26 Pa. 355 | Pa. | 1855
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Act of 11th September, 1787, under which the town of Allegheny was laid out, directed the state authorities to “ reserve, without the said town, one hundred acres for a common pasture.” The lots were sold, and the reservation made, in pursuance of which, the title to the one hundred acres of land reserved for a common pasture remained, as before, the property of the state, and the lotholders became entitled to the privilege of common of pasture. The state owned the land — the lotholders the servitude of pasturage. Both these titles were legal ones, and not merely equities, requiring a trustee for their protection. The lotholders could assert their rights in a court of law, in their own names. The state was not constituted a trustee for their protection. She held the land for herself, subject alone to the easement
This act vests the title to the one hundred acres in the City of Allegheny, with express authority to grant it away for such “ public uses as the Select and Common Councils shall direct and ordain.” The railroad company is a public highway, for public use. It is upon this ground alone that the company has a right to take private property for the construction of the road, on giving compensation to the owners. The grant of a portion of the land, for the bed of the railroad, would therefore be a grant for “ public uses” within the meaning of the authority conferred on the city councils. There is nothing in the proviso which in any manner invalidates the grant. The proviso has relation to matters subsequent, to wit, the application of the land by the grantee to the “ public uses” proposed. The grant is valid, if made for public uses, but the property must not be “applied” by the grantee to those uses until releases be first obtained from “ such persons as might by law” have a right to depasture the common. If the grantee of the city should misapply the land granted, to the injury of persons who held rights of pasturage, it is for them to complain. The city has no right to embark in the Quixotic enterprise of vindicating them. As she is neither their agent nor trustee, her acts in their behalf would not bind them. A judgment against her would not conclude them — one in her favour could not be pleaded by them to conclude the railroad company. We have, therefore, in this proceeding, nothing whatever to do with the rights of the lotholders to the privilege of pasture. When they complain of any violation of their rights, it will be time enough to consider and decide upon them. It is altogether out of place to decide upon them in this suit in which they are not parties.
But the power of the city councils to grant the land to the railroad company, does not altogether depend upon the Act of 1840. By the Act of 11th April, 1848, the 11th section of the Act of 11th February, 1848, passed by the legislature of Ohio to incorporate the railroad company, became a law of this Common
It must be remembered that the ground was public ground, owned and in charge of the public municipal authorities, for public uses. It may also be inferred that the grant was made on the application of the railroad company, and on their own representation of the quantity of ground which they deemed it necessary to occupy. In the construction -of a grant it is important to have respect to the estate of the grantor, to the consideration which leads the estate, and to the recompense and loss which is sustained: Gough v. Howard, 3 Bulst. 125. Where a grant is made by the king, at the suit of the grantee, it is to be taken most beneficially for the king and against the grantee: 2 Bl. Com. 347; Hob. 243; Hard. 309. A grant made by the Commonwealth, or by a municipal corporation under authority derived from the Commonwealth, at the instance and for the convenience of a. railroad company, is governed by the same rule of construction. Nothing is to be taken by implication against the public, except what necessarily flows from the nature and terms of the grant.
. Where a right of way is granted through territories of such extent, as to render, depots and stations for water and wood indispensable, at proper points within the limits of the grant, and where the land is either unoccupied or so sparsely populated, that these structures would not be likely to produce serious inconvenience, the right to erect them might be implied from the nature and extent of the grant. But the grant of a right of way through a small strip of- ground, designed for public uses in a densely populated city, stands upon a different footing. Under such circumstances it is not reasonable to suppose that anything further
Keeping these principles in view, it seems plain .that the grant of “ a right of way fifty feet wide, through the commons of the city to Federal street,” is limited to the right of passage, and to receiving and discharging freight and passengers within the fifty feet fixed by the grant. It confers on the company no authority to occupy any ground beyond the fifty feet granted; and it is incumbent on the company to enjoy their easement in such a manner as to guard against trespasses being committed on land not included in the grant, by their agents or customers, in transacting the business of receiving and discharging freight and passengers. The company, like individuals, are responsible for all the consequences to which their acts necessarily lead. If they stop their trains on that part of the road, for the purpose of receiving and discharging freight and passengers, without guarding the common from trespasses committed in arriving and departing, and in loading and unloading, and without providing suitable accommodations for those purposes, on their own ground, they become parties to the intrusion. The right to receive and discharge passengers, even within the fifty feet, exists only by implication, and is not to be carried farther than necessity requires. As the present terminus of the railway is at this point, this right would seem to be to some extent a necessary incident of the right of way. But the company have no right to occupy any part of the fifty feet by any structures except the railroad itself. They have no authority, under the contract, or otherwise, to erect, even within the fifty feet, any warehouses, depot-houses, car-houses, wood-houses, water-houses, or any other buildings for receiving or discharging passengers or freight on that part of the railroad which 'passes through the common. Wagons, drays, and carriages have
Is the railroad company transcending or threatening to transcend its privileges ? The evidence shows that the company has erected a platform seventeen feet wide on the north side of the railroad on the South Common. This platform is three feet high and two hundred and eighty-two feet long, and the common ground has been graded to allow easy access to drays and wagons passing and repassing between the common and the platform. It is true, that a post and rail fence was erected on the north side of the platform in 1854, but a panel of the fence has been cut away, or otherwise removed, and since then drays and wagons pass from the platform on to the South Common. The evidence shows that the company have used their road in South Common, not merely for passing and repassing, but for depot purposes. Passengers and their baggage are received and set down on that part of the road; freight cars are there loaded and discharged; empty passenger and freight cars stand upon that part of the road at all times. Piles of timber, stone, pig metal and cast iron, steam boilers, and other machinery, barrels of salt, bundles of hay, hags of wool, and rags, with other freight received by and intended for shipment in the cars of the company, are placed on the common ground north of the railroad.
The agents of the company, the hands employed by the company, have been seen unloading the ears, and placing the freight on the common. The testimony is, that the common ground is now used by the company as a depot — that the whole of the South Common occupied by their road is used as a general depot for the storage of their cars, and the discharge of their freight. Plans of the car-house have been prepared with doors opening on the common, and the president of the company has declared in reference to the contemplated structure, that he intended to occupy the whole of the common ground along the car-house, as far as circumstances required. In speaking of the double doors opening on the common, he said that through these passengers were to be
These are the views entertained by Mr. Justice Woodward and myself. Mr. Justice Knox and Mr. Justice Black do not concur in them, but they concur in the decree to be pronounced. Mr. Justice Lowrie takes no part in the decision, being related to parties interested.
It is ordered and decreed that an injunction be granted to restrain the railroad company and their officers, servants, and agents from occupying, for toy purpose, any ground belonging to the City of Allegheny beyond the fifty feet granted to the said railroad company; and enjoining them so to transact their business as to prevent intrusions upon the said ground of the city aforesaid, by passengers, or persons coming to or departing from the cars of the said company with their freight or baggage in and about the business of receiving and discharging freight or passengers. Also enjoining the said company, &c., against permitting their cars or locomotives to remain on that part of the said railroad which passes over the said common, for longer periods than necessary to pass and repass, and to receive and discharge freight, baggage, and passengers. Also enjoining them against erect-ing within the said fifty feet any warehouses, depot-houses, car-houses, Wood-houses, water-houses, offices, or other buildings for receiving or discharging freight, passengers, Or baggage, or for any other purpose not strictly necessary to the enjoyment of the right to pass and repass along their said railroad across the said common.
The costs to be paid by the defendants.
The opinion just read declares the views entertained of this case by the Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Woodward. Mr. Justice Black and myself concur in the decree as far as it goes; but we think it is not the full measure of justice to which the complainant is entitled. Mr. Justice Lowrib being related to persons interested in the result, takes no part in the decision.
In the case of Bell v. The Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad Company, Mr. Justice Black, in an elaborate opinion, discussed all the questions raised in this case except the one relating to the right of the City of Allegheny to maintain a suit in her own name for.the relief of the commoners.
In the opinion referred to, it appears to me to be clearly established that the railroad company has no right to occupy the Allegheny common, and that the ordinance passed by the city councils granting the right of way, was null and void, for want of power in the city to make the grant. It is unnecessary to discuss the question anew," or to repeat the reasons given by Mr. Justice Black, in the above-mentioned case, why the injunction there prayed for ought to have been awarded. I allude to it now for the purpose 'of saying that in no respect whatever has the argument in this case satisfied me that the positions there taken were erroneoús, so far as they related to the law of the case. The common in question was reserved by the Act of 1787 to the lot-holders for common of pasture; and when, by the Act of 13th April, 1840, the legal title passed from the Commonwealth to the City of Allegheny, it was explicitly provided that the common should not be applied to any other purpose without releases were first obtained from the commoners.
The principal object of the grant to the city was that she might represent the commoners: not to destroy, but to protect their rights. Holding the legal title, the city has the power to prevent encroachments upon the rights of the commoners, and may lawfully, in her own name, compel the removal of an obstruction to the common, placed upon it without authority of law.
Neither do I consider that it makes any difference that the company constructed its railroad over the common with the assent of the city councils. The principle of estoppel has no application to such a case. The railroad company knéw, or ought to have known, that councils had no authority to grant the right of way, and that with or without their assent the appropriation of private property to the use of the company, without compensation or security, was expressly forbidden by the constitution of the state.
The act of councils, in attempting to grant that which the city did not possess, was simply void, and the effort now made by the
It is, in my opinion, to be regretted that the effort is not a successful one. The Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad is a work of great public utility, and should meet with liberal encouragement in all its lawful undertakings; but when, not content to exercise the highest delegated power known to the constitution, under the restrictions imposed by that instrument, it takes private property without either making or securing compensation, the power of restraint and coercion belonging to this court should be promptly and effectually applied. I apprehend that we have no more important duty to perform than to hold incorporated companies strictly within the line of their chartered privileges, and, where they have overstepped the -boundary defined by the power which created them, to compel them to retrace their steps at once.
I think the injunction prayed for in the bill should be granted; but as a majority of the court will not assent to this, sooner than have-the bill dismissed, I will unite with my brethren in affording the partial relief indicated in the opinion of the Chief Justice.-