Southern Railway Co. v. City of Winston-Salem

165 S.E.2d 751, 4 N.C. App. 11, 1969 N.C. App. LEXIS 1431
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1969
DocketNo. 6921SC2
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 S.E.2d 751 (Southern Railway Co. v. City of Winston-Salem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Railway Co. v. City of Winston-Salem, 165 S.E.2d 751, 4 N.C. App. 11, 1969 N.C. App. LEXIS 1431 (N.C. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Parker, J.

Appellant railway attacks the allocation of the cost of erecting and maintaining the required signal devices at the two grade crossings of its tracks by City streets made by the two ordinances here in question as an arbitrary and unreasonable exercise of its police powers by the defendant City under all existing conditions and circumstances, thereby violating the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 17, of the North Carolina Constitution. The standard by which a valid exercise of the police power is to be tested has been stated by the North Carolina Supreme Court in Winston-Salem v. R. R., 248 N.C. 637, 642, 106 S.E. 2d 37, 41, as follows:

“Therefore, when the exercise of the police power is challenged on constitutional grounds, the validity of the police regulation primarily depends on whether under all the surrounding circumstances and particular facts of the case the regulation is reasonable; that is, whether it is reasonably calculated to accomplish a purpose falling within the legitimate scope of the [15]*15police power, without burdening unduly the person or corporation affected.”

The Court in that case further pointed out that changed conditions as they arise may bring the subject matter in question within the operation of the approved testing principle of reasonableness or may remove it therefrom. Therefore, in determining the validity of the cost allocation made by the two ordinances here in question, we must determine whether such allocation was reasonable under all existing conditions and surrounding circumstances of this case.

The North Carolina Supreme Court in Winston-Salem v. R. R., supra, held that an attempted exercise of its police powers by the City of Winston-Salem to require the railroad company in that case to bear the entire expense of constructing a new trestle to replace an existing trestle carrying its tracks over an existing street, which new trestle was made necessary by the widening incident to construction by the City of a new street which intersected with the existing street underneath the trestle, was unreasonable under the facts and circumstances of that case. On somewhat similar facts, this Court has also held in the case of Raleigh v. R. R., 4 N.C. App. 1, 165 S.E. 2d 751, that an attempt by the City of Raleigh to impose the entire cost of a new bridge carrying the railroad’s tracks over a city street made necessary by reason of the widening of such street by the city in order to facilitate the flow of traffic to and from other areas in the City, was an unreasonable exercise of the police power. The facts and circumstances of the case presently before us, however, are clearly distinguishable from the special facts and circumstances with which the North Carolina Supreme Court was concerned in Winston-Salem v. R. R., supra, and with the facts and circumstances with which this Court was concerned in Raleigh v. R. R., supra. Neither of those cases involved exercise of the police power to eliminate or minimize any danger to the traveling public such as exists in a grade crossing of a city street by railroad tracks. In each of those cases the new construction was not required to eliminate or minimize any element of danger arising from the existence or location of the railroad tracks or the operation of trains thereon. On the contrary the new construction in each of those cases was required solely to accommodate a wider underpass for the city street made necessary to accommodate an increasing flow of vehicular traffic which was in no way related to the existence or location of the railroad tracks. The new construction in no way benefited the railroads, but benefited many of their principal competitors. Under such circumstances, and in view of the changed economic conditions as they bore upon the [16]*16financial condition of the City on the one hand and the railroad on the other, it was held that the attempted imposition of the entire cost of the new construction on the railroad would be so unreasonable and arbitrary as to fail to meet the accepted testing standard for a constitutional exercise of the police power.

In the case with which we are presently concerned, however, the grade crossings involved clearly constitute hazards to the traveling public. This danger arises solely and directly by reason of the existence of appellant’s tracks and the operation of its trains thereon. Appellant railroad will receive direct benefits from the installation of the required signal devices in the form of a reduction in its potential tort liability. The facts and circumstances of this case, therefore, are more nearly comparable to those which existed in the earlier cases cited by the Supreme Court in Winston-Salem v. R. R., supra, particularly such cases as Durham v. R. R., 185 N.C. 240, 177 S.E. 17; and R. R. v. Goldsboro, 155 N.C. 356, 71 S.E. 514. In discussing these and other cases which had upheld as reasonable, and therefore as constitutional exercises of the police power, imposition of costs upon the railroad of eliminating dangers at crossings, the North Carolina Supreme Court in Winston-Salem v. R. R., supra, said (248 N.C. 637, 649) the following:

“The basic pattern of the foregoing decisions relied on by the City is that where impelling considerations of safety or convenience of the traveling public require alterations or improvements at a grade crossing, or that the grade crossing be eliminated entirely by carrying the tracks over a public way or the public way over the tracks by bridge, the duty of making the required alterations or improvements, or of providing the necessary bridge, ordinarily devolves upon the railroad company. The basis of this rule is the superior nature of the public’s right to the safe and unimpeded use of streets and highways. Erie R. R. v. Board of Utility Commissioners, supra (254 U.S. 394, 65 L. ed. 322). The thread of decision seems to be that if the operation of the railroad, either at grade level or upon a particular type of elevated overhead support for its tracks, interferes materially with the public safety or with the public convenience in the exercise of the superior right of the public to use the public way, then the railroad company, being regarded in law as the agency causing the dangers or inconveniences, is charged with a legal duty to remedy the situation and may be required to make alterations and changes of its crossing facilities. R. R. v. Minneapolis, 115 Minn. 460, 133 N.W. 169, Ann. Cas. 1912D, [17]*171029; Erie R. R. v. Board of Utility Commissioners, supra. However, the legal duty imposed by law on railroad companies and enforced by exercise of the police power in most of these crossing cases relates to the elimination of dangers and inconveniences to the traveling public which may be said to be of the company’s own making in the sense that the railroad is located so as to interfere with the superior right of the traveling public to the use of the public way. And, where the police power is invoked to require a railroad company to pay for a crossing improvement in furtherance of public safety, the exercise of the power usually relates to measures designed to eliminate specific dangers at the crossing, to prevent or minimize crossing accidents.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.E.2d 751, 4 N.C. App. 11, 1969 N.C. App. LEXIS 1431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-city-of-winston-salem-ncctapp-1969.