160 F. 712 | W.D. Pa. | 1908
(after stating the facts as above). This is an information, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1899, § 18, 30 Stat. 1153 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3545), against the defendant company for a refusal to make the changes ordered by the Secretary of War in its bridge across the Monongahela river at Brownsville, Pa., 50 miles above the city of Pittsburg. This bridge was built in 1832, under a charter from the state of Pennsylvania, and is located on the line of the Old National Pike, laid out by the federal government in 1807, to give better access to the then distant parts of what is now the Middle West. It closes the gap in the road made by the river, the necessities of travel before that being met by a ferry, and after its construction the ends of the road leading to the ferry were relocated, so as to connect with the approaches to the bridge, which was thus adopted and made an integral part of the thoroughfare. It was built at a cost of from $65,000 to $75,000 and is still in good preservation, and if undisturbed would probably last for 20 years more. It is a toll bridge and the net returns amount to about $10,000 a year, but the changes which have been ordered by the Secretary of War will compel the tearing down of the whole structure, with the loss of all that it represents, and the building of a new bridge (if the franchise is to be preserved) at an estimated additional expenditure of $112,000. There is a large and increasing use of the Monongahela by reason of the mineral and other developments on its upper reaches, but it is effected artificially, by means of slack-water navigation, secured by locks and dams, through which it is connected' with the Ohio at Pittsburg and so brought in touch with the general interior system.of waterways of the Ohio and Mississippi basins. At the time the bridge was built, while the river had been declared to be a navigable stream by the Legislatures of both of the states through which it runs, except for flat bottom boats and rafts, and in times of high water, the navigation of it was very limited, and in dry times, according to the weight of the evidence, practically none at all. Not
Preliminary to that, however, two points are raised which require brief consideration: (1) That the verdict as rendered is defective in form and inconclusive; and (2) that nothing was said to the jury as to the right of the defendant to the benefit of a reasonable doubt, to which it was entitled, the case being a criminal one. The first of these seems to have been suggested by the recent case of Pressed Steel Car Co. v. Steel Car Forge Co., 149 Fed. 182, 79 C. C. A. 130. But the two cases are very different. The difficulty there was that the jury failed to declare whether they found for the plaintiff or the defendant, simply stating that they sustained the validity of the contract sued upon and fixed the damages at a sum named. But here they say, in so many words, that they “find a verdict of guilty”; as to which it is not easy to see how anything could be more positive or certain. Nor is the other matter more serious. The obvious answer to it is that not only was there no request for an instruction as to the effect of a reasonable doubt, but that no exception was taken to the failure to give it. Had there been, it would have enabled the court to at once make the necessary correction as would have undoubtedly been done, and without that, the case being a misdemeanor, the omission must be regarded as immaterial. By the neglect to except at the time, the defendants virtually gave the court to understand that to this extent at least the charge was satisfactory, suggesting that the stress laid upon it, now that the case has gone against them, is an afterthought, if not indeed a catching at straws.
The important questions in the case are those which were first ad
It is said, however, that Congress having provided for a trial by jury upon a criminal information duly preferred, the question of whether the bridge was in fact an unreasonable obstruction cannot be withdrawn from their consideration or concluded by executive action, the right to a hearing being essential, according to the form of proceedings adopted, in order to comply with the requirement for due process of law. No doubt it would have been competent for Congress to so provide, leaving it to a jury of the district, upon a trial according to the forms of the common law, to say whether, in any given case, the situation was such as to make the bridge an obstruction, but there is nothing in the act to suggest that it was ever so intended. Should Congress undertake to investigate and decide for itself whether a particular bridge was an unreasonable obstruction, it would hardly be contended, after it had passed upon the question, that it was still open, simply because the enforcement of its decision by a criminal prosecution, for a refusal to comply, was provided for. But, as pointed out above, the method given by the statute under consideration is merely an alternative. By a general enactment, Congress has delegated to the Secretary of War the duty of investigating and determining the cases in which the conditions exist that call for action, and his
But it is said that the changes which are required to be made will virtually destroy the bridge, and thus deprive the defendant of its property, which cannot be done without at least making just compensation. Conceding that, if located upon waters which were naturally navigable, the rights of the owners would be subject to a servitude in favor of the public which would justify such action without this (Gibson v. United States, 166 U. S. 269, 17 Sup. Ct. 578, 41 L. Ed. 996; Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U. S. 141, 21 Sup. Ct. 48, 45 L. Ed. 126; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364, 27 Sup. Ct. 367, 51 L. Ed. 523), it is contended that the present structure was built at a day when the stream was not navigable, the changes which
It will not of course be denied that, in every enterprise, a party is charged with notice, not only of that which is immediately in view, but of that also, which according to outward and obvious indications, is to be reasonably apprehended. This is elementary law, and there is no good reason why it should not apply in a case of this kind the same as any other. It amounts to no more than that every one is bound to observe the situation as it is, and take subject to the consequences reasonably to be expected from that which is thus brought home to him. As already stated, where- a bridge or other structure is located upon waters which are naturally navigable, except as it has been sanctioned by Congress, it is affected with all the infirmities incident to or consequent upon that position. This is not confined to conditions as they are at the time, or else Congress would not be able to provide for the future needs of the country, and would be cut down in the use of such waters, unless compensation was provided, to the ■condition in which nature left them or in which they happened to be
Nor is it of any consequence that the navigation by which the changes required in the bridge are made necessary is in part artificial. In Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. v. Drainage Commissioners, 200 U. S. 561, 26 Sup. Ct. 341, 50 L. Ed. 596, the creek which was utilized to drain and reclaim the farm land there involved was artificially enlarged; and yet it was held that the railroad company, at its own expense and without any provision for its reimbursement, could be required-to remove from the creek the bridge and culvert which it had placed there, although it was sufficient, according to the depth and width of the channel at the time, and (unless it abandoned the crossing) to erect and maintain a new bridge which would conform to the regulations established by the drainage commissioners. Here was an entirely new, distinct, and artificial use, the only thing to be said in defense of it being that it was a related one, and yet the structure was required to be removed without compensation having been provided for it. Nor is it of any consequence that the case arose under the state and not the federal law, there being no difference in principle. Similarly also, although not so closely in point, in West Chicago Street Railway v. Chicago, 201 U. S. 506, 26 Sup. Ct. 518, 50 L. Ed. 845, a street railway which had lawfully constructed a funnel under the Chicago river Was required at its own cost and expense to lower the tunnel so as to provide a new and additional depth in the river which had been ascertained by competent local and federal authority to be necessary to meet the increased demands of navigation. In every such instance, as pointed out above, the structure involved of necessity, from its character and location, is subject to a servitude in favor of the public which may be asserted by' the proper governmental authority acting for the common good. Property so conditioned, and affected with such an inherent infirmity, has no value which can claim or call for compensation when thus lawfully appropriated.
But it is further urged that the bridge was adopted by the government as an integral part of the national pike, the ferry crossing the
Finding no occasion, then, for disturbing the verdict, the rule for a new trial must be discharged, and, thereupon proceeding to impose the penalty prescribed by law, the sentence of the court is that the Monongahela Bridge Company, defendant, pay a fine of $1,000 to the government of the United States, and pay the costs of prosecution, and that execution issue against the property of the said company to collect such fine and costs unless the same be paid within 10 days.
Specially assigned.