173 Mass. 12 | Mass. | 1899
South Street in the city of Northampton is a highway which crosses the petitioners’ railroad, and which formerly crossed it at grade. By proceedings begun on November 14, 1889, upon petition of the mayor and aldermen of the city, under the provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 112, §§ 129-184, as amended and modified by Sts. 1882, c. 135, 1884, c. 280, 1885, c. 194, and 1887, c. 295, these crossings were separated and the highway was carried over the railroad at another point. These proceedings were before this court in Davis v. County Commissioners, 153 Mass. 218, where it was held that so much only of South Street as was within the location of the railroad was discontinued, and that the deflection or alteration of the street by which it was carried over the railroad was within the powers conferred by the statutes cited.
On May 11, 1897, upon this petition, the commissioner’s adjudicated that common convenience and necessity required that a highway be laid out as prayed for across the railroad and under its tracks, and on October 5, 1897, made a final decree laying out and locating the highway as prayed for across the railroad and under its tracks, and ordering the construction of the highway within one year by the present petitioners, who are respectively the owner and the lessee of the railroad.
The petitioners contend that the proceedings of the commissioners under the petition of April 6, 1897, should be quashed, because they had no power to lay out a highway across the railroad, or to authorize the city so to do, at the point where the railroad and the street formerly crossed at grade, and because, under the charter of the city, its city council alone has power to lay out highways within the city, and because the county commissioners had no authority to order the present petitioners to construct the highway, and because the order for construction is indefinite, and because the carrying out of the order will involve an alteration in the grade of tracks which has been fixed by other proceedings under the grade crossing act, St. 1890, c. 428, and also because the carrying out of the order will result in endangering the railroad by the action of Mill River, and will destroy part of a city sewer.
If the county commissioners had any jurisdiction of the petition of April 6, 1897, their only authority was under the provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 125, which is the section authorizing the laying out of highways and town ways across a railroad previously
But we are of opinion that the county commissioners had no power, upon the petition on which they made their adjudication, to lay out and locate, or to authorize the city to lay out and locate, a highway across the railroad at the point where it was formerly crossed by South Street. The provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 125, were not intended to apply to such a case. The crossing of the street and the railroad at that point having been altered by proceedings under Pub. Sts. c. 112, §§ 129-134, if thereafter public convenience and necessity required a further alteration, it could be ordered by fresh proceedings under the same statute. Boston & Albany Railroad v. County Commissioners, 164 Mass. 551, 554. And in our opinion it could be ordered in no other way. To permit the county commissioners, under the guise of laying out a new highway across the railroad, to restore the former crossing although at a different grade, would be to disturb the former decree by means which the Legislature never intended should be used for that purpose, and which are not adapted to do justice between the railroad corporations and the city, in a case
The substance of the situation is that when a change in the place of crossing is made in abolishing a grade crossing, if after the change is made it remains a crossing of the same street with the same railroad, accommodating substantially the same travel, it is really the same crossing though removed to a new location. Norwood v. New York & New England Railroad, 161 Mass. 259. If further alterations or changes are further required for the convenient passing of the travel of the same street across the railroad, they are to be made by new proceedings for the alteration of existing crossings. Boston & Albany Railroad v. County Commissioners, ubi supra.
We do not think it advisable to discuss any of the other questions raised. Whether, if there were occasion to lay out a highway in Northampton under the provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 125, it could be laid only by the city council, is an interesting question, which might involve an exhaustive examination of the charters of the cities of the Commonwealth, and the comparison of -their provisions with those of the general statute provisions regulating the laying out of highways. Neither the decision of this question, nor that of the other questions which we have only stated, is material to the result.
Writ of certiorari to issue, and the proceedings of the county commissioners to be quashed.