250 Mass. 234 | Mass. | 1924
This is an action of contract. The declaration contains a single count. It sets forth a written instrument dated August 19, 1902, wherein, after a recital of the granting on that day of a location to the defendant on certain highways in the town of Southborough, the defendant agreed amongst several other stipulations to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $900 annually “with such sum in excess thereof as would equal its excise tax payable to said Town were all
The answer of the defendant, in addition to a general denial, avers the illegality of the contract alleged in the declaration and also the enactment of St. 1919, c. 370, whereby provision was made that no excise taxes should be collected of street railway companies under St. 1906, c. 463, Part III, §§ 134, 136, and acts in amendment thereof or in addition thereto during 1920 and 1921.
The case was heard by a judge of the Superior Court, who made findings of fact in substance as follows:
In 1902 votes were passed at the annual meeting of the town of Southborough purporting to authorize the selectmen to contract with the defendant as to all matters concerning the location, construction and maintenance of the street railway of the defendant. After appropriate proceedings, on August 19, 1902, contemporaneously with the execution of the contract here in suit, the selectmen granted an original location to the defendant for the construction of its railway in Southborough.
The railway of the defendant then proposed and subsequently constructed was between Boston and Worcester. Within the town of Southborough the defendant proposed that the greater part of its length be over its private way. Its railway was to cross four public ways, and seventeen hundred feet were to be constructed on a public way in which, already, was a single track of another street railway. The locations were granted accordingly. Among the terms, conditions and obligations imposed in the location was one requiring the payment of $900 annually by the street railway to the town, in which was to be included the excise tax then provided by law. If such excise was less than $900, the company was to be credited with the amount thereof
What the parties attempted to do was to make an additional and supplemental provision respecting the excise tax. Taxation is a function of the general legislative department of government. The laws established by it cannot be waived or changed by municipalities or their officers. Such laws are and must be general in their operation. When the Legislature has covered the whole subject, there is no room for the exercise of authority by local officers. The town has no power to make a contract concerning that subject. Cox v. Segee, 206 Mass. 380. Gile v. Perkins, 207 Mass. 172. Boston Rubber Shoe Co. v. Malden, 216 Mass. 508, and cases there collected. Parsons v. Lenox, 228 Mass. 231, 235.
The circumstance that the physical location of the railway was chiefly over private land rather than over public ways, and that thus the excise tax under R. L. c. 14, § 44, would be relatively small in comparison with the length of tracks in Southborough, did not justify an attempt to modify the excise law. The selectmen, in granting the location for the tracks of the defendant, acted as public officers performing a judicial or quasi judicial function. They were not agents of the town and were not bound by the votes of the town in respect to those functions. They cannot travel outside the limits of the law. Underwood v. Worcester, 177 Mass. 173, 175. Hewett v. Canton, 182 Mass. 220, 223. Flood v. Leahy, 183 Mass. 232. Hyde v. Boston & Worcester Street Railway, 194 Mass. 80, 83. Selectmen of Clinton v. Worcester Consolidated Street Railway, 199 Mass. 279, 286. Board of Survey of Arlington v. Bay State Street Railway, 224 Mass. 463, 469. Northampton v. Northampton Street Railway, 231 Mass. 540, 545. Cambridge v. Boston Elevated Railway, 241 Mass. 374, 378. They were bound by the same limitations
There are many instances where, before or at the time of the exercise of the quasi judicial faculty by boards of public officers in laying out, altering or relocating public ways, contracts have been made with the municipality touching the expense of laying out, alteration or relocation of a highway whereby private individuals have contracted with the municipality to bear the whole or a part of such expense. In some instances payments or other arrangements have been made to reheve or lighten the expense to the city or town. Such contracts, payments or other arrangements have always been held valid and enforceable. Parks v. Mayor & Aldermen of Boston, 8 Pick. 218. Freetown v. County Commissioners, 9 Pick. 46. Jones v. Andover, 9 Pick. 146, 153, 154. Copeland v. Packard, 16 Pick. 217. Crocket v. Boston, 5 Cush. 182. Atkinson v. City Council of Newton, 169 Mass. 240. Brookfield v. Reed, 152 Mass. 568. Aspinwall v. Boston, 191 Mass. 441, 445. Estes v. Newton, 241 Mass. 229, 232. See Nevins v. City Council of Springfield, 227 Mass. 538, 542. Compare West Springfield & Agawam Street Railway v. Bodurtha, 181 Mass. 583. Such cases, however, rest upon a different principle and have no bearing upon the case at bar. They have no relation to the tax laws, although they may indirectly affect municipal revenues.
The case at bar also is distinguishable from the numerous decisions to the effect that " other terms, conditions and obligations in addition to the general provisions of law ” may lawfully be inserted in locations, such as Newcomb v. Norfolk Western Street Railway, 179 Mass. 449, Selectmen of Gardner v. Templeton Street Railway, 184 Mass. 294, Selectmen of Hyde Park v. Old Colony Street Railway, 188 Mass. 180, and Selectmen of Wellesley v. Boston & Worcester Street Railway, 188 Mass. 250.
The contract upon which this action is brought relates to the subject of taxation, which in essence is and must be authorized by a general law. If resort be had to the corresponding term of the location, it is subject to the same infirmity.
Judgment for defendant.