167 Mass. 46 | Mass. | 1896
These are suits in equity heard by a single justice, and the evidence was taken before a commissioner. The bill in each case was dismissed, and the plaintiffs appealed. The evidence is voluminous, but the facts generally are such as are commonly known wherever electric street railways are used. There is some evidence concerning the electrolytic action of the electric current on water and gas pipes in or near the street where the railway is located, and conflicting evidence concerning the dangerous character of the electric current used by the defendant. We have no doubt that the current used is dangerous to animals and
The construction and use of an electric railway in a public street sometimes enhance and sometimes diminish the value of the adjoining real property. Suburban lands usually are made more valuable by the construction of such a railway, because the lands can be conveniently reached thereby from the thickly settled portions of a city, but many householders prefer to have the tracks not in the street immediately in front of their dwellings, but in some neighboring street, on account of the noise, and the running of electric cars in front of costly dwelling-houses in a narrow street often is a serious detriment to the property on the street. The defendant’s acts in the location and operation of the street railway complained of appear- to have been duly authorized by the board of aldermen of the city of Cambridge.
The principal contention of the plaintiffs is that the maintenance of an electric railway operated by the single trolley system in a public way imposes an additional servitude upon the land, and is a taking of the property of an abutter within the meaning of the Constitution, whether he owns the fee of the way, or to the centre line of it, or owns only to the side line of the way, because it is constructed in such manner as to cause a permanent obstruction to other uses of the way, subjects the property of the abutter to the dangers of a permanent current of electricity which may injure property and persons, and involves the use of heavy vehicles in the street, running long distances without stops at a high rate of speed, which use injures property by the constant jar from the cars and by the noise. The statutes of the Commonwealth make no provision for com
It is obvious that the use made of a public way in the operation of an electric railway is of the same general kind as that for which the way was originally laid out, viz. the transportation of persons and things from place to place along the way. It is equally obvious that the actual operation of the electric railway shown in the present cases does not exclude ordinary travel from the way; that there is no exclusive occupation by the railway of any part of the surface of the way, and that the overhead structure is incidental to the use of the surface of the way, and does not prevent the public from using the way in the ordinary manner. The use of the ordinary steam railroad when it crosses a public way or runs along the way is intended to be in a sense exclusive. Provision is made by statute for the erection of gates at some of the crossings of public ways by railroads, or for signals which shall indicate the approach of trains, and the express or implied intention is that the railroad trains shall not give way to travellers on the way, but that travellers shall give way to them, and the gates or signals are intended to warn such travellers against being on the .track at the time of the passage of trains. The whole system of street railways is founded on the theory that the use of the ways by the railways must be consistent with the use of the ways by other travellers at the same time. The regulation of street railways which boards of aldermen and selectmen are empowered to make has this end in view. Pub. Sts. c. 113, § 27. The statutes and the decisions of the courts give the street railway companies certain rights to the use of their own tracks in the public ways not possessed by travellers generally, but still the right of other travellers to use the ways in a reasonable maimer is recognized and enforced against the railway companies. The theory on which it has been held that the taking of a part of a public way for a railroad location was a new use, for which compensation must be made, was that by this taking and the-subsequent use the public were at times excluded from
The test whether the land under a street is subjected to a new use by the operation of new forms of transportation of persons or things is undoubtedly in some respects a question of degree, but the solution of it does not depend so much upon the kind of power used as upon the structures which are required and the change in the occupation and use of the street occasioned by the new form of transportation. Elevated railroads upon permanent elevated iron or steel structures have been held elsewhere to be a new use, which entitles the landowners to compensation in damages. Horse railways on the surface of the street, which do not prevent the use of the streets by ordinary . travellers, have been held in this Commonwealth not to constitute a new use which requires compensation. Attorney General v. Metropolitan Railroad, 125 Mass. 515. Electric rail
Bills dismissed.