State v. Tupper

23 S.C.L. 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 23 S.C.L. 135 (State v. Tupper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Tupper, 23 S.C.L. 135 (S.C. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question to be decided is, whether the Railroad Company have, by their charter, or by the Acts of 1828 and 1832, the legal right to use locomotive steam engines, in transporting their cars from Line to Mary streets?

The principles of law and policy involved, are not novel; but their application to such a case, makes up much interest in the issue. Railroads have just commenced, but are already in vigorous growth — and the question naturally arises, how shall they be treated in law? According to law, is the answer.

[137]*137By their charter of 1827, the company is authorized to construct a railroad “ from the city of Charleston to Savannah river,” &c. By the Act of 1828, the company are authorized to farm out any part of their right of conveyance, and to prescribe the locomotive to be used — and by the Act of 1832, p. 52, the following enactment is made: “ Be it further enacted, that the said company be and they are hereby authorized and empowered to construct a single track of their road and the necessary number of turn out tracks, from the present termination of their road at Line street, on Charleston neck, to the Boundary line of the city of' Charleston, through any public streets, roads or squares, on the said track; Provided, that no locomotive steam engine be used below Line street; and provided also, that the railroad be so constructed as not to impede the ordinary passage of carriages and -persons along the said roads, streets or squares.”

These are all the specific enactments that belong to the case, and we look in vain for any express authority to use locomotive engines on any part of the road. But the Act of 1832, authorizes an extension of the road from its termination at Line street, down to Boundary street, prohibiting in the same sentence the use of steam engines on this part of the road. This seems to be a specific exception to an admitted power, plainly indicating that the company have authority to use such engines on other parts of the road. It is no more than an indication ; but it enforces the reasonable supposition, that such a power was implied, by the original authority to construct a railroad, and which power had been already, in 1832, carried into practical operation. Throughout the former road to Line street, steam engines were used from the beginning. I think that it may be justly inferred, that the company bad general authority to use steam engines as their propelling power. This obvious intention of an Act, plainly implied by its context and concurring with its object, is part of the act in terms ; that power is as much embraced as horse power ; yet steam power is not absolutely essential to railroads; other power may be used; and we would hesitate to say that the Legislature could not regulate or even prohibit the use of a peculiar locomotive power, which it had never expressly granted by the company’s charter, and which was not absolutely essential to the general authority to construct a railroad, [138]*138although it is a most convenient power. But it is not necessary to decide such a question. The Act af 1832,. assumes that the termination of the road was at Line street; and in point of fact the company had there terminated the road, and never before 1884 constructed the extension of the road to Mary street, and then used the motive power by means of horses, up to 1835, at which time they substituted steam for horse power, and the indictment followed. Now, after such assumption by the Legislature, that the road terminated at Line street, such practical admission by the company, that it did there terminate: and after so plain an acceptance of the further right, under the Act of 1832, to extend the road below Line street, without the use of steam power, it would be hazardous to conclude that the company had the absolute right under their original charter, to extend the road from Line to Boundary streets, and to use locomotive steam power on that part, in defiance of the prohibition of the Act of 1832.

Admit for a moment that they originally had the absolute right to the steam engine, yet it is plain they must have • accepted the limitation as well as the privileges conferred by the Act of 1832 ; and one of these limitations is, the prohibition to use steam power below Line street. This limitation, then, to the use of the steam engine, would seem to follow as by consent, and the acceptance of the Act of 1832.

This view entirely counteracts the argument drawn from the letter of the Act of 1827, to construct a railroad from the outer verge of the city of Charleston to Hamburg, with the implied privilege of using the steam power at every step, as inseparable from the right of using the road itself.

But now take another view. Admit that the company has, as incident to the railroad, the right to use any motive power whatever; and that this road might be brought to Boundary street, under the original charter; yet is it not plain that such incidental power must be used, as any man must use his most unalienable rights and privileges? That is, in such away as not to infringe another person’s rights, and also, so as to create no public nuisance. It is in this, that the company claim exemption; but nine nuisances out of ten arise from the abuse or misuse of some undoubted right or privilege. The useful and now indispensable tallow-chandlery and soap-[139]*139boiling, become nuisances when placed in a populous town ; no one can question the right to erect such a manufactory, yet in a particular position it would become a nuisance. The notion, then, that the incidental right of using steam power, would justify its use to impel the cars of a railroad through a town already settled like Charleston Neck, would rather present a question of nuisance or not, to be decided by a jury, not by the Judge. But no such question is made in the present case. The jury have decided on the facts, and we must find in the defence a legal justification of the nuisance so verified by the verdict, or the verdict must stand.

The principle last noticed is very general. This corrective power of the law, makes despotic powers (and they are not a few in any society,) inure to their proper end: and, its various application is a distinguishing feature in modern law, modern policy, and modern government. Even verdicts might, and would become nuisances, in some cases, but for the corrective power, which may say even to the country— “ Error has crept in, ,go then, and again consider your decision, and respect the laws of the land.” And such is the authority of their own laws, and such the power of reason, that the very hands that caused, obey the mandate and remove all complaint in a second verdict. Civilization would advance its tranquil tide with tardy gradations, indeed, without the principle, that the right of using, should not be carried in practice to the abuse of our privileges. I might well stop here, but it may be satisfactory in a case of new impression, to notice leading adjudiciations made elsewhere, upon the same subject. Judges are under great obligations to be governed by uniform principles of law, and we are not to suffer the exigency of a particular case, to creep in, and infract such principles, however hard the consequences upon individuals, or important the interest at stake.

In not one of these adjudications is there a doubt suggested, that locomotive steam engines, when used on railroads, may be the means of nuisances in certain locations. In the case of the King against Morris, Barn. & Ald.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.C.L. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tupper-scctapp-1838.