Eschweiler, J.
The work on the trunk highway in question here was being done pursuant to the provisions of secs. 1312 to 1317, Stats., providing for the state trunk highway system under federal aid and under the direction of the said highway commission, under the provision of secs. 1317m — 1 el seq.
The authority to require the defendant railroad corporation to either do the concrete surfacing itself of pay the cost thereof when done by the commission is based upon [608]*608the provisions of sec. 1299h — 1 (now sec. 81.20, Stats.), the parts of which material here are as follows:'
Section 1299h — 1. 1. “Whenever any . . . public highway in any . . . incorporated village .'. . shall extend upon, over or across the tracks or right of way of any railway company, such railway company shall, at its own expense, construct, grade and maintain in safe condition for public travel, the portion of. such street or highway extending upon, over or actoss the tracks or right of way of such railway company. Whenever any such . . . highway in any . . . incorporated village, . . . extending upon, over or across the tracks or right of way of any such railway company, shall be improved, paved or surfaced, or any such street or highway within the limits- of any incorporated city shall be improved, paved or surfaced under the provisions of sections 1312 to 1317, inclusive, or sections 1317m — 1 to 1317m — 15, inclusive, such railway company shall, at its own expense, improve, pave or surface such portion of such highway as shall extend upon, over or across the right of way of such railway company, in substantially the same manner and of substantially the same materials.”
Sub. 2, sec. 1299h — 1, provides that for failure by the railway company to do the work as above required, then the public officer having charge of the adjacent improvement shall do the work and the cost thereof shall be paid by the railway company.
This particular statute was created by ch. 120,- Laws of 1907. By ch. 97 of the Laws of 1915 the provision as to “paving” was inserted and sub-. 2, supra, addéd- to the original.
Another statutory provision akin to the one just cited is found in sec. 1299h — 9 (now sec. 81.19), createdby ch. 377 of the Laws of 1913, whereby the.duty is placed on steam railroads, at grade highway crossings, to .keep the surface of the. crossings between the tracks and rails-and extending four feet on either side of the outside rails in good condition and' repair for highway purposes; and provides for assessing and [609]*609collecting the cost of the work on default of its being done by the railroad company, and further provides that such duty and remedy given shall be' in addition to other duties and remedies and is not to be construed to repeal any other duties or remedies then existing.
Defendant does not disclaim liability for paving or surfacing in manner acceptable to the highway commission such portions of the crossing as lie within its. several tracks and extending four feet on either side thereof as provided in sec. 1299h — 9, last above quoted, and under the stipulated facts it appears that such has been done and the cost thereof is not included in the complaint.
The defendant asserts, however, as to the rest of the right of way; and as to the portion of the highway in front of the real estate outside the sixty-six-foot right of way and iised for freight or- depot grounds; and as to the culvert, that if sec. 1299h — 1, supra, must be construed as applying as to any such spaces or work, then the statute is unconstitutional and void because denying the railroad company due process of law and the equal protection of the law and in violation of the Fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution.
It is urged that this claim of power under sec. 1299A. — 1, supra, must be supported (and it is so contended on behalf of the plaintiff) upon the police power to provide for -the safety of the traveling public, and that the fixing of the outside lines of defendant’s right of way, irrespective of the width thereof or condition as to tracks thereon, is purely arbitrary and for that reason cannot stand.
Concededly the danger to the traveling public at such intersections is the track or tracks used for railroad traffic rather than the strip of land used for right of way. The former, therefore, rather than the latter establishes the point from which must be reckoned the zone of danger to the public and within which zone the state may concededly require of the one maintaining the danger the obligation of maintaining [610]*610reasonable safeguards. Theoretically such danger zone starts from the railroad track and extends to a vanishing point on each side thereof. Practically it is impossible to fix such vanishing point at any particular number of feet. With several possible practicable solutions open to it, the legislature, not the railroads nor the courts, has the option of choice. It might declare a definite space measured in lineal feet as the outside limits of such danger and require the railroads to keep such space in what the legislature reasonably determines to be a safe condition with regard to the other portions of the highway under the existing circumstances. This might, in instances of narrow rights of way or of several parallel tracks thereon, throw the outside lines of such danger zone well outside of the right of way and thereby compel the railroads to assume liability for such highway paving beyond their, right of way, just as the same rule might in other instances keep the liability well within such right of way. Again, it may, as it undoubtedly has here, consider that, balancing all these things, it will assume liability for the state, or place it upon the body paving or surfacing such highway up to the right of way and limit or extend the railroad’s liability and obligation to that strip of land which the railroad has by its own volition declared necessary for its trackage purpose. We cannot declare such legislative decision beyond its power. This view we deem supported by such decisions as Great Northern R. Co. v. State ex rel. Village of Clara City, 246 U. S. 434, 38 Sup. Ct. 346, affirming 130 Minn. 480, 153 N. W. 879; S. C. 132 Minn. 474, 157 N. W. 1069, L. R. A. 1918D, 1153; State ex rel. Fairmont v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 148 Minn. 91, 180 N. W. 925; Erie R. Co. v. Pub. Util. Comm’rs, 254 U. S. 394, 41 Sup. Ct. 169; Washington T. Co. v. District of Columbia, 265 Fed. 965.
We do not overlook, but consider immaterial here, the distinction which might be of weight were the power here claimed to be based upon liability predicated on ownership [611]*611of adjacent real estate merely, between the law in Minnesota and that here as to liability, or nonliability, for special assessments for street improvements. In Minnesota, as is pointed out in the cases above cited, the railroads there, by their payment of gross-earnings tax, are exempt from special assessments; here, though at first the rule was the.same (Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Milwaukee, 89 Wis. 506, 62 N. W. 417), yet by subsequent statute they are now liable for such. Chicago, M. & St.
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Eschweiler, J.
The work on the trunk highway in question here was being done pursuant to the provisions of secs. 1312 to 1317, Stats., providing for the state trunk highway system under federal aid and under the direction of the said highway commission, under the provision of secs. 1317m — 1 el seq.
The authority to require the defendant railroad corporation to either do the concrete surfacing itself of pay the cost thereof when done by the commission is based upon [608]*608the provisions of sec. 1299h — 1 (now sec. 81.20, Stats.), the parts of which material here are as follows:'
Section 1299h — 1. 1. “Whenever any . . . public highway in any . . . incorporated village .'. . shall extend upon, over or across the tracks or right of way of any railway company, such railway company shall, at its own expense, construct, grade and maintain in safe condition for public travel, the portion of. such street or highway extending upon, over or actoss the tracks or right of way of such railway company. Whenever any such . . . highway in any . . . incorporated village, . . . extending upon, over or across the tracks or right of way of any such railway company, shall be improved, paved or surfaced, or any such street or highway within the limits- of any incorporated city shall be improved, paved or surfaced under the provisions of sections 1312 to 1317, inclusive, or sections 1317m — 1 to 1317m — 15, inclusive, such railway company shall, at its own expense, improve, pave or surface such portion of such highway as shall extend upon, over or across the right of way of such railway company, in substantially the same manner and of substantially the same materials.”
Sub. 2, sec. 1299h — 1, provides that for failure by the railway company to do the work as above required, then the public officer having charge of the adjacent improvement shall do the work and the cost thereof shall be paid by the railway company.
This particular statute was created by ch. 120,- Laws of 1907. By ch. 97 of the Laws of 1915 the provision as to “paving” was inserted and sub-. 2, supra, addéd- to the original.
Another statutory provision akin to the one just cited is found in sec. 1299h — 9 (now sec. 81.19), createdby ch. 377 of the Laws of 1913, whereby the.duty is placed on steam railroads, at grade highway crossings, to .keep the surface of the. crossings between the tracks and rails-and extending four feet on either side of the outside rails in good condition and' repair for highway purposes; and provides for assessing and [609]*609collecting the cost of the work on default of its being done by the railroad company, and further provides that such duty and remedy given shall be' in addition to other duties and remedies and is not to be construed to repeal any other duties or remedies then existing.
Defendant does not disclaim liability for paving or surfacing in manner acceptable to the highway commission such portions of the crossing as lie within its. several tracks and extending four feet on either side thereof as provided in sec. 1299h — 9, last above quoted, and under the stipulated facts it appears that such has been done and the cost thereof is not included in the complaint.
The defendant asserts, however, as to the rest of the right of way; and as to the portion of the highway in front of the real estate outside the sixty-six-foot right of way and iised for freight or- depot grounds; and as to the culvert, that if sec. 1299h — 1, supra, must be construed as applying as to any such spaces or work, then the statute is unconstitutional and void because denying the railroad company due process of law and the equal protection of the law and in violation of the Fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution.
It is urged that this claim of power under sec. 1299A. — 1, supra, must be supported (and it is so contended on behalf of the plaintiff) upon the police power to provide for -the safety of the traveling public, and that the fixing of the outside lines of defendant’s right of way, irrespective of the width thereof or condition as to tracks thereon, is purely arbitrary and for that reason cannot stand.
Concededly the danger to the traveling public at such intersections is the track or tracks used for railroad traffic rather than the strip of land used for right of way. The former, therefore, rather than the latter establishes the point from which must be reckoned the zone of danger to the public and within which zone the state may concededly require of the one maintaining the danger the obligation of maintaining [610]*610reasonable safeguards. Theoretically such danger zone starts from the railroad track and extends to a vanishing point on each side thereof. Practically it is impossible to fix such vanishing point at any particular number of feet. With several possible practicable solutions open to it, the legislature, not the railroads nor the courts, has the option of choice. It might declare a definite space measured in lineal feet as the outside limits of such danger and require the railroads to keep such space in what the legislature reasonably determines to be a safe condition with regard to the other portions of the highway under the existing circumstances. This might, in instances of narrow rights of way or of several parallel tracks thereon, throw the outside lines of such danger zone well outside of the right of way and thereby compel the railroads to assume liability for such highway paving beyond their, right of way, just as the same rule might in other instances keep the liability well within such right of way. Again, it may, as it undoubtedly has here, consider that, balancing all these things, it will assume liability for the state, or place it upon the body paving or surfacing such highway up to the right of way and limit or extend the railroad’s liability and obligation to that strip of land which the railroad has by its own volition declared necessary for its trackage purpose. We cannot declare such legislative decision beyond its power. This view we deem supported by such decisions as Great Northern R. Co. v. State ex rel. Village of Clara City, 246 U. S. 434, 38 Sup. Ct. 346, affirming 130 Minn. 480, 153 N. W. 879; S. C. 132 Minn. 474, 157 N. W. 1069, L. R. A. 1918D, 1153; State ex rel. Fairmont v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 148 Minn. 91, 180 N. W. 925; Erie R. Co. v. Pub. Util. Comm’rs, 254 U. S. 394, 41 Sup. Ct. 169; Washington T. Co. v. District of Columbia, 265 Fed. 965.
We do not overlook, but consider immaterial here, the distinction which might be of weight were the power here claimed to be based upon liability predicated on ownership [611]*611of adjacent real estate merely, between the law in Minnesota and that here as to liability, or nonliability, for special assessments for street improvements. In Minnesota, as is pointed out in the cases above cited, the railroads there, by their payment of gross-earnings tax, are exempt from special assessments; here, though at first the rule was the.same (Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Milwaukee, 89 Wis. 506, 62 N. W. 417), yet by subsequent statute they are now liable for such. Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Janesville, 137 Wis. 7, 118 N. W. 182; Superior v. Lake Superior T. & T. R. Co. 152 Wis. 389, 140 N. W. 26.
As to the highway space fronting on the so-called depot grounds and beyond the sixty-six-foot right of way, we think there can be no liability placed upon defendant for the paving thereof under the statute above quoted. The plain language of the statute declaring the liability to be for the paving of so much of the public highway “as shall extend upon, over or across the right of way” should, when reasonably construed with the purpose of the statute in view, be limited to that strip used for trackage purposes — that which creates th^ danger at which the regulation is aimed.
The statutory requirements for the condemnation of lands for railroad purposes recognizes a substantial distinction between lands taken for strictly right of way and that taken for other railroad purposes, such as depot grounds, a distinction recently and fully discussed in Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. v. Becker, ante, p. 182, 196 N. W. 575. We see no reason why this distinction should be disregarded here, and therefore hold that the statute invoked does not authorize-the including in the judgment of the $405.72 allowed for the surfacing outside of the right of way.
As to the item for the new concrete culvert to replace the iron pipe culvert installed and maintained by defendant and used for the draining of the station grounds and tracks, there being no dispute but that such new culvert is necessary, from an engineering standpoint, in order to safely and [612]*612properly carry the new concrete pavement over that portion of the right of way where the culvert is located, we can see no substantial grounds for disturbing the judgment in that regard.
By the Court.- — Judgment modified by striking therefrom the item for surfacing outside of the right of way, and as so modified affirmed.