State v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railway Co.

85 Iowa 516
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 23, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 85 Iowa 516 (State v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railway Co., 85 Iowa 516 (iowa 1892).

Opinion

Geangee, J.

I. It is first' urged that the commissioners have no authority to make such an order, 1. Railroads: private crossing: jurisdiction of railway commission. because it affects a private, and not a public, right, and that the law authorizing railroad commissioners to make ‘rules, orders and regulations” as to railroads [518]*518relates only to such feorporations in their capacity as common carriers, and to matters affecting the public as distinguished from private or individual rights.

To a proper consideration of the point presented we should somewhat particularize the complaints upon which the commissioners acted in making the order as they appear in the petition, and are admitted by the demurrer. It appears from these statements that the land of Mr. Cutler is by the railroad track cut diagonally, and in nearly equal parts; that it is an inclosure used as a pasture, in which is kept a large amount of stock; that it is “necessary to drive” said stock over and across the said defendant’s road as often as twice a day; “and that the defendant refused and still refuses to build or furnish an adequate crossing for him so that he can safely transfer his said stock from one side of the defendant’s said railroad track to the other in said pasture.” By Code, section 1268, it is provided: “.When any’ person owns land on both sides of any railway, the corporation owning the same shall, when requested so to do, make and keep in good repair one cattleguard and one causeway or other adequate means of crossing the same at such reasonable place as may be designated by the owner.”

It now becomes a question whether or not the adequate means of crossing railway tracks within the meaning of the section pertains to private or individual rights to the exclusion of a public right or obligation in regard to them. In judicial proceedings there has been considerable comment in regard to the public character of such corporations and their amenability to legislative control because of that character. The construction of railway lines of necessity requires that the estates of others shall in a sense become subservient to them. The public demand for them because of their public utility has induced legislation by which land-owners must, for a compensation, if not agreed upon to be. [519]*519settled under the forms of law, yield a right of way over their lands for railway lines. This exercise of eminent domain in their favor is because of their ‘ ‘public character, relations, and uses.” Such rights are not granted in aid of mere private purposes.

These facts are highly important in determining to what extent rights and obligations growing out of the exercise of corporate functions as a result of such legislation are public or private. In so far as the law gives to the corporation rights and privileges, as against the land-owner, for the construction and maintenance of railway lines, the rights and privileges are of a public nature, and enforceable against the landowner because of that nature. The legislative authority thus exercised in favor of the corporation can only be justified by the same authority granting adequate protection to the land-owner, by prescribing the manner of the exercise of such functions by the corporation and in a way on the one hand to preserve to the public and the corporation the full benefits designed by the franchise, and on the other to preserve to the land-owner, to the fullest extent consistent with the franchise, the enjoyment of his property rights.

The section of the statute quoted is a part of the law under which the defendant company accepted the franchise and constructed its railway, and by the admitted facts of the case it has failed to provide an adequate crossing on the land of Mr. Cutler. Its obligation to provide such a crossing arises out of its acceptance of corporate rights under the general laws of the state. The relation of the land-ownerto the corporation is involuntary, — the result of a public necessity. His rights as against the corporation to an adequate crossing are not in the usual sense contractual. The obligation of the corporation to make such crossings is primarily to the public, resulting from the acceptance of its franchise. It may inure, under legal rules, to the [520]*520benefit of the land-owner, but not in such a sense that the public is divested of a right or interest therein. If such right or interest is no more than to enforce a compliance with the terms and conditions of the graut to the corporation, and that in respect to individual rights arising out of the transactions of the public with the corporation, it is still a right that the law equitably administered will recognize. If the public, in furtherance of its general interests, says to A., a land-owner, “You must yield a right of way over your land to a corporation for railway purposes, but a condition of this requirement is that adequate means of crossing such railway shall be preserved to you,” is it not in harmony with equity and good government that the public, while compelling A. to observe the terms of the grant in favor of the corporation, should preserve and exercise a right to compel the corporation to observe the particular conditions of its acceptance from the public, whereby the individual rights of A. , pertaining expressly to the grant, may be preserved? Let us view the situation in the light of the facts in £his case. The defendant company has accepted its franchise and constructed its road across the land of Mr. Cutler. The use of the land as a pasture requires that a large amount of stock shall cross this road twice a day. Mr. Cutler is entitled to an adequate crossing which the company, by its demurrer, admits that it has not given him. We are of the opinion that the public has such a right or interest arising out of the grant of the franchise that it may, if, indeed, it should not, compel the corporation to observe its undertaking. The contention .in behalf of the public interest in the crossing is somewhat aided by the fact, that the crossing for the passage of stock over the track affects the public safety in the operation of trains. In many instances the added security of an undergrade over a grade crossing might be the controlling consideration in ordering a change.

[521]*521We should next inquire if the public, through the legislative power, has attempted the discharge of such a, duty, because it is urged that the statute creating the board of railroad commissioners, and defining their duties, gives to the board no authority over “private crossings,” and the crossing in question would come within that class, for it is not one for use by the public. Section 3, chapter 77 of Acts of the Seventeenth General Assembly, provides that “said commissioners shall have the general supervision of all roads in the state operated by steam, and shall inquire into any neglect or violation of the laws of this state by any railroad corporation doing business therein, or by the officers, agents, or employees thereof, and shall also from time to time examine and inspect the condition •of each railroad in the state, and of its equipments, and the manner of its conduct and management, with reference to the public safety and convenience, and, for the purpose of keeping the several railroad companies advised as to the safety of their bridges, shall make a semi-annual examination of the same and report their condition to the said companies. * * * Whenever, in the judgment of the railroad commissioners, it shall appear that any railroad corporation .fails in cmy respect ■or particular

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Bluebook (online)
85 Iowa 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mason-city-fort-dodge-railway-co-iowa-1892.