32 Pa. Super. 579 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1907
Opinion by
The appellant’s first proposition, as clearly stated by its counsel, is that the occupation of this portion — a strip about thirteen feet wide and sixty-seven feet long — of the public street by a portion of the passenger depot of the railroad company, with the consent of the municipal authorities, is not an illegal act; on the contrary, it is expressly authorized by law, and what is authorized by law cannot be a nuisance. The only statutory authority for the act to which our notice has been directed is supposed to be contained in the eleventh section of the act regulating railroads adopted by the legislature of Ohio on February 24, 1848, which became part of the law of this commonwealth to the extent and in the manner following. On February 24 of the same year the Ohio and Pennsylvania R. R. Co., having Pittsburg for the eastern terminus of its railroad, was incorporatod by act of the Ohio legislature, and it was therein provided that the company should have all the powers and privileges and be subject to all the restrictions and provisions of the act regulating railroad companies above referred to. It further provided that when the legislature of Pennsylvania should pass a law giving their assent to and confirming the provisions of this act of February 24, then it should take effect and be in force in that state. In April of the same year the act of the Pennsylvania legislature entitled “ An act to incorporate the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad Company ” was approved, whereby the full and entire assent of this commonwealth was given to each and all of the provisions of the Ohio act of February 24, and it was therein declared that the said act was adopted, ratified and confirmed and enacted into a law of this commonwealth, and all and each of the provisions, conditions and restrictions thereof, as fully and as effectually as if the same were enacted section by section. It further provided that exemplified copies of the two Ohio acts above referred to should be annexed to this act, and published in the same manner. Accordingly the three acts were published in the appendix to pamphlet laws of 1849, at pages 754 et seq. The Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago Ry. Co., the successor to the rights, privileges and property of the Ohio
“ It does not admit of a doubt in this state that a railroad company may use a public street or highway when authorized by its charter, either expressly or inferentially: ” Cleveland & Pittsburg R. R. Co. v. Speer, 56 Pa. 325, citing Phila. & Trenton R. R. Co.’s Case, 6 Wheat. 25, 43 ; Mifflin v. Harrisburg, Portsmouth, etc., R. R. Co., 16 Pa. 182; Commonwealth v. Erie & Northeast R. R. Co., 27 Pa. 339, 354. And in Mercer v. Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & Chicago R. R. Co., 36 Pa. 99, where the section of the charter above quoted was under consideration, it was held that the exercise of the power to authorize the building of a railroad on a street or other public highway may be devolved by the legislature upon the local authorities. These cases, it is true, relate to occupation of a highway by a railroad proper, but the principle that the power of the state over the highways thereof is supreme would sustain legislative authorization of the occupation of a highway by such appendages or adjuncts of the railroad as passenger depots, freight houses, shelter sheds, and the like, subject, of course, to such obligation as may be imposed by the constitution to make or secure compensation to individuals affected thereby. The question, therefore, is not of the power but of the intention of the legislature to delegate to local authorities the dis
But even if it be assumed that the delegated power was broad enough to authorize that at the time of the location of the railroad, how was it at the time it was attempted to be exercised in the present instance ? At that time the company’s railroad had been located and in operation for years. Its passenger depot at this station was also located and in use op the north side of the railroad, and on the south side there was sufficient space to enable the company to maintain a platform eight feet wide without encroachment upon the street upon which the company’s right of way abutted. This being the situation, the company proposed to erect, and did erect, on the south side of the railroad in connection with the platform just referred to a passenger station or shed for the accommodation of east-bound passengers, and steps leading from it to the street. It stands six feet above the grade of the street, is supported on posts, is covered, part of it is inclosed in glass, and it occupies a portion of the street about thirteen feet in width and sixty-seven feet in length. We note, also, although we do not regard this negative finding as absolutely essential to the conclusion we have reached, that the learned trial judge, upon a view of all the facts and circumstances, refused the defendant’s request for a finding that it is impossible for the defendant company to construct an adequate shelter shed at Leetsdale station without occupying a portion of this street. If there is anything that ought to be regarded as conclusively settled by the decisions, it is that the power of a railroad company to occupy a public street or highway must be derived di
As the bill was filed before the construction of the building, and before the formal resolution of the commissioners giving their assent upon the terms and conditions therein specified was adopted, it could not be claimed, and is not, that the plaintiffs are estopped by acquiescence or delay from resorting to this remedy. There is no consideration of that hind 'to affect the decision of the casé. But the appellant does very strenuously insist that none of the plaintiffs has sustained such special damage as entitled him to maintain a bill in equity to enjoin this unauthorized use of the highway. It is true the building is on the opposite side of the street from the property of the plaintiff Riley, and in that respect the case resembles North Penna. R. R. Co. v. Inland Traction Co., 205 Pa. 579. But there is' this obvious difference between the two cases. In that case the injury complained of was the laying of a street railway track upon the highway, which did not exclude the public or the plaintiff from the use of that part of the highway. In this case a portion of the highway has been actually excluded from public use and the plaintiff’s use by the building which has been erected' thereon. Moreover, while the injury to the plaintiff upon this account is not of the most serious nature, yet there is evidence in the case that to some extent it interferes with his light, and the court' has found that it interferes with his view. The highway, it is true, is not greatly traveled at this time and the building is upon that part of it which is not generally traveled by the public. Nevertheless it is a part of the highway which every member of the public has a right to travel, and the case is to be considered
The remaining proposition to be considered is that the court ought to have dismissed the bill for multifariousness. Al
There are other questions in the case which need not be considered in view of the conclusions we have reached upon these questions.
The decree is affirmed, the appellant to pay the costs.