209 Pa. 589 | Pa. | 1904
Opinion by
It is impossible to gather a clear chronological history of this case from the jumbled-up records in the paper-books before us. It seems, there were proceedings- in the court of quarter sessions to No. 7, December sessions, 1900, whereby the county commissioners were authorized to construct a county bridge across the Susquehanna river at Mifflinville in Columbia county. We gather from the paper-book in No. 114, January term, 1903, that the viewers and reviewers appointed by the quarter sessions reported in favor of a grade crossing at the southern approach thereto. Confirmation of this report was resisted by the railroad company but it was confirmed absolutely by the court of quarter sessions on July 7, 1902.
From this order, in effect refusing an overhead crossing under the act of 1901, the railroad company appealed to this court. The case was heard at June term, 1903, at Harrisburg. See 206 Pa. 420. Unfortunately, the hearing developed that to end by final decree the litigation, certainly one party in interest and possibly three had not been made parties to the suit and that we could make no decree binding on all until all had an opportunity to be heard, we therefore expressly declined to decide the merits of the case, but after giving our views as to the true intent and meaning of the act of 1901, we further said: “ Under these circumstances Ave have thought it best without deciding the other question to turn over the appellant to the more plastic and convenient remedy of a bill to enjoin the construction of the bridge in such manner as will require the highway to cross the railroad at grade. This appeal is therefore dismissed without prejudice.”
When it is noticed that the court below in its opinion filed refusing a decree for a grade crossing gave as its controlling reason that the act of 1901 had no application, because the proceedings in the court of quarter sessions were conclusive and determined that the crossing was made under act of 1836, our decision, that this was a new grade crossing and if allowable at all must be allowed under the act of 1901, was, in effect, giving a binding construction to the act of 1901. It is a
In July, 1903, the railroad company filed this bill in equity against the county commissioners and the other defendants to restrain by injunction the construction of the grade crossing. After hearing, a preliminary injunction was awarded. It had been in force some weeks when the supervisors were heard on their application for grade crossing under the act of 1901. On hearing, the court, on October 26,1903, granted in opinion filed their application for a grade crossing and the same day dismissed the railroad company’s bill for an injunction. From both decrees the railroad company has appealed.
We will first pass on the appeal from the decree dissolving the preliminary injunction and dismissing the bill, for the court so blends the facts and reasons in both proceedings that this decree is, practically, a consequence of both. Besides appellant at our suggestion, when the controversy was first before us, adopted this method of proceeding, which at the time we thought and still think, the most appropriate one for settling the dispute. Nor was it at all improper for the parties to submit in this case the testimony taken in the other cases before the same judge, nor for him to consider his findings of facts and conclusions of law in framing the present decree. But in so doing he has made it necessary for us in reviewing him to follow the same course.
We have seldom had occasion to notice a case where so much time and labor have been expended by counsel and court on either wholly immaterial questions or on those purely incidental to the main issue; such as the purely collateral question whether the railroad company had an indefeasible right to land upon which its tracks were laid and of which it had been in undisputed possession for nearly a quarter of a century,-
Plaintiffs aver that defendants are about to cross the railroad tracks at grade under the provisions of the Act of June 7, 1901, P. L. 531, and then in the seventh paragraph of the bill aver:
“ That said proposed grade crossing is at the foot of a hill and across the throat of plaintiff’s railroad yard, where the shifting of trains and drilling of cars keeps said track in more frequent use, and close upon its railroad station and water tank, and if constructed, would be very dangerous to the public whether traveling upon the highway, or upon this portion of the railroad, over which ten passenger and.more than twenty freight trains of very great length pass daily.”
In the face of the previous proceedings in the case, it is hard to treat the answers of the township supervisors with patience, because they are so manifestly evasive. This is the substance of the supervisors’ answer:
“For further answer your respondents say that as supervisors aforesaid, they are not interested, nor have they taken any part in the construction of the bridge mentioned in plaintiff’s bill; neither have they nor are they about to construct
This answer was filed the 8th of August, 1908, the bridge being then in process of construction and planned with approaches across the railroad tracks. In about a month thereafter, the same supervisors presented a petition to the court to authorize a grade crossing, that it was necessary and that it was their duty to construct it.
The county commissioners in their answer to this seventh paragraph, deny the statements therein, but avér that: “ They have no duty to perform with respect to the railroad crossing or the making of a highway beyond the bridge,” while in a former petition they had asked authority to construct a grade crossing. On proper exception filed to these answers, the court might have ordered defendants to more particularly answer, or in default thereof, have ordered the bill to be taken pro confesso and have made decree accordingly. But the railroad company filed no exceptions; instead it joined issue and we suppose, to speed a final hearing, put the case on the trial list.
As already noticed, when this equity proceeding was commenced, the report of bridge viewers in the court of quarter sessions had been confirmed, to wit on the 7th of July, 1902, but the act of the 7th of June, 1901, was then a law upon the statute book and by its terms took effect June 1,1902.
The final decree and most of the proceedings in the quarter sessions case were made after the act of 1901 had become a law. In so far as concerned highways and bridges crossing railroads, both are general acts relating to the same subject and the older act is clearly modified by the later one. By the act of 1836 the court of quarter sessions had power to change the course of a road so as to suit the location of a new bridge; but no such power is given that court by the act of 1901 where such change involves the crossing at grade of the tracks of a railway; that power is expressly given the common pleas by the last act and all the details for its exercise pointed out. This particular power of authorizing grade crossings of railroads no longer exists in the quarter sessions by the act of 1901. Notice the scope of the third section of that act:
“ Every municipality or other authority hereafter constructing a highway .... across an existing railroad shall construct
And the manner hereinafter provided is set out in section 4, by petition to the common pleas, which shall by evidence, by appointment of commissioners or otherwise satisfy itself that such construction is reasonably required. When this act went into effect, before final decree in the quarter sessions, it practically suspended all further proceedings in that court, and the court, which it must be assumed had full knowledge of the law, should have so declared. The new statute, so far as it related to the highway crossings of a railroad at grade, was substituted for the old and the quarter sessions had no longer jurisdiction in that particular; its proceedings therefore became a nullity. “ A subsequent statute revising the subject-matter of a former one and evidently intended as a substitute for it, although it contains no express words to that effect, must operate to repeal the former to the extent to which its provisions are revised and supplied: ” Commonwealth v. Cromley, 1 Ash. 179; Stoever v. Immell, 1 Watts, 258; North Canal Street Road, 10 Watts, 351, and many subsequent cases. Therefore, we hold these proceedings cannot be sustained under the act of 1836.
Was the decree one that should have been made under the act of 1901 ? As is wisely said by the present chief justice when the same case was before us last year :
“The settled policy of this state, legislative and judicial, is against the future increase of grade crossings. The act of June 19, 1871, gave the courts jurisdiction over crossings of one railroad by another at grade, and this court has more than once expressed its regret that the control did not extend to the crossing of a railroad and an ordinary highway. This control the act of June 7, 1901,. has now given, any grade crossing which hereafter comes before the court, comes with a heavy burden of proof upon it.
“ Under the conceded facts, the crossing involved in this controversy is a new grade crossing and as such is prohibited by the act of 1901. The fact that it is incidental to the relocation of an existing highway under the act of 1836 does not relieve it of the ban of the act of 1901. The language of
This is a new grade crossing. It is true, an ancient ferry-had a landing a short distance below the bridge and the passengers crossed the tracks some on foot and same by vehicle but the contemplated crossing was not only in a different place on the tracks but was intended to accommodate more people ; it was in every reasonable sense a new one and not a mere perpetuation of an old one. So that it was fairly within the meaning of the act a crossing 44 hereafter established,” and therefore controlled by the provisions of the act of 1901. There was an agreement of counsel, filed in a companion case to this equity suit and argued here with it to admit in evidence the proceedings in County Commissioners v. Penna. Railroad, which proceedings related to the same crossing; also both court and counsel have used almost indiscriminately the proceedings and facts developed in the second suit, Supervisors of Mifflin Township v. The Penna. Railroad Co. in their argument and opinions in this suit, therefore we, in justice to them, must follow in the use of the same material; indeed it is proper that we should all do so for the cases are so blended that we could not otherwise intelligently consider the law and the evidence. As we have shown this bill is properly filed under the act of 1901. The two most important averments of plaintiff’s bill are the seventh and eighth; the seventh we have heretofore quoted, averring the dangerous character of the proposed grade crossing; the eighth is as follows :
44 That at the very place of said proposed grade crossing the high ground, along whose base at the edge of the river bank plaintiff’s railroad is laid, affords a most advantageous opportunity for an overhead crossing to the level of the village street, which is about eighteen feet higher than the plaintiff’s railroad tracks, and 170 feet distant therefrom across the village common, said street being upon about the same level as' the Berwick road with which said bridge connects, some 500 feet from its northern end.”
First are the averments of the seventh paragraph of the bill true ? The learned judge has found they are not. We think
As to the eighth paragraph which avers that an overhead crossing could be easily made at a comparatively moderate expense, we think that should also have been affirmed as a fact. The policy of the commonwealth and this court with reference to grade crossings has been frequently and in no uncertain terms announced. It is, that the murderous grade crossing must go. It would seem to be intimated in the argument of counsel for appellees that the proper construction of the act of 1901 is, that it is an enabling act, to facilitate grade crossings of railroads by highways. We are of a wholly different opinion; it is a prohibitory act. Perhaps, in the absence of the act of 1901, under a liberal interpretation of the act of
We review the case on the record before us as it stood at the date of the appeal, but while the appeal was pending the whole superstructure of the bridge was swept away by the flood of February, 1904; this is asserted by appellants in their paper-book and admitted by respondents in theirs, so that in the reconstruction of the bridge a change in the height of the piers will probably be all the alteration necessary in the plans.
It is further argued by counsel for the township supervisors that equity is without jurisdiction because the statute gives exclusive jurisdiction by petition to the common pleas in the proceeding there prescribed., It must be noticed that when the case came before us at Harrisburg and was argued, that for reasons then apparent in the argument on both sides, the statutory proceeding attempted to be put in force , had not reached all the proper parties to the issue, nor had it reached the real merits of the issue. It was aptly remarked by the chief justice in the opinion filed in that case, that the statutory method of proceeding is closely assimilated to a proceeding in e.quity and he says, “ whether we might not take up the case aS if'on an appeal in regard to an injunction is far from clear,” and just whose duty, whether that of the county or the township supervisors, it was, to construct a crossing was also not clear. He then says: “ Under these circumstances we have thought it best, without deciding the other questions, to turn Over the appellant to the more plastic and convenient remedy of a bill- to enjoin the construction of the bridge.” Whether in the beginning, there might be sought- a highway crossing at grade, where the precise statutory proceeding in form pointed out in the act would be held to be exclusive, we do not now decide. We do hold that1 under the facts, here developed, it is not-exclusive in this - case. There- are four distinct parties
Here were five parties, each one affected, either officially or individually or in its corporate capacity by the. proposed grade crossing and each having separate interests, to some extent antagonistic, depending on the evidence; a comprehensive and just decree could only be made by ascertaining the exact nature of the duties and obligations and rights of each; the remedy most adequate was clearly in equity. Equity alone
But besides the lawful jurisdiction of equity because of the inadequacy and inconvenience of the proceeding by petition under the statute, the objection of respondents to the jurisdiction comes too late. The bill was filed and answer made thereto by each one of the four parties ; no one of them raised a question as to the jurisdiction; issue was joined and hearing had, preliminary injunction awarded and afterwards dissolved and bill dismissed; no demurrer was filed. Objection in this case is first made to the jurisdiction in the argument in this court. While objection to the jurisdiction can, generally, be made at any stage of the proceedings, objections to the jurisdiction of equity on the ground that the proceedings should have been instituted on the law side of the court, will not be entertained, unless made within a reasonable time after bill filed. “ Whether a case may be brought in the chancery form is only a question of form and not of jurisdiction, and the objection is waived if not made in due season: ” 1 T. & H. Pr. sec. 91. “ It must be taken advantage of by demurrer and not by objection to the jurisdiction of the court: ” Adams v. Beach, 1 Phila. 99. To the same effect are Edgett v. Douglass, 144 Pa. 95; Drake v. Lacoe, 157 Pa. 17; Shillito v. Shillito, 160 Pa. 167. So that on both grounds we hold that this decree is sound in equity.
As to the parties to the bill, it does not appear that either Charles Reimard, the contractor for the bridge, or the King Bridge Company were at all concerned by their contracts in the grade crossing; their contracts called for only the construction of the bridge and its superstructure. As to them the bill is dismissed; as to the county commissioners and township supervisors the decree of the court below dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill, as to them, is reversed ; the bill is reinstated and it is directed that injunction issue enjoining them, their agents and servants from constructing a crossing at grade over the tracks of appellant’s railroad. It is further ordered that said county commissioners and township supervisors pay the costs.