159 Mass. 32 | Mass. | 1893
The plaintiffs contend that, as the road had been in use by the public for many years, it would have been com
The new road was opened in the year 1875, or before. No repairs have been made by the town on the Sand Hill Road for many years, and in the year 1880 signs stating that it was “ Not a public way,” were placed at points between which the vote ordered that it should be discontinued; but it has been left open and unobstructed, connecting at either end with public roads, and it has been in continuous use since a time long prior to the year 1872. It does not appear when the railroad was constructed, but the crossing is planked between the rails, and over it are the usual signs. No evidence was offered to show when the crossing was planked or the signs were erected.
The objections urged against the validity of the attempted
The contention that upon the evidence the road might have been found to be a highway by prescription or otherwise, as distinguished from a town way, so that the town had no power to discontinue it, is unsound. If the mere use of a private way, without proof that the use is adverse to the owner of the soil, is evidence from which to find a highway by prescription, (see Johanson v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 153 Mass. 57,) the same principle does not apply to town ways. All the public have the right to use town ways at their pleasure; and the exercise of this right cannot change the nature of the way, or withdraw it from the jurisdiction of the town. Webster v. Lowell, 142 Mass. 324, 341. Bigelow v. Hillman, 37 Maine, 52. Larry v. hunt, 37 Maine, 69. Pillsbury v. Brown, 82 Maine, 450. Even a defective location by the town rebuts any presumption of dedication or of location as a-county way; Avery v. Stewart, 1 Cush. 496 ; and discontinuance by the town is proof that the way was laid out by the town. Brownell v. Palmer, 22 Conn. 107, 117. We therefore regard the road as one which the town had the power to discontinue; and whatever the nature or amount of travel over it after the vote of discontinuance, it could not have been a highway by prescription, as the accident was less than twenty years after the passage of the vote.
In this Commonwealth it is not necessary to the legal discontinuance of a way, in addition to the vote or adjudication of the proper authority, that there should be an actual shutting up of the road or an exclusion of travel. A discontinuance adjudicated by the proper tribunal is complete, without more. See Commonwealth v. Western, 1 Pick. 136; Tinker v. Russell, 14 Pick. 279; Hallock v. Franklin, 2 Met. 558; Commonwealth v. Boston Albany Railroad, 150 Mass. 174. Whether if a discontinued way is left open the town may be still liable for injuries to travellers is a different question. See Pub. Sts. c. 49, §§ 94,95. That they are so liable in Connecticut is all that we understand the case of Munson v. Derby, 37 Conn. 298, 312, cited npon this
The fact that the vote was to discontinue from and after the time when the new road, laid out on the same day, should be opened for use, did not make the discontinuance void. While the laying of the new way and the discontinuance of the old one both result from the same vote or adjudication, it is reasonable that the public should not be excluded from the old road until the new one is ready for use. Whether for the purpose of founding claims for damages the vote would be treated as a present discontinuance, we need not now consider. It is enough to say that this clause did not render the action of the town illegal.
We have greater difficulty with the remaining objection urged, namely, the proviso that the owners of abutting lands should have the right to use the road as a private way for their especial use. Conditional adjudications of tribunals having the power to lay out or discontinue ways are not uncommon, and have been often upheld. Sometimes the condition has been declared void, and sometimes it has made the whole adjudication of no effect. See Jones v. Andover, 9 Pick. 146; Copeland v. Packard, 16 Pick. 217; Harrington v. Harrington, 1 Met. 404; Braintree v. County Commissioners, 8 Cush. 546; Holcomb v. Moore, 4 Allen, 529; Sears v. Fuller, 137 Mass. 326; Cheshire Turnpike v. Stevens, 10 N. H. 133. As stated in Harrington v. Harrington, the case of Jones v. Andover is a decisive authority to the point that the mere annexing of a condition does not render the laying out of a way invalid ; and we see no reason why proper conditions may not be annexed to a vote of discontinuance. The same doctrine is to be inferred from the case of Sears v. Fuller, in which non-compliance with a condition precedent avoided the discontinuance. Harrington v. Harrington also holds that a condition subsequent will not prevent the vote to which it is annexed from taking present effect; and that if the condition is contrary to law it alone is void, while the vote stands as if absolute and unconditional. In Braintree v. Norfolk, however, the commissioners had incorporated in their order laying out a highway a requirement that the town should keep agents to attend to a drawbridge, and should light it; and because they had no authority to impose these burdens, it was held that the whole
Construing together the article in the warrant and the vote, with the facts that since the opening of the new road the town has not repaired the old one, and has maintained notices that it is not a public way, although opened and travelled, it may he argued that the intention of the town was not to discontinue the road, but to change it from a public town way to a private way for the especial use of those whose lands abutted upon it. And if this were the better construction, as a town has no power to make such a change by mere vote, we should be required to hold that the proviso was such an integral part of the scheme as to make the vote void. But we are not to presume that the town intended to go wholly beyond its powers. That it might discontinue a town road was of course well known, and that "it might attempt to do so upon condition is not surprising. The proviso did not stipulate for anything to be done or to occur before the discontinuance should take effect. Assuming that the town had no power to reserve to those owning abutting lands the right to use the road as a private way, the proviso was a reservation or limitation, and not such an integral part of the scheme that the
Exceptions overruled.