¶ 2. The material facts relevant to this case are not in dispute. The City of Burlington owns and operates a municipal electric utility that has maintained utility poles since the 1950s within an historic railroad righi>of-way that crosses the Preseaults’ property. In 2002, the City began a telecommunications project that involved installing approximately sixteen and one-half miles of fiber optic cable for the transmission of video, voice, and data services, including cable television service, to connect city-owned buildings and facilities. As part of the project, the City installed a fiber optic cable along the utility poles abutting the Preseaults’ property, as permitted by a Public Service Board rule allowing licensed entities access to utility poles. The cable is located several feet below the crossbars that hold the preexisting lines.
¶ 3. The Preseaults filed a complaint in federal district court, asserting that the installation of the cable was an unlawful taking that violated then’ constitutional rights. The district court dismissed the complaint, ruling that 30 V.S.A. §§ 2513-2515 unequivocally granted the City a right to install the fiber optic cable on existing utility poles. The Preseaults appealed, and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals certified to this Court the following question, which we accepted for review: “Are the City’s rights under section 2514, which remained following the abandonment of the railroad easement pursuant to Proctor, in the nature of a common
¶ 4. As the Second Circuit noted, “[t]he present lawsuit follows more than 20 years of litigation over the Preseaults’ ownership and right to exclusive possession of land that once had been subject to the railroad easement.” Id. at 98. A summary of the historical background and various proceedings between the parties is helpful in understanding the current dispute. In 1899, pursuant to an act of the Vermont Legislature, the Rut-land-Canadian Railroad Company acquired a right-of-way to operate a railway line on lands that included property owned by the Preseaults’ predecessors-in-title. In 1962, defendant State of Vermont acquired the railroad right-of-way from one railroad company and leased it to another, which continued to operate a railway line. In the 1970s, the railroad discontinued rail service on the land abutting the Preseaults’ property and removed all existing track and railroad equipment. In 1981, the Preseaults brought a quiet title action in the superior court alleging that the railroad’s easement had been abandoned, and that title to the righf>of-way had reverted back to them. The court dismissed the action, holding that the matter was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), and we affirmed. See Trustees of Diocese of Vt. v. State,
¶ 5. The Preseaults next sought a certificate of abandonment from the ICC, but, pursuant to the National Trails System Act, the ICC approved an agreement between the State of Vermont and the City of Burlington to use the railroad right-of-way as a bicycle and pedestrian path.
¶ 6. Meanwhile, in 1987, the State of Vermont and the City of Burlington initiated trespass proceedings in state court seeking damages and injunctive relief
¶ 7. We now return to the instant dispute. In dismissing the Preseaults’ complaint challenging the City’s installation of the fiber optic cable, the federal district court ruled that 30 V.S.A. §§ 2513-2515 entitle utilities to maintain easements arising from railroad rights-of-way, and that the Preseaults had failed to raise any disputed fact indicating that the fiber optic line had materially increased the burden of the existing utility easement. The Second Circuit opined that the district court’s reasoning treated “the statutory right as having the characteristics of a common law easement,” which it deemed to be an unsettled question of Vermont law, and thus certified the following question to this Court: “Are the City’s rights under section 2514, which remained following the abandonment of the railroad easement pursuant to Proctor, in the nature of a common law easement, or limited to maintaining the lines that existed prior to the abandonment?” Preseault,
¶ 8. The Preseaults ask this Court to answer the certified question in the negative, arguing that 30 V.S.A. § 2514 provides only a limited statutory right to maintain existing utility lines and cannot be construed as granting a common-law easement that would allow utilities to add new nonburdensome lines. Defendants City of Burlington and the State of Vermont respond that the rights provided by §§ 2513-2514 are in the nature of an easement and are properly construed as such. In the alternative, defendants argue that this Court should reformulate the certified question and reconfirm its determination in prior cases that the railroad right-of-way in question was never formally abandoned as required under federal law, and thus they are entitled to exclusive possession of the historic right-of-way. Central Vermont Public Service Corporation has filed an amicus brief expressing the concern that our resolution of the certified question in this case could affect the right of utilities under 30 V.S.A. § 2502 to construct and maintain transmission lines along town highway righDof-ways without obtaining the consent of adjacent landowners. See Dessureau v. Maurice Memorials, Inc.,
¶ 9. The instant dispute centers around the statutory rights embodied in 30 V.S.A. §§2513-2514. Section 2513(a) allows a utility to “erect and maintain its telecommunications or electric transmission and distribution lines and facilities along the sides of railroad tracks within the limits of lands owned or held by a railroad on paying
¶ 10. In so holding, the Court reasoned as follows:
[Under the statute,] [t]he railroad use ... was not confined strictly to railroad purposes, but carried inherent in it rights in favor, among others, of electric light companies. These rights might or might not come into actual physical being at a later period. Put another way, railroad use encompassed other uses, including electric lines. Since this is so, the [landowner’s] predecessor in title was entitled to show and receive damages for the full use to which the condemned property might be put by the appropriation, not only railroading but also any other statutory use, electric lines included.
The compensation paid in the condemnation proceedings to the [landowner’s] predecessor for railway use was full indemnity for that use and all the other uses which the statute of the day included or encompassed therein. The Rutland Street Railway Company having paid the then owner of the land for the right of way now owned and used by the [utility], the [utility] is under no obligation, either legal or equitable, to pay this [landowner] therefor a second time.
Id. at 433-34,
¶ 11. This reasoning indicates that the Legislature intended the predecessor statutes of §§ 2513-2514 to allow utilities to provide electric and telecommunication services along railroad rights-of-way even after the railroad’s abandonment of the rights-of-way because the railroad is presumed to have already compensated adjoining landowners for all of the permitted uses, including the installation and maintenance of electric and telecommunication lines — even if those uses came into being at a later time. Nevertheless, the Preseaults argue that the statutes allow utilities only to maintain existing lines. In making this argument, they focus on the statement in Proctor that “when the railroad use is abandoned, the right to maintain a then existing independent electric line continues.” Id. at 434,
¶ 12. Indeed, the language of the decision quoted above suggests the contrary.
II13. As indicated in the cases cited above, the plain intent of the Legislature in enacting §§ 2513-2514 and predecessor statutes is to allow utilities to continue to provide electric and telecommunications services within railroad rights-of-way even after railroad operations cease. Cf. Davis v. MCI Telecommunications Corp.,
The question certified by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Preseault v. City of Burlington, 112 F.Sd 96, 103 (2005), is answered in the affirmative.
Motion for reargument denied August 18, 2006.
Notes
Apparently, the ICC has never issued a certificate of abandonment with respect to the railroad line at issue in this case.
