23 Fla. 546 | Fla. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court:
I. This case is brought here by writ of error. There was no motion for a new trial, or in arrest of judgment, made until after the term. The motion so made was properly overruled. Such motions .cannot be made after the term. Sec. 1, p. 453 Mc.’s Digest.
It is unnecessary to say more in regard to the disagreement of counsel over their conversation or alleged verbal understanding as to when the trial in the Circuit Court should take place, than that no agreement between parties or counsel, as to a trial of a cause, is of any effect before the court unless the evidence of it is in writing and subscribed by the party (or his attorney) against whom it is alleged or is made, in open court and noted by the judge in his minutes. Cir. Ct. Com. Law Rule 43.
It is urged that the indictment does not accuse the defendant of any crime.
The statute (sec. 8, p. 428 Mc.’s Digest) provides that if any person or persons within this State shall obstruct any public road or established highway, by fencing across or into the same, every such person or persons who shall build any such fence, or wilfully cause an}7 other obstruction in such road or highway or any part thereof, shall be liable to be indicted, and on conviction thereof shall be fined in a sum not exceeding one hundred dollars, at the discretion of the courtand the judgment of the court shall be that the obstruction be removed.
The indictment is founded upon this statute.
It is urged that the indictment is insufficient in that it does not allege that the road is a “ public road,” or “ an established highway.” In indictments at common law the expression the King’s or Queen’s “common highway, used for all the liege subjects * * * with their horses, coaches, carts and carriages to go, return, pass, repass, ride and labor,” is used. We think the allegation of the indictment before us, that the road described was and is “ a common highway in Putnam county, in this State, made and laid out for the people of this State to go, return and pass at their free pleasure and will on foot, on horseback and in vehicles,” is equivalent to either that of the common law form, or to an allegation under the statute that it was and is an “ established highway.” It is not necessary to use the exact language of the statute, words of equivalent import are sufficient.
We have considered the question whether the indictment shows an unlawful, as well as a wilful obstruction of the highway, and our conclusion is that it does, for its
III. It is contended that the statute providing for establishment of public roads in this State is unconstitutional ¡because it forbids compensation for taking private property. Section 7, p. 899 McO.’s Digest, which provides that nothing shall be allowed to any person whose “ unimproved lands ” a road may pass through ; and section 2, p. 898, which authorizes the supervisor of a road to use material adjacent to the road for building or repairing the same are cited. In the absence of the bill of exceptions, we must assume that it was shown upon the trial that, as agaiust the plaintiff in error, the road was lawfully established. The lands may have been “ improved lauds,” and satisfactory compensation have been made under the statute, or by agreement, to the person owning them when the road was established. The question covered by the second section is not involved under the indictment.
IY. The indictment shows that the Palatka and Indian River Railway Company is a corporation existing under the laws of Florida. No judgment inconsistent with its rights as such should be permitted ; and, consequently, a consideration of the rights of a railroad corporation as to
Our statute, by section 10, p. 277, MeC.’s Digest, empowers a railroad company to construct its road across, along or upon, or to use any street or highway which the route of its road shall intersect or touch, and provides that whenever the track of any railroad shall touch, intersect or cross any road, highway or street, that such road, highway or street may be carried over or under the railroad *l as may be found most expedient for the public good,” and that in ease any embankment or cut in the construction of any railroad shall make it necessary to change the course of any highway or street, it shall be lawful for the railroad •company to change the course or direction of the road, highway or street. The 22d section, p. 284, also provides that, whenever the track of a railroad shall cross a highway, such highway may be crossed under or over the track, “ as may be found most expedientand that “ in cases where an embankment or cutting shall make a change in the line of such highway, or is desirable with a view to more easy ascent or descent,” the railroad company “ may take such additional lands for the construction of such road or highway on such new line as may be deemed requisite by the directors, unless the lands so taken for the purposes aforesaid shall be donated by the owner or owners.” This statute also provides that the court shall declare “ such road or highway, as located by the railroad * * * company, open for all purposes of a public road or highway without cost or expense to such railroad or canal company, and such lands so declared open shall be held tor highway purposes.”
A grant to a railroad company of the right to construct
The law is well settled that when a new road or way is opened or made across a way or road.alreadj' existing and in use, the new way must be so constructed as to cause as little injury as possible to the old way or road. N. C. R. Co. vs. Mayor, &c., of Baltimore, 46 Md., 425.
“It is,” says the Supreme Court of Illinois, “ a well settled principle of the common law, resting upon the most obvious considerations of justice, that any person or corporation that cuts through a highway, for the benefit of such persons or corporation, must furnish to the public a proper crossing, even though acting under a license from the proper authorities. We refer, of course, to cases where the legislative power has not, in terms, relieved the person or company that interferes with a highway from the necessity of removing any obstructions they may create. In the absence of such an express provision, it is palpable that a railway company is under obligation to leave every highway it crosses in a safe condition for the use of the public.” The People vs. Chicago & Alton R. Co., 67 Ill., 118 ; see also 42 Iowa, 234; Maltby vs. C. & W. M. Ry. Co., 52 Mich., 108, see p. 110; Oliver vs. U. E. Ry. Co., 9 Q. B., 409; P. & E. Ry. Co., 80 Ky., 147, and 10 A. & E. R. R. cases, 318. Where the statute is silent, the common law applies, and a statute which expresses specifically no further exaction than a restoration of the highway to its former condition is not to be construed as abridging the common law duty of maintaining the crossing in such plight as to make it reasonably safe. 52 Mich., 108.
There is usually to be found in the statutes a requirement
In New York, where the last provision quoted obtains» it is stated in People vs. D. & C. R. R. Co., 58 N. Y., 165, to be “ true that bringing in the word unnecessarily does impty that the usefulness of the highway may have been somewhat impaired, either in the process of construction or in the maintenance of the railway, but that it was quite certain that the section does not mean that the highway should be rendered useless, but that it does mean that the highway shall be preserved for the use of the public travel and to permit the adoption of it at the same time for the laying of its track upon it.” Says Church, C. J., in People vs. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. Co., 74 N. Y., 304, “ The statute implies that the usefulness of a highway intersected may be to some extent impaired, and I think it fairly implies also that the crossing must be such as that the usefulness of the highway shall not be destroyed. The duty thus imposed is an important one for the public and it should be imposed not oppressively but reasonably and fairly for the public benefit.” See also 38 N. Y., 846. In Railroad vs. Commissioners, 31 O. S., 338, when the provisions of the statute required the road to be placed in such condition as not to impair its former usefulness, the doctrine is that the Legislature did not intend to require a restoration of the highway to its actual former condition, as that would be impracticable ; that substantial restoration was all that was intended ; that some inconveniences to the public travel are necessarily incident to all public railroad crossings, and such as are inseparably connected therewith must be submitted to by the public; that usefulness implied capabilities for use, and it
If it had been intended that the railroad company should have the right to entirely obstruct and destroy existing highways, why were the above provisions enacted, whose only purposes were to authorize the railroad company either to pass the highway on a different surface or to make a new highway around the obstruction occasioned to the old one by the cut or an embankment ? They show as distinctly as does the language quoted from other statutes, a clear intent to preserve the public highways against obstructions such as is alleged in this indictment.
Our understanding of this indictment, as indicated above, is that this obstruction is one whose illegality is attributable to the manner of the construction of the railroad upon the highway and not to the fact that the highway is crossed at a point outside of the authorized route of the railroad. It is only upon the former view that we think the indictment valid,for it does not state facts showing any illegality of the latter character. Wabash and St. Louis Ry. Co. vs. People, 12 Ill., app. 448, cited in U. S. Digest, 1883, p. 623, sec. 15.
As the judgment before us prevents the railroad company from abating the nuisance, or “ removing the obstruction ” by grading the highway to the surface of the railroad track or by carrying the highway under or over the railroad, or by changing the line of the highway, or by carrying the railroad along and upon the highway on the surface of the latter, or in such other manner as not to obstruct it or prevent its use by the public, according as one or the other of these courses may, under the circumstances
The form of a judgment in cases of nuisances is discussed in sec. 2369 and notes of Vol. 3, Am. Cr. Law, 6th Edition ; Wood on Nuisances, sec. 864, 2d Edition ; Bishop Cr. Pro., Vol. 2, sections 870, 871, and authorities cited. Every judgment should be adapted to the nature of the nuisance of which a defendant may be convicted.
The judgment is reversed and the cause will be remanded to the Circuit Court with directions to enter a judgment in accordance with this opinion and the practice in such cases.