45 So. 854 | Miss. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court.
According to the testimony of Collins himself, it is shown that the traction engine was operating over a public road leading
This is not a case of occasional use of the highway for the passage of this traction engine for the purpose of transporting it from one place to another; but the record shows that the road is being used for the purpose of running this traction engine between the two mills and hauling lumber. In 15 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law (2d ed.), p. 505, it is said that: “The use of the highway for the passage of an object or vehicle of an unusual character, and therefore calculated to frighten horses, is not in itself illegal, and it has accordingly been decided that the propulsion of objects by steam is not necessarily a nuisance. The question seems to be dependent to some extent upon the
Whether or not a particular use of a highway constitutes a nuisance is not, of course, determinable alone by the adjudication of the board of supervisors to that effect; but it is a question of law. But, since the board is vested with full jurisdiction in all matters appertaining to the public roads, its declaration upon this subject is very persuasive, and particularly when we consider it as applied to the case now under consideration. In our search of the authorities we have not found a single case, in the absence of a statute which gave the authority, which holds that the public highway may be continuously used for the purpose of running a traction engine in order to facilitate the business of a private individual. Many states have statutes upon this subject, and the very fact that it has been necessary to legislate along these lines shows that the continued use of a traction engine on the public highway is regarded with disfavor and looked upon as dangerous to the public in the use of the road. In Wisconsin under St. Wis. 1898, § 1347b, as amended by chapter 197, p. 304, Laws 1899, the owner or operator of a steam engine on any public highway in any town, etc., is required to signal and stop it when approached, within fifteen rods in either direction, by a team or person riding or driving any animal, and
It can make no difference how many petitioners living along this road sign the petition to permit the use of this traction engine on it. An unlawful use of the highway cannot be made lawful thereby. The question is: Is the continued running of this traction engine on this highway an unusual, unreasonable, and extraordinary use of the highway, and does it endanger the safety of those who have the right to travel upon it ? If the use is unreasonable, unusual, and dangerous to safe travel, it is perfectly within the power of the board of supervisors to put a
The case of Macomber v. Nichols, 34 Mich., 212, 22 Am. Rep., 522, cited by counsel for appellee, is not in point. There was no question in that case as to the right of the public^authority, vested with full jurisdiction over the public highways, to declare a particular extraordinary use of the highway an obstruction and a nuisance and to order its discontinuance. It was a private litigation to recover damage by one party against another. It that case the facts do not show that there was any continued use of a highway for the purpose of hauling over the road by the steam engine in question. On the other hand, the facts show that the engine in question was a threshing machine, moved from place to place only ocassionally, when it became necessary to go to another place. There was no continued use of the road for the purpose of running this engine; no hauling back and forth over the road, day by day, with wagons coupled to it. In short, in the Macomber case, sv/pra, the business engaged in was not in the use of the road to make the threshing machine useful and valuable in the owner’s business; but in using, the machine, it became neeessaiy to occasionally carry it over the public highway, and the court held that this could be
We cannot be unmindful of the fact that at this present day and time the country highways are used almost exclusively by teams drawn by animals. It may be that an automobile, or bicycle, has as much right to the road as these teams; but, as stated, we are not called upon to decide this question. We think the use of a traction engine upon this road at the place and under the circumstances was an unusual, unreasonable, and unlawful use to make of this road, and that the board of supervisors had the right to prevent it. The jurisdiction over the roads being confided to the board of supervisors both by the constitution and the statute, it will be a rare case, and one of manifest abuse of power, whenever this court holds that not to be an obstruction of the highway which the board of supervisors have officially declared to be an obstruction.
The injunction is reinstated, and the decree is reversed and cause remanded.