within the highway limits after they have beeu laid out. Its first sentence provides that “ all.. . . street railways occupying any portion of a public highway or street shall be located thereon,” etc.,— implying that a right to occupy some portion of the highway or street has already been acquired. The right is acquired in the case of voluntary corporations by the fact of incorporation, and in the case of other corporations, by the laying out in accordance with their charters. The next sentence of the section provides that the mayor and aldermen or the selectmen, as the case may be, “ after the determination, as herein provided, that the public good requires the building of the proposed railway on the proposed route ” (the clause referred to), may make the location, and prescribes the *278 procedure for so doing. If the words “ as herein provided” had been omitted, the clause would have no weight in supporting the allegation of those who favor the petition. A laying out of the proposed route by selectmen would then answer the terms of the clause as literally and fully as a laying out by the court. But it is alleged that these words disclose an intent that the laying out in all cases shall be done by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 858, 69 N.H. 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-the-nashua-street-railway-nh-1897.