81 Miss. 685 | Miss. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the court.
The agreed case is this: “For the purpose of the trial of the above-styled cause, and for no other purpose, it is agreed by the parties hereto that the road ordered to be constructed by the board of supervisors, hereto attached, is a new public road, laid out and opened by the board within the past year, and that the railroad has been constructed and operated for more than the last twenty years at the point where this new road crosses it, and where the bridge is ordered to be constructed by the board. It is further agreed that the bridge has not been constructed, and that the road is a public road, and regularly laid out by the board in conformity with the law, and that if § 3555 of the Code of 1892, embraces and requires the erection of bridges over a railroad previously constructed, on public roads newly constructed, and laid out after the railroad .was built, then the railroad is liable in this suit, otherwise it is not, and that the bridge is necessary to the use of the road. It is
We think the latter clause of § 3555 of the code of 1892 applies to railroads constructed prior to its passage. We have examined carefully all of the authorities cited by counsel for appellant on this point. Very many of them simply declare the well-known common law rule, that, where a highway is constructed over a previously existing highway, the expenses involved in making the crossing must be borne by the person or corporation making the crossing, and that the crossing must be so constructed as to interfere as slightly as possible with public travel over the first highway. Others of these cases hold that certain statutes or charter provisions relied on as changing the common-law .rule did not have that effect. We think it is very clear that § 3555 does change the common-law rule, and that the latter clause applies to railroads constructed before that section became a law, as well as to railroads constructed afterwards. It must necessarily have been within the contemplation of appellant’s lessor when the road was originally constructed through Mississippi that as the state was opened up, and hamlets, villages, and towns built, and population in the interior increased, very many new public roads crossing the railroad would be demanded by the very largely increased needs of the people in the matter of travel over public roads. All this appellant’s lessor must, of course, have contemplated; and it is not subjecting it to any unexpected burden, when the state, in the exercise of its police power, passed, subsequently to its construction, a statute requiring it to do what from the first it must have known the constantly increasing needs of the public as to travel would require it to do.
Appellant’s second proposition — that, if this be the true construction of the statute, then it is unconstitutional, in depriving appellant of its property without due process of law, and in impairing its charter rights — is untenable. The supreme court
Affirmed.