140 Mass. 87 | Mass. | 1885
This is a petition for a writ of certiorari, by which the petitioner seeks to quash the proceedings of the board of street commissioners of the city of Boston in laying out a foot-way over the petitioner’s railroad, and crossing its location by means of a bridge. Several objections to the proceedings of the commissioners are stated in the petition, but the only one which has been argued, and which it is necessary to discuss, is in these words: “ Because no town or city, or board of street commissioners, is authorized by law to lay out a footway over or across a railroad.”
The Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 125, provide that “ a highway or town way may be laid out across a railroad previously constructed, when the county commissioners adjudge that the public convenience and necessity so require.” The petitioner contends that the only authority by which a public way can be laid out across a railroad is derived from, not merely restricted and regulated by, this statute; and that a footway is neither a highway nor a town way, within the meaning of the provision. We think that neither proposition can be sustained; but the former is material only as bearing upon the latter.
By the common law a public footway is a highway, and the term “ highway ” includes a footway. Tyler v. Sturdy, 108 Mass. 196, and cases cited. Bac. Abr. Highways, A. Town
A public footway would be a highway, within the general meaning of that word, and would be either a highway or a town way within the distinctive meanings of those words as used in the statutes, according as proceedings for laying it out should be required by law to be commenced before the county commissioners or the municipal authorities.
The St. of 1874, c. 299, provided that towns and cities might lay out footways, and that the proceedings should be in com fortuity with the provisions of law applicable to the laying out of town ways. If there was authority, under general laws, to lay out public footways before this statute, they would be highways or town ways according to the manner in which they had been laid out; if there was no prior authority, which is by no means clear, the statute established them as the species of highways called town ways, (except in the city of Boston, where that species is unknown, and all ways are technical highways,) and they would come within the purview of the Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 125, by which highways or town ways could be laid out across railroads.
We do not regard that statute as an enabling act, authorizing highways and town ways to be laid out across railroads, but as recognizing and regulating an existing right. Highways and railroads are both established by the legislative exercise of the
The charters under which the petitioner claims its exclusive right (Sts. 1831, o. 72, and 1833, c. 116) contain no reference to the laying out of highways across the railroad, and there was no general act upon the subject when the charters were granted. The Legislature surely did not intend, by authorizing the taking of land for a railroad, to divide the State from its western boundary to the sea by a strip of land five rods wide over which no public way could be laid. There is nothing in the nature or relation of the two public uses to indicate such an intention; and the first legislative utterance on the subject assumes the right to lay out public ways across railroads, and regulates it. Rev. Sts. o. 39, § 69. “ If, after the laying out and making of any railroad already granted, or which may be hereafter granted, any turnpike road or other way shall be so laid out as to cross said railroad, the said turnpike road or way may be so made as to pass under or over said railroad, and said turnpike or way shall in all cases be so made as not to obstruct or injure such railroad.” This was the only statute upon the subject for twenty years.
We think this statute was a legislative recognition, and restriction and regulation, of the right of the county commissioners, and of towns and cities, to lay out public ways across railroads. This statute is substantially reenacted in the Gen. Sts. a. 63, §§ 57-60, and in the revision of the railroad acts in the St. of 1874, e. 372, § 92. In the latter, the words “a highway or town way ” are substituted for the words “ a turnpike road or other way ” in the earlier statutes, and so in the Pub. Sts. e. 112, § 125.
From a consideration of the subject matter, and an examination of the statutes referred to, it seems that prior to the Revised Statutes there was authority to lay out public ways across railroads. The Rev. Sts. c. 39, § 69, as construed in Boston & Maine Railroad v. Lawrence, 2 Allen, 107, required that ways laid out across railroads should pass over or under the railroad, nnd provided that they should be so made as not to obstruct or injure the railroad. The St. of 1857, c. 287, required that the crossing should be with the consent of, and in the manner prescribed by, the county commissioners. The reenactment of this in the Gen. Sts. a. 63, §§ 57-59, providing for the manner in which “ a turnpike road or other way ” should be laid out across a railroad, was in force when the St. of 1874, c. 299, authorizing towns and cities to lay out footways in the manner provided for laying out town ways, took effect, and under it foot-ways came, even if they were not before, within the designation of a “ turnpike road or other way.” Certainly after the enactment of that statute until the St. of 1874, e. 372, took effect, (a
Petition dismissed.