White River Turnpike Co. v. Vermont Central Rail Road

21 Vt. 590
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 21 Vt. 590 (White River Turnpike Co. v. Vermont Central Rail Road) 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
White River Turnpike Co. v. Vermont Central Rail Road, 21 Vt. 590 (Vt. 1849).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hall, J.

This was an appeal from the court of chancery. The bill, which was filed in 1846, states, that the plaintiffs were incorporated by the legislature of this state in the year IS00 and authorized to lay out and make a turnpike road from the mouth of White River to the second branch of that river; that the corporation was duly organized, and built the road, and have ever since kept it in good repair, and have rightfully, in conformity to their charter, kept [593]*593gates upon it, and received tolls from travellers over it, and that no person, or corporation, has a right to injure the road, or interrupt the plaintiffs, or travellers, in the use of it; — that the defendants, a corporation chartered by the General Assembly of this state in October, 1843, have laid out and surveyed a line for a rail road, and are preparing to build the same, in the valley of said White River, along and over the plaintiffs’ turnpike road, in many places crossing it in such manner as to stop all passing upon it, and in other places embracing the whole of the turnpike road, thereby interrupting, or entirely preventing, all travel or passing on the same; and that, if the road is permitted to be built, it will entirely destroy the plaintiffs’ turnpike road, and prevent all passing upon it with any kind of teams or carriages whatever. The bill prays for a perpetual injunction against the defendants, from taking any real estate of the plaintiffs for their rail road, and from locating or building it across or within the limits of the plaintiffs’ road, and from encroaching upon it in any manner.

From the answer of the defendants and the facts shown and agreed upon it appears, that the turnpike company laid out their road four rods wide, agreeably to their charter; that the rail road in many places is within the limits of the turnpike road, and that it crosses the turnpike road in four places, — in three of the places by means of bridges, the abutments of which stand within the limits of the turnpike road, but not within the travelled part of it, and once upon the track of the road; that some two or three acres of the turnpike road, in the whole, are covered by the rail road ; that the turnpike road is in places, for considerable distances, made narrower by the encroachments of the rail road, but that from eighteen to thirty feet is in all places left for the travelled part of the turnpike ; that in locating the rail road the defendants avoided passing over or within the limits of the turnpike road, whenever it could be avoided without great inconvenience and almost ruinous expense; and that no other, route along White River for the rail road could have been adopted, without greatly increased expense and difficulty. It is admitted by the plaintiffs, that the proceedings of the defendants in locating their road were regular, if they might locate it along White River, except in so far as they have encroached upon the plaintiffs’ turnpike road. Since the filing of the bill the rail road has been in [594]*594the process of construction; and the defendants have offered to agree with the plaintiffs upon the damages done to their road, and failing to do so, have caused their damages to be appraised by the Rail Road Commissioners; and from their appraisal the plaintiffs have appealed to the county court, where the appeal is now pending.

. The ground, upon which the plaintiffs claim relief, is, that the defendants have no right to build their road in such manner, as to cross or touch upon the limits of their turnpike road.

The first objection to the right of the defendants thus to construct their road rests upon an alleged want of constitutional power in the legislature of the state, to confer authority on the rail road company to take the plaintiffs’ property for'the use of their rail road. It is said, that the charter to the plaintiffs was a contract of the state with the turnpike corporation, which would be impaired by the execution of the grant to the defendants, and that such grant to the defendants cannot therefore be carried into effect, but in violation of that clause of the tenth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits any state from passing “ a law impairing the obligation of contracts.”

Upon this question it is deemed sufficient to say, that it now appears to be too well settled by authority to be controverted, that there is no implied contract by the state, in a charter of a turnpike or other private corporation, that their property, or even their franchise itself, shall be exempt from the common liability of the property of individuals to be taken for the public use; that it may be taken, on proper compensation being made ; that a rail road is an improved highway, and that property, taken for its use by authority of the legislature, is property taken for the public use, as much as if taken for any other highway ; and that the legislature may delegate its powers to a rail road corporation, to take private property for public use in the construction of their rail road, as well as to a turnpike corporation to take the like property for the public use in the construction of a turnpike road. Armington v. Barnett, 15 Vt. 745. West River Bridge Co. v. Dix, 16 Vt. 446. Boston Water Power Co. v. Boston & Worcester R. R, Co., 23 Pick. 360. Enfield Toll Bridge Co. v. Hartford & N. Haven R. R. Co., 17 Conn. 454.

It appears, also, to be equally well settled, that where there has been a legislative grant to a private corporation to erect a bridge, [595]*595turnpike, or other public convenience, which is not in its terms exclusive, there is no constitutional obligation on the legislature,— however strong a moral one there may be, — not to grant to a second corporation the right to erect another bridge, or turnpike, for a similar purpose, to be constructed so near the former as greatly to impair, or even to destroy, the value of the former ; and this, without making compensation to the first corporation for the consequential injury. Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 429. Enfield Bridge Co. v. Hartford & New Haven R. R. Co., 17 Conn. 454. Mohawk Bridge Co. v. Utica & Schenectady R. R. Co., 6 Paige 544. It is therefore unimportant to inquire, whether the defendants’ rail road charter contains any provision, by virtue of which the plaintiffs’ corporation can obtain compensation for an injury to their franchise, by the diversion of travel from their turnpike road; and we have not looked into the defendants’ charter with a view to determine that question.

The plaintiffs’ bill does not, however, complain, that the value of their franchise is likely to be destroyed, or impaired, by the diversion of the travel from their turnpike- to the rail road, or that their right under their charter to maintain a turnpike road and to collect tolls upon it along White River has been in any manner invaded. The injury complained of is an actual encroachment upon the plaintiffs’ real estate, — or interest in real estate, — which they hold under and by virtue of their charter. It is precisely such an injury, as an individual, having a similar interest in real estate, might complain of; and it must be conceded, that the plaintiffs are entitled to the same constitutional protection to their property, that an individual would be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Vt. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-river-turnpike-co-v-vermont-central-rail-road-vt-1849.