State Ex Rel. City of Waterbury v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad

71 A. 942, 81 Conn. 645, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 A. 942 (State Ex Rel. City of Waterbury v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad) 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
State Ex Rel. City of Waterbury v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 71 A. 942, 81 Conn. 645, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 134 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Baldwin, C. J.

The Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company, the predecessor in title of the defendant, having a franchise from the State for the construction and operation of a railway in certain streets in the city of Waterbury, submitted to the city authorities a plan for exercising this franchise with respect to some of these streets, pursuant to General Statutes, § 3823. This provided that before any such company should proceed to construct a railway or lay new tracks, it should “cause a plan to be made showing the highway or highways in and through *650 which it proposes to lay its tracks, the location of the same as to grade and the center line of said highways, and such changes, if any, as are proposed to be made in any highway,” and that “said plan shall be presented to the mayor and court of common council of each city . . . within which such company proposes to operate its railway, who shall thereupon, after public notice, proceed to a hearing of all parties interested therein, and after such hearing may accept and adopt such plan, or make such modifications therein as to them shall seem proper, and shall, within sixty days after the presentation of such plan, notify such company in writing of their decision thereon and of such modifications therein as they have made”; and that “no such company shall construct such railway or lay additional tracks, except in accordance with a plan approved by the authorities aforesaid, or approved on appeal, by the railroad commissioners or'the superior court, as provided in §§ 3832, 3833, and 3834.”

The plan presented was an entirety. It was denominated a plan for an “Extension from East Main Street to the Pearl Lake Road.” The proposed location started in East Main Street, and was to end at the Pearl Lake Road, reaching the latter by way of Chapel Street.

The approval of the plan was an approval of it in its entirety. Such an approval, either by the city authorities or given upon an appeal from their action, was a condition precedent to the location of such an extension. Central Ry. & Elec. Co.’s Appeal, 67 Conn. 197, 210, 35 Atl. 32.

The right to make a location of a railway or of any part of it is a power of election, and when once exercised is exhausted, in the absence of a statute to the contrary. Hartford & C. W. R. Co. v. Wagner, 73 Conn. 506, 509, 48 Atl. 218. The location by the Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company of its extension from East Main Street to the Pearl Lake Road has been made. It has been made and approved as a whole. . The company did not thereby come *651 under an obligation to enter upon the construction of the piece of road thus located. But it did come under an obligation, if it should enter upon the construction of that piece, not to stop when it had constructed part of it, and proceed to operate cars upon that part, without going forward further, within a reasonable time, to complete the extension.

The city authorities had power to modify the plan submitted as a condition of their approval, in any way legitimately affecting one or more of the particulars which the statute required such plans to specify. One of these particulars was the grade proposed for the tracks: another was the change, if any, to be made in any highway. The city authorities were of opinion that changes were proposed in the plan with respect to that part of the route running from Baldwin Hill to the terminus of the extension, which required modification. Their approval was therefore conditioned on the company's bringing the street, in that part of the extension, throughout its full width, to a specified grade, and putting it, both within and outside of the railway tracks, in good condition for public travel. Another condition required this and certain other work to be completed, and the whole extension to be put in operation, by November 15th, 1904.

These conditions were strictly modal. They related to the manner of proceeding. The first guarded the public against irregular grades and too narrow a roadway: the second guarded the public against unnecessary delays in the performance of the work, and insured their receiving the full benefit of the entire extension, if any part of it were constructed and used. Both were germane to the plan of location. Central Ry. & Elec. Co.’s Appeal, 67 Conn. 197, 214, 219, 35 Atl. 32; Waterbury’s Appeal, 78 Conn. 222, 225, 61 Atl. 547.

It is argued that, since the State had given the company a right to locate its railway in the streets in question *652 within a period which would not have elapsed on November 15th, 1904, this time could not be shortened by the city. This right of location, however, was given subject to the approval and control in certain particulars of the city authorities. It was a qualified, not an absolute right. The company could not begin the laying of a track by digging up the pavement in a busy thoroughfare and leave things in such a shape for months or years. It must act reasonably in the exercise of its franchise, and the General Assembly left it with the municipal authorities, in the first instance, to see that it should so act. The order of approval now in question was in effect a declaration by proper agents of the law that the public interest required that the particular extension contemplated should, if undertaken, be carried to completion during the current season.

It follows that the specific ground on which the memorandum of decision indicates that the writ was quashed was insufficient. Part of the extension approved having been constructed and put in operation, by the Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company, it came under an obligation, so far as appears from the writ, to build the rest of it, and put that in operation; conforming, as respects so much of the route as runs from Baldwin Hill Street to the terminus at Pearl Lake Road, to the condition imposed by the city in that regard.

If the entire extension had been so completed and put in operation, it is certain that no part of it could have been subsequently abandoned, at the will of the company. State v. Hartford & N. H. R. Co., 29 Conn. 538, 547. The reasons for this apply conversely. The benefits and the burdens coming from the conditional approval of the location go together. It was not within the company’s power to accept and take advantage of what it deemed beneficial, and yet escape the burdens incident to a full completion of the extension in the manner authorized.

It appears from the judgment-file that the Superior *653 Court found all the issues for the defendant, and adjudged the writ insufficient. If, therefore, any of the grounds assigned for quashing it were valid, there was no error.

The first ground was that the defendant was no party to the proceedings had in 1904. This is immaterial, since its succession to the rights, franchises, and obligations of the Connecticut Railway and Lighting Company came at a later date;

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 942, 81 Conn. 645, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-city-of-waterbury-v-new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-conn-1909.