78 Me. 413 | Me. | 1886
Trespass gw. c. by the owner of the fee for cutting and carrying away grass growing within the located limits of the land duly taken by right of eminent domain and occupied by the Maine Central railroad.
The defendant justifies, as section foreman of the railroad company, in executing the instructions of its general manager and road-master to cut and burn the bushes, errass and rubbish.
It is common learning that railroads are of public convenience and necessity, and that when the corporations can not purchase the land for their location and use, they may take it by right of eminent domain on payment of the damages legally assessed therefor, which, considering the elements which enter into their estimation, is practically quite equal to the full value of the land. Hence, although such corporations are owned by private individuals, still they are denominated quasi public corporations, and in the land so taken they acquire an easement, an incorporeal right only, the fee still remaining in the owner of the land.
But easements are as various as the purposes to which land and buildings may be applied. They vary as to the mode and extent of occupation according to the particular use to be made of them under the authority by which they are acquired. The character and extent of easements acquired by pew owners in meeting-houses, in land flowed by mill-dams, in land taken for canals, town ways and highways, are well defined, and the respective rights of the land owners and of those having the easements, have long been settled by numerous decisions of this court, which it is needless to cite here. The mode and extent of the use necessarily " varies not only according to the exigencies of each particular kind, but to the varying circumstances of each species of public work.” Brainard v. Clapp, 10 Cush. 10. The rights under public easements are commensurate with, and include such use and occupation as are directly or incidentally conducive to the free exercise and" full enjoyment of the franchise and the advancement of the public benefit contemplated by the public work.”
■ It follows that the easement in lands taken for the purpose of a railroad is obviously vastly different from that in lands appropriated to the various kinds of other public ways. Its propelling power, its numerous freight and passenger trains driven at the high rate of speed demanded by the public— its absolute responsibility for damage to insurable property, real
And such is the doctrine held by law writers and by numerous decisions of courts of the highest respectability in several of the states, among which are the following: Brainard v. Clapp, 10 Cush. 10; Hazen v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 2 Gray, 577, 580; Prop’rs L. & Canals v. Nashua & Low. R. R. Co. 104 Mass. 11, and cases there cited; Jackson v. Rutland & Burl. R. R. Co. 25 Vt. 150; Conn. & P. Riv. R. R. Co. v. Holton, 32 Vt. 43.
The precise question raised here was decided in a late case in Yermont, and in speaking for the court, Chief Justice PiekpoNT said:
"If the right to remove the herbage be conceded, adjoining land owners throughout the state would be found, at the proper seasons, within the lines of the road, with their hired men, tools and perhaps teams, for the purpose of taking oif the herbage, and the detriment to the railroad company and the danger to the trains and passengers would be increased a thousand fold. The men employed by the land oivncrs would be likely to be careless, both in respect of being on the track in person, and temporarily laying their tools thereon, from which accidents might reasonably
The grass could have been of but slight value to the plaintiff; but whether it was worth what he estimated it or what the defendant testified, or whether it was harvested or burned on the ground, is immaterial.
Judgment for the defendant.