83 Vt. 528 | Vt. | 1910
The nature of these cases, which are treated as one cause, is fully stated in the opinion therein already filed. See 83 Vt. 421. The history, too, of the cases down to the May Term, 1910, of this Court, when the opinion referred to was filed, is therein sufficiently traced. That opinion is to be read as a part of this.
After the decision at the May Term was rendered, on due notice to all parties, the Public Service Commission held a further
The order also provides for the construction for the use of pedestrians of a subway extending under all of the railway tracks west of the station, they being the eight tracks referred to in the former opinion. 83 Vt. 421. The order further provides that there shall be constructed to the west of the railway tracks, north of the subway, and adjacent to its western entrance a baggage house and platform adequate to receive, deliver, and care for baggage on the west side of the tracks, and that there shall be made, as an approach to the same, a graveled driveway connecting a street called Main Street in the former opinion with a street, running easterly therefrom and nearly at right angles thereto, called the street by the National Bank. The contemplated driveway is short and lies upon land already held by the Central Vermont. The order further provides for the construction and maintenance of fences of such quality and location as to prevent “general public travel” over the tracks at grade to and from the station. The appellant challenges the right and authority of the Public Service Commission to order the subway and the westerly baggage house and platform which it has ordered as above stated.
The first claim of the appellant is that, in dealing with the dangerous situation at White River Junction, it was the duty of the commission to adopt a plan jointly proposed by the Central Vermont Railway Company and the Boston & Maine Railroad. This plan contemplates an underground driveway for teams as well as an underpass for foot-passengers. In its main features it is one of the plans referred to in this cause, 83 Vt. 421, 441, as having been discussed in the report of the commissioners filed next before the one now under consideration. In such former report the commissioners stated their reasons for not adopting the joint railroad plan then before them. These reasons were not
The appellant makes a second objection to the order now under consideration; and that is that it destroys, or renders inadequate, the “team track” at White River Junction. By this is meant the track farthest west, and the claim is that it is absolutely necessary to place and keep ears thereon, and for teams to stand alongside thereof when freight is received or unloaded in the course of the transactions of the appellant company with its patrons doing business at White River Junction. More specifically the claim is that this most westerly track would be rendered practically useless by the construction on the west side of the tracks of the baggage house and platform ordered to be there constructed. When the question was before this Court of whether, in relieving the dangerous situation at White River Junction by the construction of an underpass, the commissioners could compel the elimination of the four westerly tracks of the Central Vermont Railway Company and an almost complete revision of its tracks at that terminal point, we held that an order to that effect could not be made as an incident to the construction of an underpass unless it was a necessary incident thereto. And we held that on the facts reported it appeared that those radical changes were not a necessary incident to the construction of an underpass. Accordingly the commissioners have made an order which eliminates none of the eight tracks, but extends the underpass under them all. The appellant now claims that the prin
The Public Service Commission is by law required to state all of its rulings that are excepted to and its finding of facts, and a ease determined by the commission comes to this Court for the correction of any error so shown or of any error appearing from the facts found and reported by the commission. There is no propriety in requesting evidence to be reported to this Court except when it is necessary to the presentation of questions of law properly raised and before the Court. The law of procedure applicable is that which governs appeals from the court of chancery. P. S. 4600; Randall v. Randall, 55 Vt. 214; Sargent v. French, 54 Vt. 385.
In response to the requests above referred to the commissioners report that no stenographer was employed to make a verbatim report of the testimony at the hearing, but that the clerk of the commission took minutes which contain the substance of the testimony only. From these minutes they comply with the requests except as hereinafter noted; and, since there was a suggestion in the argument for the appellant that, at all events, the case ought to be remanded for findings in respect to the matter of the team track, we herein notice the requests relative to evidence in that regard and the responses thereto. The appellant requested
The appellant also requested the commissioners to report all evidence tending to show the amount of track that would remain ’available as a team track provided the baggage room and platform ordered by the commissioners should he constructed “along and. adjoining” the team track, and all the evidence tending to show
It appears from the cases and from the usage of good writers and speakers that the word “adjacent” in conveying the idea of nearness indicates no fixed or uniform distance, no more than does the phrase “a piece of stone” indicate anything definite as to size. It seems unnecessary to say that “near” does not mean “next.” In one of the cases above referred to, a place was thought to be adjacent to another though two feet intervened, in another, though the places were a half mile apart, and in another it was said that tracts of land two miles apart would probably be considered adjacent. The word “adjacent” is proportionate or relative in its meaning, and the necessity and convenience of the situation to which it applies must not be overlooked in determining its latitude. Here the baggage room with its platform is to be westerly of the tracks and northerly from the entrance to the underpass, and so placed that the driveway already referred to will serve as an approach to the baggage house, but the course of the driveway and its termini are not fixed further than has been shown. The approach to the baggage room from the sides not facing the tracks is the matter which concerns the public.
In answer to requests for all the testimony in respect to the amount of baggage taken across the tracks daily the commissioners report the testimony of the station agent and one of the proprietors of the Junction House. Mr. Wheeler, the proprietor referred to, testified in substance that twenty or twenty-five trunks are taken across the tracks either to or from the station each day and that in addition to these many small pieces .of baggage are taken across the tracks on trucks.
The station agent testified in substance that the local job teamster hauls trunks across the tracks and that the Junction House trucks deliver trunks across the tracks to or from every •train, that this would be on an average of five or six times a day, that baggage is a small part of the traffic across the tracks, and that teams from the country very seldom cross the tracks but deliver both their baggage and their passengers on the west side of the tracks. 'So the testimony set out at the request of the appellant tends to show that no very spacious structure is required to house the trunks which, at any one time, are likely to be on the west side of the tracks, and that some structure ought now to be there to house the trunks which, as the station agent testifies, are now left there. There is no reason to suppose from anything that has in any way been brought to our attention that there cannot be constructed a baggage room and platform adequate to the requirements of the situation, and of the commissioners’ order, without serious interference with the use of the team track as such. It has been the duty of the commissioners to relieve a situation demonstrated and confessed to be highly dangerous. It should be the part of the appellant not to magnify slight inconveniences but to surmount them. If the manager of the Central Vermont is correct in his judgment that the team track at White
We have throughout taken notice of the former proceedings in this Court in this case. Counsel upon both sides have proceeded upon the theory that we would do so. Such a course a court will take either upon the suggestion of counsel or upon its own motion. Dewey v. St. Albans Trust Co., 60 Vt. 1, 6 Am. St. Rep. 84, 12 Atl. 224; Wilson v. Calculagraph Co., 153 Fed. 961; Hancock v. Diamond Plate Glass Co., 37 Ind. App. 351, 75 N. E. 659.
In oral argument a suggestion was dropped to the effect that the order of the Public Service Commission is outside the scope of the Bacon petition. It appears, however, to be well within it.
There is no ground for reversing the judgment and order of the Public Service Commission nor for taking the exceptional course of recommitting the report for further findings.
Judgment and order affirmed and catise remanded. As the order is dated June 25,1910, and as the intervening time has been required for the presentation and decision of the questions raised on this final appeal, the Public Service Commission is at liberty to fix a new time for the completion of the tvork by their order (directed.
Watson and Powers, JJ., concur in the legal conclusions reached, but dissent on the question of the present disposition of ■the case. Believing that it sufficiently appears from the record that a compliance with the order of the Commission will probably interfere with a material portion of the so-called Team Track, they would, in view of the importance of the matter and in the interests of fairness to the petitionees, (who are entitled to sufficient findings to raise their legal questions), remand the case for further findings relative to this feature of it — since counsel request it — as was recently done with Scoville v. Brock, 79 Vt. 449 —though counsel did not request it.