27 Conn. 48 | Conn. | 1858
This was an action on the statute for an injury occasioned by a defective bridge, and the principal question was, whether the bridge was one which the defendant town was bound by law to maintain and keep in repair. There was no doubt that the bridge belonged to the defendants to keep in repair, unless it belonged to and was a part of the Warren Turnpike Company’s road, and belonged to the turnpike.company to maintain ; in which case it must of course be conceded that the town is not liable for an injury occasioned by its being out of repair, because our statute makes towns liable only in cases where no other person or corporation is liable to maintain and repair the road or bridge by the defect of which an injury is sustained. Rev. Stat., tit. 24, § 1. Sherwood v. Weston, 18 Conn., 32.
It appeared that there was an ancient road at the place in question, which belonged to the town to maintain, and had been maintained by it up to 1806, but in that year the Warren Turnpike Company was chartered and organized, and from that time for a period of forty years that corporation repaired it and maintained toll gates upon it and treated it in all respects asa part of their road. In 1846 the turnpike company ceased to repair the road, took off all its gates therefrom, and from that time entirely abandoned it. It does not explicitly appear from the motion, but we suppose it to be the fact, that the only road in Cornwall ever main
Now whether it be assumed that the charge in respect to the liability of the turnpike company, while it continued to maintain the road as a part of its turnpike, is correct, or whether the proper course would have been to submit this as a question of fact, to the jury, to say whether the acts of the corporation under their charter were not a sufficient location of their turnpike road over this old highway, so as to exonerate the town from liability to repair, &e., can make no difference, for if either course was proper, then, as it might have been found and probably would have been found that
The circumstance that it cannot be determined by a mere inspection of the resolution where the road of the corporation was to be built or established, does not render the charter void. It has not been claimed that the legislature had not the power to charter a company with authority to build and maintain a turnpike road, leaving the corporation to locate it in some suitable place for the accommodation of the public. It is true this is not often done, in respect to turnpikes. But towns, cities and boroughs, have power to make ordinary highways and streets, and there can be no objection in principle to granting the same power to a turnpike corporation which does not apply to the authority which is exercised over this subject by these municipal corporations.
A turnpike located, built, and opened for travel, by a corporation thus chartered, would possess all the incidents, in
It was claimed that the late repairs of the road by the town operated to estop the town from claiming that it was not liable to maintain the road. We do not think so, for so long as there is a liability upon the turnpike corporation, there can, by our statute, be none upon the town. What the effect of a continued abandonment of all their corporate rights by the corporation for a long period might be, it is unnecessary to consider. If the abandonment had been for a period sufficient to justifythe presumption that the charter had, in some way, been taken away, or ceased to exist, the question no doubt would be presented in a more favorable aspect for the plaintiff. But a mere abandonment of corporate franchises for a few years is obviously insufficient to raise any question of this sort. Indeed it is not raised here, but the claim is that there may be a liability to repair and pay damages for injuries occasioned by non-repair against the corporation and the town at the same time, and cases are cited which are supposed to sanction this claim. It is sufficient however to say, in answer to this claim, that our prac.
Again, it is said that the turnpike company, by abandoning their road and leaving it open for travel, dedicated it to the public as a highway, and the town, by its repairs, accepted it, and thus it became an ordinary highway.
There is no doubt that it is a highway which the town is bound to repair if it is not still a turnpike road, because as it was such highway previous to the charter of the turnpike, it would remain so after the turnpike ceased to exist, as was decided in Sherwood v. Weston; but the difficulty is that the turnpike company still exists, and is by law liable for any injury caused by its being out of repair, and by the statute the town is made liable only in cases where there is no liability on any other person or corporation.
For these reasons we are of opinion that the superior court erred in its charge to the jury, and we accordingly advise that a new trial be granted. • .
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
New trial advised.