Taber v. New York, Providence & Boston Railroad

67 A. 9, 28 R.I. 269, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 A. 9 (Taber v. New York, Providence & Boston Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taber v. New York, Providence & Boston Railroad, 67 A. 9, 28 R.I. 269, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 41 (R.I. 1907).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

By an act passed at the May session of the General Assembly, 1888, permission was given to the defendant railroad company, among other things, “to widen, construct, and use its old roadbed in the city of Providence, and to extend the same across Henderson street, through Allen's avenue, so called, and in the same direction, until it comes to Eddy street.” An amendment to this act, passed at the January session, 1891, merely extended the time in which the railroad company might file its location in the Court of Common Pleas.

On the 22d day of July, 1891, the railroad company located its railroad in Allen’s avenue, in pursuance of the authority given it by said acts and filed its report, and a plat of its said location, in the Court of Common Pleas in Providence. May 15, 1896, it filed in the Common Pleas Division of the Supreme Court an abandonment of a portion of its said location, retaining a strip forty feet wide in the center of Allen’s avenue.

On February 14th, 1896, the petitioner filed his petition, in *272 said Common Pleas Division, that commissioners be appointed to estimate damages caused by said location. After numerous hearings, and an amendment of the petition, the same was-granted, and three commissioners were appointed by the court to estimate damages.

At the time of said location, and up to the present time, the claimant, Tiffany, owned a tract of land, consisting of a large number of lots on the Allen plat, extending from Allen’s avenue out to the harbor line, and said Allen’s avenue was a part of said plat.

The claimant duly filed and proved his claim for damages by reason of said location, before said commissioners, and in their report, filed in said Common Pleas Division, December 27,. 1900, said Tiffany was awarded the sum of $2,718. From this-award Tiffany appealed, and his claim for damages was there-afterwards tried to a jury.

Upon such jury trial no damages whatever were awarded said claimant.

After verdict the claimant moved that a new trial be granted him, which motion was denied, and he duly excepted thereto..

He then filed his bill of exceptions t,o the rulings of the trial judge and to his denial of said motion, and the case is now before us o,n said excéptions.

The exceptions raise the following questions :

1. Is the railroad company entitled to occupy its said location, forty feet in width in Allen’s avenue, to the exclusion of the public?

2. Is the claimant Tiffany entitled to damages for the taking by the railroad company of his land in said Allen’s avenue?

3. Is said claimant entitled to damages, caused by the location of said railroad, to his land east of and abutting on said Allen’s avenue, and not covered by tide water?

4. Is said claimant entitled to damages, caused by said location, to tide-flowed lands adjoining his upland on said Allen’s-avenue?

5. If the claimant is entitled to damages by reason of said location, are benefits from said location which are general to* *273 all abutters on said Allen’s avenue to be deducted from Ms damages?

(1) We tMnk the first question must be answered in the negative. At the time of the location of the railroad Allen’s avenue was a public highway. The act authorizing the extension of the railroad through said avenue provided:

“Sec. 2. Said railroad company shall not lay any rails in any of the streets in the city of Providence without the permission of the city council of said city, and upon such terms and conditions as it may prescribe.”

A public highway can not be condemned for railroad purposes without express legislative authority. And when the consent of the municipality in which the highway is situated is required by the act granting the authority it is a condition precedent to any valid right to use the street. City of Philadelphia v. River Front R. Co., 173 Pa. St. 334; Appeal of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co., 1 Penn. 449; West Jersey Traction Co. v. Camden Horse R. Co., 53 N. J. Eq. 163. The right of a railroad to cross or pass along a highway does not include the right to build permanent structures upon it (other than its tracks at the grade of the street), or to use it for a freight yard, or any exclusive purpose, but it is limited to a reasonable use by crossing, passing, and repassing, consistent with the earlier public right. Tate v. Ohio, etc., R. Co., 7 Ind. 479; Lackland v. North Missouri R. Co., 31 Mo. 180; Savannah, etc., R. Co. v. Shiels, 33 Ga. 601; Gahagan v. B. & L. R. Co., 1 Allen, 187. In this case the court (p. 190) says: “It was undoubtedly true that the defendants could not lawfully use the highway as a part of their freight yard; that is to say, they had no right to make the exclusive use of it which their own convenience required, which they could make of their own property. But they could pass and repass upon the highway for any lawful purpose, provided they used it only to a reasonable extent, and in a reasonable manner, without encroaching upon the rights of others who had an equal right to use it.” In Gear v. C. C. & D. R. R. Co., 43 Iowa, 83, the railroad company took one hundred feet of land for a right of way. A part of tMs right of way was a travelled road, if not a public highway. The court says: “When a railroad com *274 pany lays its tracks upon a public highway, it undertakes at its peril, by some means, to put the public highway in as good condition for travel as before. For its neglect to do this it may be indicted, and, if necessary to protect the public in the use of the highway, the obstruction may, by a proper order, be abated even if the result be the destruction of the railroad at the point where it obstructs the public travel.”

(2) As to the second question: Allen’s avenue being a public highway at the time of the location of the railroad, the company could only lay its rails therein with the consent of the city council of Providence, and could not so use the street as to prevent the reasonable use of the- same as such public highway. B.ut in addition to the right to lay rails with such consent of the city council, the company in this case has a location forty feet in width along Allen’s avenue in the center thereof. It has not been content with the right to lay rails, but has exercised the right, under the act above referred to, of taking said forty-foot strip as a railroad location. Such being the case, and the fee to the center of the street being in Tiffany, it is a taking of his property for which just compensation must be made. Before the location of the railroad company, if the highway had been abandoned the use of the land in question would have reverted to Tiffany. After the location, in case of such abandonment the land would still be subject to the easement of the railroad use. As was said by Storrs, C. J., in Imlay v. Union Branch R. R. Co., 26 Conn. 249 (p.

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Bluebook (online)
67 A. 9, 28 R.I. 269, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taber-v-new-york-providence-boston-railroad-ri-1907.