Town of Tolland v. Town of Willington

26 Conn. 578
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 26 Conn. 578 (Town of Tolland v. Town of Willington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Tolland v. Town of Willington, 26 Conn. 578 (Colo. 1857).

Opinion

Ellsworth, J.

It appears that in 1807 there was abridge, 150 feet long, spanning the Willimantie river, between the towns of Tolland and Willington. It had ever been the practice, as it was the duty, of these towns, to build and maintain this bridge at their joint and equal expense, as the statute directs where a river or stream is the dividing line between two towns. The bridge standing in 1807 was carried off by high water in 1818, and the towns, concluding that it would be best to reduce this space of 150 feet by filling a part of it with abutments of earth, gravel and stone, in order that the bridge or structure might be more permanent, very much reduced the open space, and built a bridge of wood, which latter was replaced by the towns in 1835, when the space was still more reduced by further extending the abutments into the river, until the distance between the abutments was reduced to about sixty-five feet.

The neglect which has given rise to the damages and suit in question was an omission to place a proper railing on the north or upper side of the solid part of the work on the Tolland' side of the river, but within the original space of 150 feet. The language of the motion is, “ all of the aforesaid bridges and abutments were made and have been maintained by said towns, at their joint and equal expense.”

An injury having been sustained and damages being claimed by William S. Moore and William W. Moore, and a suit brought by William S. Moore against the towns jointly, and the persons injured being willing to compromise for $275, the towns agreed with each other that if Tolland would, in the first instance, pay the said Moores the $275, Willington would repay Tolland the one-half, provided Willington was by law equally liable with Tolland for said damages. The plaintiffs have paid the sum named to the Moores and the latter have released their claims.

There being no dispute as to the facts of the settlement [580]*580and of the payment of the $275, this suit presents this single question, — Were the defendants equally liable with the plaintiffs for these damages? Or, in another form, were the towns bound jointly"to keep and maintain this abutment and railing ? The court has found that they were liable. This finding seems to us exactly to meet the point in issue and to settle the disputed fact upon which the defendants were to become obligated to pay. If no error of the court has intervened in receiving the evidence upon which it has arrived at this conclusion, we do not see why the defendants are not liable on their promise. All the evidence before the court does not appear to be stated, but only a part, so far as we learn from the motion itself. It should have been stated to be all, if it were indeed all; or if, upon the facts which are stated, the judge had doubted of their legal sufficiency, he could have ruled one way or the other, or have reserved the question for this court, when we should have had a clean question of law on the record. At present, we have no evidence that the judge intended any thing of the kind. He made an absolute decision as to the liability of the defendants as the case lay before him on the evidence. We do not now see that but one error or supposed error is presented, and no other is found in the errors specially assigned. And as to the general assignment, it amounts to nothing, as will be apparent when we consider the point, as we will do presently. The special error to which we refer is the admission by the court of evidence on the part of the plaintiffs that the selectmen of both towns had always built and maintained the entire structure, whether solid or open, which served for a passage over the entire 150 feet, as a joint duty and at their joint expense. But. herein is no error. It is the constant practice to receive the acts of-selectmen, as conducing to prove the relation of the town towards highways, bridges, paupers, and whatever else comes within their appropriate province or jurisdiction. Selectmen stand on the same ground with other agents. The weight of the evidence will depend on circumstances, as in other cases of principals and agents. Here the length of time during Which succes[581]*581sive selectmen of the two towns have unitedly acted, the repetition and publicity of their acts, and the severe responsibilities and burthens assumed by the towns, give a decisive character to this evidence, and we are not surprised that the judge felt its full weight, and decided that the towns, having made and maintained the entire structure for the 150 feet as their joint bridge, abutment, or highway for a half century and more, were liable to pay these damages. We might add, were it necessary, that since it is clear, from the facts admitted, that the two towns were at first liable to build and maintain a bridge of some kind to connect the two points or banks 150 feet apart, little evidence could be necessary to prove the continuance of the obligation. Although it is not, in our view, necessary to go further, yet we must think a writ of error is not the proper or usual mode for bringing before this court the supposed mistake of the judge in receiving this evidence. For an error of this character in the superior court, under our law, a motion for a new trial is the true remedy. A writ of error or motion in error will bring up properly a revision of the declaration, pleadings and judgment, but not an error in receiving or rejecting evidence, or in the charge 5f the court. We notice it, that a salutary rule of law may be preserved and followed.

Much stress has been laid on the insufficiency in law of the facts specifically found by the judge, to sustain his conclusion that it was the duty of the towns to maintain the abutment and railing at their joint expense. We have already said that the judge’s motion does not present such a question; but further, no such error is assigned. The assignment of the first error is in these words:—“ That judgment should have been rendered for the defendants instead of the plaintiffs.” What is the error ? Is it in the declaration, the pleadings, the reception of evidence, or in something else ? We can not tell. Were the declaration insufficient, perhaps a general assignment would answer; for the meaning of such an assignment is this: that if the facts, each and all of them, are taken as stated by the plaintiff' in his declaration, still he is not entitled to judgment. But this [582]*582declaration is sufficient, and the error, if there be any, must be hunted out if we are to correct it, whereas, by the rule of this court, it must be specially pointed out before trial by a suitable assignment.

Allowing, however, that we can notice that, from the facts recited in the motion, (assuming them to be all the facts,) the judge has drawn an inference that Willington is jointly bound with Tolland to maintain this railing, we are not satisfied that he has therein committed an error, for it may be that this abutment is part of the bridge. We can not say, as matter of law, how this is. We can not decide, as matter of law, what is bridge or what is abutment,—where one begins and the other ends, or what is mere highway. It is more a question of fact than of law, and may be sometimes a very nice and difficult one. If a bridge is considered to be a pathway for traveling over a stream of water, or if the work of a bridge includes whatever is necessary to make it accessible, as we think is intended by the statute respecting bridges, when it requires towns to maintain necessary bridges, the abutments may be parts of a bridge. At any rate, these towns have so treated this structure, whether of earth, wood, or stone, which occupies this space of 150 feet.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Conn. 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-tolland-v-town-of-willington-conn-1857.