228 Mass. 575 | Mass. | 1917
It appears among the terms of the grant of location to the Globe Street Railway Company, to whose franchises and obligations so far as involved in the cases at bar the defendant company has succeeded, that the company was “to construct, electrically equip, and maintain its tracks ... on Slade’s Ferry Bridge . . . according to the plans on file,” subject to the conditions that the company, its successors and assigns “shall, so long as its tracks continue to be on said . . . bridge, keep in repair, at its own expense, all of the roadway of said bridge, for its entire length, to the satisfaction” of the city engineer and the surveyor of highways, and shall furnish a bond “for the faithful fulfilment of the terms and conditions of this order.” The order was passed on October 21,1895, and, the bond having been given and approved and the location having been accepted and continuously used as a part of its railway system, the company and its successors were bound to comply with this condition. Pub. Sts. c. 113, § 7. R. L. c. 112, § 11. Mayor & Aldermen of Worcester v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 192 Mass. 106, 113, 115.
But, as pointed out in Springfield v. Springfield Street Railway, 182 Mass. 41, the Legislature may modify or annul a location of this nature without violation of any constitutional provision. By St. of 1898, c. 578, § 11, street railways were relieved “from all obligation thereafter to keep any portion of the surface material of streets, roads and bridges in repair, unless the obligation so to do had been imposed in a grant of an original location, which the statute defined to mean the first location granted to the company in the city or town as to whose streets, roads or bridges there might be a question.” Worcester v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 182 Mass. 49, 52.
The agreed facts show that the location in question was not the first or original location, and neither the company nor its successor was required after the passage of the statute to reimburse the plaintiff city for expenditures in making repairs. The city however contends that the St. of 1911, c. 552, superseded the St. of
The grant of location contained the further condition, the performance of which also was secured by the bond, that the railway company will sell six tickets for a sum not exceeding twenty-five cents, “each of which tickets shall entitle a passenger to one ride
' The statute being constitutional and the powers of the commission plenary over the regulation and establishment of fares on street railways, independently of whatever conditions may have been imposed in antecedent grants of location by selectmen of towns or municipal boards, Arlington Board of Survey v. Bay State Street Railway, 224 Mass. 463, 469, the decision under which the "four and one sixth cent ticket sold in strips of six tickets for twenty-five cents in the City of Fall River” was withdrawn and the refusals to give the rulings requested by the plaintiff disclose no errors of law.
If from the allegations of the petition, admitted by the demurrer, it is to be assumed that an order was entered in conformity with the decision, the inquiry under St. 1913, c. 784, §§ 20, 21, whether an increase of fare is necessary “in order to obtain a reasonable compensation for the service rendered,” is primarily a question of fact. It is not limited to any particular part of the system which if operated by itself might be found to be more than self sustaining. And the question whether the company should be permitted to withdraw the commutation tickets called for the exercise of the sound discretion and judgment of the commission, based on the evidence of the company’s financial condition, and ability to serve efficiently the public dependent upon the maintenance of its entire system of intercommunication and transportation. We are
Ordered accordingly.