The danger of grade-crossings has re-
ceived the attention of the General Assembly of this state on numerous occasions. That every such crossing is a menace to human life is recognized, and repeated enactments, each supposed to be more stringent and effective to lessen the danger than former ones, have from time to time been passed. Indeed the legislative will seems now to have become settled that all such crossings shall be removed without unnecessary delay.
To carry out this determination the General Assembly at its session in 1889 passed an act entitled “ An Act relating to Grade Crossings.” This act, which is chapter 220 of the public acts of 1889, is given in full in a note below.
In an earlier part of the same section the rule of procedure to be followed by the commissioners in making such order is given, as follows:—“ And if the aforesaid petition is brought by the directors of any railroad company, or in behalf of any railroad company, they shall order the expense of such alterations or removals, including the damages to any person whose land is taken, and the special damages which the owner of any land adjoining the public highway shall sustain by reason of any change in the grade of any such highway in-consequence of any change, alteration or removal ordered under the authority of this act, to be paid by the railroad company owning or operating the railroad in whose behalf the petition is brought.”
All the prior statutes respecting grade-crossings had been permissive. They had authorized the directors of any railroad or the proper officers of a municipality to apply to the railroad commissioners for an order by which some grade-crossing should be removed. None of them had made it compulsory upon any one to ask for such an order, nor had they laid the duty upon any one to take the steps necessary to remove such crossings. As expenses—sometimes quite large expenses—would be incurred in the changes incident to such removal, perhaps it is not strange that those statutes had done very little to abate the evil aimed at. The legisla-’ ture of 1889 proceeded to apply a more rigorous rule. While leaving the permissive features of the former acts to remain in force, they commanded the directors of every railroad in
In arriving at the legislative intent as expressed in any statute it is always expedient to recur to the circumstances which surrounded the legislature at the time the statute was passed. In 1889 there was an urgent public demand for efficient legislation to remove the danger arising from grade crossings. At that time the Asylum Street Bridge Commission was about finishing its labors. That commission had been created by the legislature and directed to take such steps as were needed to remove a grade-crossing in Asylum street in the city of Hartford. The validity of that commission had been established. Its efficiency and success had been demonstrated. In that instance by the instrumentality of a commission one grade-crossing of exceptional danger had been removed. That was a precedent which might safely be followed. All grade-crossings were dangerous, although not so highly dangerous as the one in Asylum street. A special commission was needed for the removal of that one. But in ordinary cases a general commission would be adequate. In the Asylum street case the legislature acted because the railroads and the municipality neglected to act. That commission was successful because it was the instrument of the supreme power of the state. If in other cases the directors of railroads disobeyed the commands of the statute and neglected to remove the dangerous crossings, another commission acting in like manner by the supreme power of the state would be likely to be successful. In the one case the legislature had proceeded upon the theory that the Asylum street crossing was a nuisance dangerous to human life. Now the legislature was about to proceed upon the
What was said by this court of the statute which created that special commission may with equal justice be said of the statute of 1889. “ In scope and purpose it concerns the protection of life. Neither in intent nor fact does it increase or diminish the assets of any railroad corporation. It is the exercise of the governmental power and duty to secure safe highways. The legislature having determined that the intersection of a railway with any highway at grade is a nuisance dangerous to life, in the absence of action on the part of the municipality or of the railroad may compel them to become the owner of the right to lay out new highways and new railways over such land and in such manner as will separate the grade of the railway from that of the highway at intersections ; may compel them to use the right for the accomplishment of the desired end; may determine that the expenses shall be paid by either corporation alone, or in part by both, and may enforce obedience to its judgment. That the legislature of the state has the power to do all this for the specified purpose, and to do it through the instrumentality of a commission, it is now only necessary to state not to argue.” On the 12th day of March, 1891, the railroad commissioners, intending to obey the command contained in that act, and to conform to the rule of procedure therein prescribed, issued an order in which, after reciting that the directors of the New York & New England Railroad Company had failed to remove or apply for the removal during the year ending August 1st, 1890, of any grade crossing of a highway which crossed or was crossed by their railroad,
From that order the railroad company made the present appeal to the Superior Court in Hartford County. They made the town of Bristol, the railroad commissioners, and divers other parties, defendants, and caused notice to be served on them to appear and make answers.
. In the Superior Court there were various pleadings filed, sundry motions were made, and there were orders thereon, there was a hearing and judgment affirming the order of the railroad commissioners, and a finding of facts as follows:—
í “Said railroad company is, and at the date of said order was, of sufficient ability to execute said' order of the railroad commissioners, and the financial condition of said company w.as at the time of the making of said order, and is, such as to warrant the order for the removal of said crossing. Said'*537 crossing so ordered to be removed is one of the most dangerous ones upon the line of said railroad, and the said order was necessary for the safety of the public. At the commencement of the trial the plaintiff moved to strike out the answer of the railroad commissioners, upon the ground that they were not entitled under the statute to appear and defend in said proceeding in this court. The court denied the motion and the plaintiff excepted to said ruling. The plaintiff offered to prove that in December, 1890, the railroad commissioners, in a proceeding against the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Company, ordered the removal of a grade crossing on Morgan street in the city of Hartford in such manner as to require one fourth the expenses of such removal to be paid by the state. Said evidence was offered in support of the allegation in paragraph seventeen of the plaintiff’s petition. Upon objection of the defendant the court excluded the evidence and the plaintiff excepted to said ruling.”
From that judgment the railroad company has appealed to this court. The several grounds of appeal, as they are mentioned in the appellant’s brief, are :—
1st. That the railroad commissioners were not entitled to appear and defend.
2d. That the statute is unconstitutional.
3d. That the order expunging various paragraphs of the appeal was erroneous.
4th. That it was error to reject the evidence concerning the Morgan street order.
5th. That it was error to admit the evidence concerning the New England Terminal contract.
6th. That all the issues are not disposed of by the judgment.
There was no error in overruling the plaintiff’s motion, not made till the opening of the trial, that the answer of the railroad commissioners be stricken out on the ground that they were not entitled to appear in the matter. The plaintiff having caused the commissioners to be brought into court and having joined issue with them upon their answer, was
The statute is in its operation an amendment to the charter of each of the railroad corporations affected by it. It imposes on the plaintiff, being a corporation of that kind, an obligation which previous to its passage the charter of the plaintiff did not impose. But as that charter contained the provision that it might be altered at pleasure by the legislature, the statute is binding upon it.
All general laws and matters of police regulation affecting corporations are binding upon them without their assent. New York & New England R. R. Co. v. City of Waterbury, 60 Conn., 1; Bulkley v. New York & New Haven R. R. Co., 27 id., 479; English v. New Haven & Northampton Co., 32 id., 240; City of Bridgeport v. New York & New Haven R. R. Co., 36 id., 264. That the legislature may rightfully and constitutionally impose such additional obligations upon a railroad company it is now too late to question. New York & New England R. R. Co.'s Appeal from R. R. Commissioners, 58 Conn., 532. Such legislation violates no contract, takes away no property, and interferes with no vested right. Woodruff v. Catlin, 54 Conn., 277; Woodruff v. New York & New England R. R. Co., 59 id., 63; People ex rel. Kimball v. Boston & Albany R. R. Co., 70 N. York, 569; Railroad Co. v. Richmond, 96 U. S. R., 521; Cooley’s Const. Lim., (5th ed.,) 672. As stated above, the act of 1889 retains the permissive features of prior enactments and authorizes the railroad commissioners to act in the removal of a grade crossing upon the application of the selectmen of any town, but provides that in such ease the town shall be required to pay not more than one fourth the expense. An application under that part of the statute arose in the town of Killingly and is the case reported in 58 Conn., 532,
It being established by the legislature and by the repeated decisions of this court that grade-crossings are in the nature •of nuisances and dangerous to life, the right of the legislature to cause them to be abated and to require either party to pay the whole or any portion of the expense cannot be questioned. Raymond v. Fish, 51 Conn., 80; Dunham v. City of New Britain, 55 id., 378; State v. Worden, 56 id., 216; Miller v. Horton, 152 Mass., 540.
A further question raised by the plaintiff under the second reason of appeal is that the statute is unconstitutional because it authorizes the railroad commissioners to make their own jurisdiction. This objection cannot be sustained. The jurisdiction given to the railroad commissioners to proceed on their own motion to order the removal of any grade-crossing in any particular instance depends on two conditions ; first, the failure of the directors to remove or apply for its removal; of such failure the railroad commissioners would have official knowledge ; second, the opinion of the commissioners that the crossing is one for the removal of which the directors ought to have applied, and their opinion that the financial condition of the railroad company is such as will warrant the order. It is a sound rule of construction that when a statute gives discretionary power to any person to be exercised by him upon his own opinion of certain facts, the statute makes him sole and exclusive judge of the existence of those facts. Martin v. Mott, 12 Wheat., 19, 29, per Story, J.; Luther v. Borden, 7 Howard, 45, per Taney, C. J. There is really no occasion for the applica
In the third reason of appeal the plaintiff claims to be aggrieved because certain of the paragraphs of its original application were expunged. Giving the most liberal construction to the statute in favor of the plaintiff, the only questions in the case which were material, or upon which there' could be any issue, were—1st, whether or not the plaintiff’s directors had removed or applied for the removal of a grade-crossing as required by the statute ;—2d, whether or not the grade-crossing ordered to be removed by the commissioners was in fact a dangerous one, and one which the directors ought to have removed, or for the removal of which the directors ought to have applied; 3d, whether or not the financial condition of the plaintiff was such as to warrant the order. The practice act forbids a party to set out in its pleadings the evidence by which the material facts are to be proved. All the averments expunged from the plaintiff’s application were statements of evidential facts tending to show the plaintiff’s financial condition. They were properly stricken out.
The order made by the railroad commissioners in the case of the Morgan street crossing was properly rejected. That order was made under another part of the statute and was against another railroad company. It was a matter between other parties. Bethlehem v. Watertown, 47 Conn., 237; Burdick v. City of Norwich, 49 id., 225; 1 Greenleaf’s Ev., § 524.
There is no error in the judgment appealed from.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Section 1. The selectmen of any town, the mayor and common council of any city, the warden and burgesses of any borough, within which a highway crosses or is crossed by a railroad, or the directors of any railroad company whose road crosses or is crossed by a highway, may bring their petition in writing to the railroad commissioners, therein alleging that public safety requires an alteration in such crossing, its approaches, the method of crossing, the location of the highway or crossing, the closing of a highway crossing and the substitution of another therefor not at grade, or the removal of obstructions to the sight at such crossing, and praying that the same may be ordered; whereupon the railroad commissioners shall appoint a time and place for hearing the petition, and shall give such notice thereof as they judge reasonable to said petitioner, the railroad company, the municipalities in which such crossing is situated, and to the owners of the land adjoining such crossing and adjoining that part of the highway to be changed in grade; and after such notice and hearing said commissioners shall determine what alterations, changes or removals, if any, shall be made and by whom done; and if the aforesaid petition is brought by the directors of any railroad company, or in behalf of any railroad company, they shall order the expense of such alterations or removals, including the
Sec. 2. The railroad commissioners may, in the absence of any application therefor, when in their own opinion public safety requires an alteration in any highway or highways crossed at grade by a railroad or by railroads belonging to or operated by more than one company, after a hearing liad upon such notice as they shall deem reasonable to the railroad company or companies owning or operating said railroad or railroads, and to the selectmen of the town, mayor of the city or warden of the borough within which said highway or highways are situated, and to the owners of the land adjoining said crossing, order such alterations in such highway or highways as they shall deem best, and shall determine and direct by whom
Sec. 3. Eailroad companies may take land for the purpose of this act in the manner provided by law for the taking of lands by railroad companies.
Sec. A Whenever the railroad commissioners upon an application brought under the provisions of section one of this act, shall find that any highway crosses or is crossed by the tracks of more than one railroad, and the tracks of such railroads are so near together that public convenience requires the work of separating the grades to be done under and in compliance with one order, they shall give notice to all the companies operating said railroads to appear before them and be heard upon the application, and after such notice and hearing said commissioners shall determine what alterations shall be made, if any, so as to separate the grades of all of said crossings at the same time, and they shall determine by whom such work shall be done, and they shall apportion the expense to be borne by the railroad companies between such companies in such manner as they, the said commissioners, shall deem proper.
Sec. 5. Damages under the provisions of this act on account of any change of grade in highways shall be assessed in the same manner as in the case of land taken for railroad purposes; and the provisions of this act in relation to such damages for change of grade shall apply in the case of any order passed by the railroad commissioners or Superior Court since June first, 1887, under the authority conferred by section 3489 of the General Statutes.
Sec. 6. The provisions of section 3491 of the General Statutes in relation to appeals shall apply to any decision of the railroad commissioners under the authority of this act.
Sec. 7. It shall be the duty of the railroad companies to maintain and keep in repair all structures erected over their tracks at any highway crossing, but it shall be the duty of the municipality in which the structure is situated to keep in repair the surface of the highway, including the planking or other surface material of the highway upon such structure. •
Sec. 8. The provisions of this act shall apply to any cause or application now pending before the railroad commissioners or Superior Court. All provisions of the General Statutes which relate to sections 3483 and 3489 of the same shall be deemed to apply to the provisions of this act.
Sec. 9. Sections 3483 and 3489 of the General Statutes are hereby repealed, but no rights, duties or obligations belonging to or imposed upon any parties by any judgments heretofore rendered, shall be impaired or altered by such repeal.