State v. Inhabitants of Gorham

37 Me. 451
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 Me. 451 (State v. Inhabitants of Gorham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Inhabitants of Gorham, 37 Me. 451 (Me. 1854).

Opinion

Rice, J.

— This is an indictment for a defective highway and bridge, situated in the town of Gorham, and is based upon the provisions of § 57, c. 25, R. S.

Section 16, of c. 81, R. S., provides, that every rail road corporation shall maintain and keep in repair, all bridges, with their abutments, which said corporation shall construct, for the purpose of enabling their road to pass over or under any turnpike road, canal, highway, or other way.”

[454]*454This provision it is contended, to that extent exonerates towns from the general liability for defects in the highways within their limits, imposed upon them by the provisions of § 57, c. 25, and that, for that reason, the defendants are not liable in this prosecution.

This presents a question of much importance, both to towns and to the public generally. By the introduction of rail roads into our State, and from the mode in which they are necessarily constructed, the cases in which it has been found necessazy to cross streets and public highways, under circumstances which have reqizired, for the accommodation of the public travel upon such ways, the cozzstruction of bridges, similar to the one which is now the subject of complaint, are very numerous, and the rapid extension of rail roads, within the limits of the State, will multiply those cases almost indefinitely.

At common law, the obligation to maintain and repair bridges and highways originated, generally, in prescription, or by reason of the tenure by which lands or other property or privileges were held. Prima facie, the liability to repair public bridges was upon the counties, but they could relieve themselves by showing that the liability in particular cases was by prescription or otherwise upon other parties.

By the statute of 22 Henry YIII, entitled, “ For bridges and highways,” which’ Lord Coke says was in affirmance of the coznmon law, the modes of determining who are liable to znaintain bridges, and to provide means for their repair, were distinctly provided. As the provisions of this early statute have been very much relied upon in the argument, it may not be inappropriate to make such extracts therefrom as will fully show its objects, and the scope of its general provisions.

The first section of that statute provides that, “justices of the peace in every shire, &c., shall have power and authority, to inquire, hear and determine in the King’s general sessions of the peace, of all manner of annoyances of bridges broken in the -highways, to the damage of the King’s [455]*455leige people, and to make such process and pains upon every presentment afore them, for the reformation of the same, against such as owen to be charged for the making or amending of such bridges, as the king’s justices of his bench use commonly to do, &c.

“ II. And when in any parts of this realm it cannot be known and proved what hundred, riding, wapentake, city, borough, town or parish, nor what person certain, or body politic, ought of right to make such bridges decayed, by reason whereof such decayed bridges, for lack of knowledge of such as owen to make them, for most part lie long without amendment, to the great annoyance of the king’s subjects.

“ III. For the remedy thereof, be it enacted, &c., that in every such case, the said bridges if they be without city or town corporate, shall be made by the inhabitants of the shire or riding, within which the said bridge decayed shall happen to be.” This section then proceeds to provide for the repair of bridges in cities, towns corporate, &c.

The fourth section then makes provision for the “ speedy refoi’mation” and amending of bridges in “ every case where it cannot be known and proved what persons, lands, tenements and bodies politic owen to make and repair” them.

It will be observed, that this statute does not impose ujjon counties the duty, absolutely, of repairing the public bridges. But to remedy an existing evil, arising from the inability to prove what party ought, of right, to repair such decayed bridges, by reason of which they “for most part lie long without amendment,” it was provided, that when that fact could not be proved, the liability should rest upon the county, for the very satisfactory reason, given by Lord Coke, “because it is for the common good and ease of the whole county.”

On examination of the English Reports, it will be found, that this prima facie, but contingent liability, of counties to repair public bridges, existing both at common law, and by the statute of 22 Henry YIII, is recognized in all the [456]*456cases. In no case which has fallen under our observation, has that liability been treated as unqualified and absolute. Thus it was held in Regina v. Inhabitants of Wilts, 1 Salk. 359, that the county was liable, because they failed to show, as they attempted, that the liability to repair was upon the village of Laycock.

In Rex v. Inhabitants of Nottingham, 2 Lev. 112, the county failed in a similar attempt, and for that reason were charged on their prima facie liability. In The King v. Inhabitants of Kent, 13 East, 220, the defendants were exonerated by showing that the Medway Navigation Company-were liable by the provisions of their charter to repair the bridge in question.

In the case of The King v. The Mayor and Aldermen of Stratford on Avon, 14 East, 349, the defendants were held liable because they were bound to repair by immemorial usage.

The mere fact, however, that a private individual built a bridge in the highway, did not, necessarily, charge him with its repair and maintenance, but if it become useful to the county in general, the county shall repair it. 5 Barrow, 2594; 2 East, 342; 2 M. & S. 513.

There is still another class of cases in which it is supposed that both by the common law and under the statute of Henry Yni, counties are exonerated from their liability to repair bridges in the public highways. The leading case, relied upon as authority, is cited in Rolle’s Ab. 368, where the principle is thus stated; If a man erect a mill for his own profit, and make a new cut for the water to come to it, and make a new bridge over it, and the subjects use to go Over it as over a common bridge, this bridge ought to be repaired by him who has the mill and not by the county, because he erected it for his own benefit.”

This case, which is very frequently cited, was much discussed in the case, The King v. Inhabitants of Kent, 2 M. & S. 513. L’d Ellenborough, in that case, caused search to be made for the original record of that case, which was [457]*457found and is published in a note to the case then under consideration. The record begins with a commission to inquire who ought to repair the bridges and causeway between Stratford Bow and Ham Stratford. This commission subsequently found that the bridges, &c. were built by Queen Matilda, and that she purchased certain lands, rents, meadows, and a certain water mill, &c., which she gave to the Abbess of Barking on condition that she and her successors should repair and sustain the said bridges and causeway, when it should be necessary, forever.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Me. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-inhabitants-of-gorham-me-1854.