172 N.E. 22 | Ill. | 1930
During July, 1928, the county superintendent of highways of White county, Illinois, filed a petition with the Illinois Commerce Commission for an order requiring the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company to construct and maintain a bridge over a creek where the public highway in Hawthorne township, in that county, crosses the creek on the railroad company's right of way a short distance *43 south of where the highway passes under the company's trestle No. 118. A hearing was had before the commission, and on May 9, 1929, an order was entered requiring the railroad company to place the highway bridge or culvert in serviceable condition. The railroad company filed a petition for rehearing, which was denied, and an appeal was taken to the circuit court of White county, where the order of the commission was affirmed. From this order the company has perfected an appeal to this court.
Most of the facts are not in dispute and as disclosed from the record and the findings of the commission are as follows: The public highway is an improved gravel road used by persons residing in several townships in going to and from Carmi, the county seat of and an important trading point in White county, Illinois. The railroad now crosses over the highway about a mile from Carmi. About 1870 the railroad was built through White county, and in crossing the creek at the place here involved a trestle 123 feet in length was constructed. Prior to that time the highway extended in a westerly direction and passed over the property where the railroad right of way and tracks now are, at a point about 400 or 500 feet west of the present railroad trestle. The railroad tracks (or grade) at that point were then, and now are, only two or three feet higher than the surrounding ground level. About the time the railroad grade and trestle were constructed the highway was diverted under the trestle. There is no record of what arrangement or agreement, if any, was made at that time relative to the change of the public road or upon whose authority the relocation was made. The railroad tracks and right of way in this vicinity extend slightly north of west, and the highway under-crossing is practically north and south upon the right of way and is approximately level. After passing under the trestle in a northerly direction the highway turns northwesterly for a short distance and occupies a part of the company's right of way on the north side of the railroad. *44 The span of the trestle through which the highway passes is eighteen feet in width and the vertical clearance is a little over twelve feet. There is an ascending grade of about three per cent in the public road as it extends away from the under-crossing in either direction. Just east of the highway under-crossing a creek coming from a northeasterly direction flows south underneath the trestle and turns westerly within the railroad right of way. A short distance from this turn to the west the creek is crossed by the public highway. The channel of the creek is four or five feet deep, fifteen to twenty feet wide, and a bridge or culvert having a capacity of about forty sectional feet would be sufficient to carry away all the drainage water where the public highway crosses over it. The course of the creek was not changed by the construction of the railroad and its construction caused no material change in the amount of water flowing through the creek channel at the point where the trestle was built. The stream drains a very small territory on the north side of the railroad right of way and is not ordinarily subject to overflow except in times of very high water in the Little Wabash river, when the water backs up the creek to a depth of six or eight feet underneath the railroad trestle. This condition, when it occurs, lasts only a few days. At the time of the hearing before the commission there was a temporary wooden bridge used to cross over the creek. Under the bridge was a concrete culvert which had been partly washed out, and on account of its damaged condition from high water and use, poles and planks had been placed across it to permit crossing over the stream. There are no records showing that the railroad company has ever constructed or maintained a culvert or bridge across the creek at this point. There was evidence presented by several railroad employees or officials stating that the company had had nothing to do with the repair or maintenance of a bridge at this point from the year 1876 to the present time. The commission also stated in its finding *45 that there was no record of any township authorities ever having spent any money to maintain this bridge or culvert until the year 1913, at which time the township highway commissioner replaced an existing wooden culvert with the concrete culvert which is now in such bad state of repair. There was further evidence presented to the commission that an old wooden highway bridge had existed across the same creek a short distance west of the present crossing; that this bridge was located on the south side of the railroad right of way, and that the remains of the bridge are situated in line with the previous westerly direction of the old highway. However, there was no proof available as to who had constructed this old highway bridge.
The contention of appellant is that the commission was without legal authority to order the construction of the highway bridge and that the order was not justified under the police power. Appellees' position is that the right here sought to be enforced is contractual, arising out of the common law obligation of a railroad company to restore a highway to its former condition of usefulness, and that its duty in this respect is a continuing one when the duty of maintenance arises out of some act of its own.
The commission in its decision evidently relied uponHenderson County v. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co.
If the legal principles announced in the case cited are applicable here then the contention of appellees would be correct. It is apparent that the facts in that case are not like those presented by this record. Here the construction of the railroad trestle and embankment had no material effect upon the volume of water flowing in the creek channel and the course of the stream was not changed in any way. No authority of record, or arrangement between the company and the officials having supervision and control of public highways, could be found relative to the diversion of the public road under the railroad trestle. It was done about 1870 and the road has continued to be used for about sixty years. During that time, or at least since 1876, no work has been done by the railroad company on the culvert or highway bridge over the creek at this point but some *48 supervision and jurisdiction thereof have been taken by the township officials, because a concrete culvert was constructed there by the highway commissioner in 1913. It cannot be said from this record that the railroad company created conditions or changed the physical surroundings whereby it became necessary to change the location of the public road and to construct a bridge across the creek channel for such highway. Whatever the necessity may have been for a highway bridge across this creek, it was not due to the construction of or changes caused by the railroad. A substantial and adequate bridge or culvert over this creek channel is no doubt an essential part of the highway, particularly under present methods of transportation, but if the railroad were not in its present location a highway bridge would continue to be equally necessary for the convenient and satisfactory use of the road by the public. In our opinion a railroad company owes no duty of building or keeping in repair a road or bridge on its right of way unless such is rendered necessary by the construction of the railroad.
Appellant cites People v. Illinois Central Railroad Co.
The facts in the case cited are somewhat different from those in this case yet the principle involved is quite similar. Apparently there is no record or satisfactory evidence as to who constructed the first culvert or bridge over the creek after the road was changed to go under the railroad trestle. The proof presented by the railroad officials shows no construction or maintenance by the company of a bridge over the creek from 1876 to the present time. If the railroad grade and trestle were built in 1870 it is possible that a bridge or culvert over the diverted highway may have been installed at the creek channel between 1870 and 1876. If one was constructed during that time the highway was evidently placed in as good condition for travel as it was before, or at least it must have been satisfactory to the highway officials and the public. There was a separation of grades accomplished at the time, and the presence of the *50 railroad and the operation of its business did not necessarily affect the safety of the public so long as the railroad trestle was in proper condition to support its tracks and the trains passing over them.
The control of railroad crossings has been by law conferred upon the Commerce Commission as successor to the Public Utilities Commission. The Public Utilities act was passed by the General Assembly in its exercise of the police power. This power is an exercise of the sovereign right of the government to protect the lives, health, morals, comfort and general welfare of the people. (Commerce Com. v. Omphghent Township,
As we view this record, the Commerce Commission was not authorized to enter its order against the appellant relative to the construction and maintenance by it of the culvert or bridge across the creek channel on the public highway. The order of the Commerce Commission and the judgment of the circuit court are therefore reversed.
Judgment reversed. *51