Town of Fairlee v. BOSTON & MAINE CORPORATION

244 A.2d 53, 127 Vt. 215, 1968 Vt. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 2, 1968
Docket882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 244 A.2d 53 (Town of Fairlee v. BOSTON & MAINE CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Fairlee v. BOSTON & MAINE CORPORATION, 244 A.2d 53, 127 Vt. 215, 1968 Vt. LEXIS 207 (Vt. 1968).

Opinion

Holden, C.J.

These proceedings originated in a petition of the town of Fairlee to the public service board. The town’s complaint alleged the defendant railroad had failed to comply with certain statutory requirements in the maintenance of its right of way in the town of Fairlee. The petition states that residents of the town of Fairlee, conducting farming operations adjacent to the defendant’s track, have been prevented from using their land for pasturing because of inadequate fencing. The town asserts that thistles and noxious weeds have spread from the railroad rights of way into adjoining *216 tillage land and farm crossings have become hazardous because of brush and trees which obscure the tracks from persons using the farm crossings. The town requested the board to order the defendant to construct adequate fences, maintain sufficient cattle guards at highway crossings and remove weeds, brush and trees along the road bed.

At the hearing, convened by the public service board in response to the petition, the defendant questioned the standing of the town to prosecute the petition and challenged the agency’s jurisdiction of the subject matter of the complaint.

The board heard the parties, issued findings of fact and directed the defendant to construct sufficient fencing and remove trees and other vegetation at farm and grade crossings in the town of Fairlee within prescribed time limits. The order was stayed, pending review by this Court of questions concerning the authority of the town to present the complaint to the public service board and the jurisdiction of the board to act on it.

Since 1849, railroad companies operating in Vemont have been required by statute to construct and maintain farm crossings along their rights of way for the use of proprietors of lands adjoining the railroad. 30 V.S.A. §1471 (1849, No. 41 §44). The following year the duty and obligation to construct and maintain good and sufficient fences on the sides of the road was imposed on railroad operators. 30 V.S.A. §1474 (1850, No. 51 §1).

Later, in 1882, railroad companies were required to cut and destroy “thistles and noxious weeds” growing within the surveyed boundaries of the railroad. 30 V.S.A. §§1536, 1537 (1882, No. 40 §§ 1-2). In case of the railroads’s failure to. do .so, the selectmen of the town, through which the road passed, shall notify the company and, if there is no compliance ten days after notice, the selectmen are required to remove the growth at town expense with a right to recover a penalty from the railroad in an action on the statute. In 1904 similar provisions were adopted, requiring the removal of trees within eighty rods of grade crossings. 30 V.S.A. §§1538, 1539. Upon the refusal or neglect of the railroad to comply, after sixty days written notice to the offender, the selectmen of the town concerned were called upon to do the necessary cutting and removal. And the statute imposes liability on the railroad for the damage occasioned by the neglect. 30 V.S.A. §§1538, 1539 (1904, No. 93 §§1-2).

*217 The town’s petition makes specific reference to these sections of the public service law. The defendant is quite correct in advancing the contention that these particular enactments were designed to afford special remedies to towns and private persons who have suffered from the railroad’s failure to perform the duties imposed by these provisions. From this premise, the railroad argues that the town of Fairlee is not aggrieved, that these sections make no provision for complaint by a municipality to the public service board and that agency is without jurisdiction to order removal of weeds, shrubs and trees, unless and until the notice requirement to the railroad has been fulfilled.

This contention overlooks the impact of No. 126 of the Acts of 1906. The findings make it clear that the public service board, in taking jurisdiction, was mindful of other provisions of the public service law.

Prior to 1906 the railroad commission, as the regulatory agency of that day, was without power to enforce its own orders. Persons aggrieved by the refusal or neglect of railroad companies to comply with regulatory statutes had to resort to private litigation in the courts of law and chancery. This procedure proved to be entirely inadequate to serve the public and private needs in the operation of railroads. Chief Justice Rowell has pointed out that this — “seems to have been the first time the Legislature took the matter in hand with a view to remedy the shortage of authority by conferring enough more to enable the (railroad) commissioners to deal with the matters within their jurisdiction more effectively and speedily than they had ever been able to do before.” Central Vermont Railway Company v. State of Vermont and Town of Hartford, 82 Vt. 145, 150, 72 A. 324, 327.

Without disturbing ancient statutes affording special remedies concerning the same subject matter, the General Assembly in 1906 delegated to the railroad commission the broadest jurisdiction “to hear, determine, render judgment, and make orders and decrees in all matters provided in the charter of any railroad corporation, or in the statutes of this state relating to railroads.” 1906, No. 126 §23, now 30 V.S.A. §806; Bacon v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 83 Vt. 421, 443, 76 A. 128; Sabre v. Rutland Railroad Co., 86 Vt. 347, 361, 85 A. 693; Town of West Rutland v. Rutland Railway Light and Power Co., 96 Vt. 413, 421, 121 A. 755. This included jurisdiction in all matters respecting the construction and maintenance of proper fences, cattle guards and farm crossings. The power also extended to the tracks, *218 which generally include the right of way, (See Bacon v. Boston & Maine Railroad, supra, 83 Vt. at 429, 76 A. 128), to insure accommodation of the public, safe operation and compliance with the law. 30 V.S.A. § 806(4) (5). The authority conferred on the railroad commission has been transferred through the public service commission to the present public service board. 1908, No. 116 §1; 1959, No. 329 §39. It is broad enough to include questions arising under earlier statutes dealing with related subject matter. Residents of Royalton v. Central Vermont Railway Co., 100 Vt. 443, 447, 138 A. 782.

The board’s jurisdiction can be invoked on its own initiative, by petition of the attorney general, the state’s attorney of the county, by ten or more freeholders, or in such other ways as the law may specifically provide. 30 V.S.A. §§805, 807. And the regulatory agency is required to keep itself informed as to the condition and safety of all railroads and see to it that they comply with the laws governing their operation in this state. 30 V.S.A. §801.

In a matter over which the commission has jurisdiction any person or corporation that claims to be injured by the unlawful action or neglect of those in operation or management of a railroad, may bring his cause for complaint before the commission. And while the town is not given specific standing, such as that afforded to state’s attorneys and the attorney general, it is an entirely adequate source of complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 A.2d 53, 127 Vt. 215, 1968 Vt. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-fairlee-v-boston-maine-corporation-vt-1968.