179 Mass. 520 | Mass. | 1901
Land owned in fee by the town of Middle-borough, part of its municipal gas and electric light plant, has been appropriated to another public use, in proceedings for the abolition of certain grade crossings, under St. 1890, c. 428, and the acts in addition thereto. The value of the land so taken, including the damage to that part of the plant not taken, is a contribution at the cost of the plaintiff toward the expense of abolishing the crossings, and if the amount of that contribution cannot be included' in the account of expenses, and cannot be decreed to be paid by the railroad company, the Commonwealth and the town, in the proportions fixed under the provisions of St. 1890, c. 428, § 6, the town will receive no compensation for this contribution.
Such a result is contrary to the general intention of our statutes relating to the exercise of the right of eminent domain, which uniformly make provision for compensation to the owner of the land so taken.
It is no less contrary to the general intention of St. 1890, c. 428, which provides for the payment by the Commonwealth, the town or city, and the railroad company, in proportions to be fixed in the proceedings, of the total cost of the alterations, including “ all damages,” and not merely such damages as can be assessed under the fifth section of the statute. St. 1890, c. 428, § 3.
This court has heretofore declared that the general purpose is “ that the whole cost or expense of the entire work, including the cost of the commission and of the auditor, should be paid by the railroad company, the Commonwealth, and the city or town.” Boston & Albany Railroad v. Charlton, 161 Mass. 32, 34.
In the present case, the defendants contend that the plaintiff can have no compensation for its contribution of the value of that part of its gas and electric light plant taken, or for any damages to what remains of the plant. The contention is not
But in the present instance, as the plaintiff is both the owner of the land taken and the town in which the way is situated, the plaintiff cannot make an agreement with itself, nor can it maintain a petition for its damages, in which petition the town would be the side petitioner and the sole respondent. Because of the technical difficulty, which precludes, in this instance, the operation of the remedy for damages provided in St. 1890, c. 428, § 5, the auditor has refused to audit and allow the damages sustained by the taking of the plaintiff’s land as an item of expense incurred by the town in carrying out the decree for abolition of the crossings, and so the town has no remedy under the ordinary operation of the statute. If the land had been taken for railroad purposes instead of for a public street, the damages could have been ascertained under the provisions of § 5, in a petition in which the town would have been the petitioner and the railroad company the respondent. This shows that it was not the intention of the statute that land of the town which should be taken for the alterations should be contributed in all instances without compensation.
But the proceedings for the abolition of the crossing are upon the equity side of the court, and besides this there is a section giving the court power in equity to compel compliance with the statute, and to issue and enforce such interlocutory decrees and orders as justice may require. St. 1890, c. 428, § 8.
In the opinion of a majority of the court it was the intention of the Legislature that, when the general and declared purpose
The Commonwealth and the railroad companies are both interested in having the amount of the plaintiff’s damages fixed at a just sum. While neither the Commonwealth nor the railroad companies could be heard in a petition brought by the town at the bar of the court under St. 1890, c. 428, § 5, even if such a petition could be brought by the town against itself, there is no reason why they could not be admitted as parties to an issue to be tried to determine those damages. Nor is there any difficulty in having that determination of damages made under an issue framed by order of the court sitting in equity and tried as under section five of the act the question of damages would be tried if it were not for the difficulty as to parties. Such a determination, and a further order that the amount of the plaintiff’s damages, when determined, shall be marshalled and audited as an expense incurred by the town, and shall be paid in their due proportions by it and by the Commonwealth and the railroad companies, are mere steps in compelling compliance with that provision of the act which directs the total cost of the alterations to be borne by the railroad, the Commonwealth and the city, including all damages, as well as the damages to be ascertained and recovered in the manner provided by the fifth section of the act. Such steps are required by justice, since without them the total actual cost of the alterations cannot, under the other machinery of the act, be imposed where the express terms of the third section of the act impose it. Justice to the town requires that so much of that cost as is represented by the value of its gas and electric light plant as has been taken for the alterations, and any resulting damages to the remaining plant, shall be in part borne by the Commonwealth and the railroad companies. A construction of the section of the act conferring equity power, which would deny jurisdiction to ascertain the plaintiff’s damages and order them audited and paid as other expenses incurred under the decree for abolishing the crossings, would be too narrow and strict, and would leave the act to work an injustice which can be avoided.
The reservation is discharged and the Superior Court directed to allow the plaintiff to amend its bill into a petition in the proceedings for the abolition of the crossing, and, upon such amendment, to entertain the petition and dispose of it in accordance with the construction of the grade crossing acts given in this opinion.
So ordered.