Frost v. Washington County Railroad

Emery, J.

A small tide-water bay or cove makes westerly from Passamaquoddy Bay into the land in the town of Perry. The entrance to this cove from the Bay is a navigable channel between Pleasant Point on the mainland on the north and Carlow Island on the south, and this channel for the purposes of this case may be regarded as the only practicable passage by water in and out of the cove. For several years prior to 1898, and since, the plaintiff has owned a tract of land on the shore of this cove about three-quarters of a mile up the cove from the entrance. On this tract of land prior to 1898, he had built a wharf into the cove and had built a grist mill, and was carrying on a business of buying, grinding and selling grain, etc., and also a vas dealing in wood, country produce, etc. The most of his transportation of the merchandise of his business was by water to and from his wharf, in and out of the cove, through the entrance, above described. From this wharf and cove vessels and boats could proceed by sea to other coast states and to the coasts of foreign nations.

The plaintiff had been carrying on this business in this manner through this navigable channel for several years prior to 1898, when the Washington County Pailroad Company, in building its railroad into Eastport, built and has since maintained and now maintains a trestle across this channel between Pleasant Point and Carlow Island *81for the passage of its trains. This trestle practically prevents any navigation of that channel and any transportation by water in and out of the cove. This event has greatly injured the plaintiff’s business and the value of his -wharf and mill, although the railroad company has not taken nor trespassed upon any of his land or other property, but only interfered with his right of navigation through the channel into the bay and sea. He has brought this action on the case against the railroad company to recover compensation for the injury thus done him by the company’s acts in building] andjhnaintaining that trestle.

1. Hie first question is, whether the defendant company has any legal right to build and maintain a trestle of that character at that place with such effect. It was authorized by its charter (Special Haws of 1898, eh. 451) to locate, construct, maintain and operate a railroad from some point on the Maine Central Railroad in Hancock County to Calais, including a branch to Eastport. It was also empowered by its charter ( section 5 ) “to erect and maintain bridges across tide waters . . . which its railroad may cross ; provided they shall he so constructed as not unnecessarily to obstruct the navigation of such waters. ”

Under this charter the defendant company duly located its branch line to Eastport across this channel where the trestle now is, and this location was duly filed with the Railroad Commissioners and the County Commissioners and was duly approved by them. The defendant company thereupon, in 1898, built the trestle on the line of the approved location to support its railroad track and now maintains it as a part of its through railroad from Eastport to its connection with the Maine Central Railroad and with the railroad system of the United States and Canada. The Railroad Commissioners gave authority to the company to operate its railroad over the trestle as now constructed.

The plaintiff) however, contends that all this gave the defendant company no authority to construct and maintain the trestle it has ; viz: — a trestle so constructed that it unnecessarily obstructs and even entirely prevents the navigation of this channel and cove. He claims *82that the proviso above quoted in § 5 of its charter limits its authority to build bridges and trestles to those of such character and construction as will not unnecessarily obstruct navigation as described, to his detriment, — and hence this trestle is, as to him at least, an unlawful structure not authorized by the company’s charter.

To meet this contention of the plaintiff’s, the defendant relies upon an act of the Congress of the United States, approved April 12, 1900, (ch. 187) of the following tenor, viz: — “Be it enacted etc.: That the trestle on the Eastport Branch of the Washington County Railroad Company, being the property of the Washington County Railroad Company, and running from the extreme point of land south of Pleasant Point in the town of Perry county of Washington and State of Maine to the extreme northern end of Carlow’s Island in the town of Eastport in said county and State; and a certain other trestle, also the property of said railroad company, in the East Machias River in said county of Washington and State of Maine, at the extreme end of said river near the village of East Machias in said county and State, be, and both of said trestles hereby are, declared to be lawful structures: Provided, That such modifications are made in their present position, condition, and elevation as the Secretary of War may order in the interests of navigation. ” It is not disputed that the trestle first described in the' above act is the trestle in question. '

We have now to consider the effect of this act of Congress upon the question whether the trestle as now built and maintained is a lawful or unlawful structure as to the plaintiff. Under the commerce clause of the constitution of the United States (Art. 1, § VIII, par. 3.) Congress undoubtedly has full and exclusive jurisdiction over navigation and commerce in this channel whenever it chooses to exercise that jurisdiction. Whatever navigability existed in this channel and cove to and from the plaintiff’s wharf, was directly available to commerce with other States and foreign nations over the waters of the cove, channel, bay and the great highway of the ocean. “Commerce among States does not stop at a state line. Coming from abroad, it penetrates wherever it can find navigable waters reaching from without into the interior, and may follow them up as *83far as navigation is practicable.” Gilman v. Philadelphia, 3 Wall. p. 725. In Cardwell v. American River Bridge Co., 113 U. S. 205, the American River, a small branch of the Sacramento, though entirely within the State and navigable only by barges and small steamboats, was yet said to be a navigable water of the United States and as such under the control of the government of the United States, as to its navigation. So Grand River, though wholly within the State of Michigan and flowing into Lake Michigan, was held to be within the commerce clause of the U. S. Constitution. The Daniel Ball, 10 Wall. 557. When, therefore, Congress acts and so far its it acts in the premises, the jurisdiction of the State government, judicial as well as legislative, recedes. If Congress declares a bridge or other structure over or on navigable waters to be an unlawful structure, the State legislature cannot make it lawful nor can the State court declare it to be lawful. So, if Congress declares the structure to be lawful, neither the State legislature nor the State court can, even upon the most plenary proof] declare it unlawful as interfering with navigation. The judgment of Congress is conclusive, not to be questioned by any court.. In the Wheeling Bridge case, 18 Howard, 421, the U. S. Supreme Court had, upon allegation and proof], adjudged the Wheeling Bridge across the Ohio River to be an unlawful structure ¡is obstructing the navigation' of the river, and had decreed that it should be removed or elevated so as to permit free navigation of the river. Then Congress passed an act declaring the bridge to be a lawful structure in its then position and elevation. The court held that this act of Congress conclusively determined this bridge to be a lawful structure at its then elevation, and that the court could not proceed further in the matter. In the Clinton Bridge case 10 Wall. 454, the plaintiff sought to prove that the bridge across the Mississippi River unis a serious and dangerous obstruction to navigation to his special detriment. After the erection of the bridge, Congress passed an act declaring that the bridge (describing it) “shall be a lawful structure.” The court held that the act of Congress took the question from the court. The action was thereupon dismissed without hearing any evidence. In Miller v. The Mayor of New York, 13 Blatchford, 469, a case concerning the Brooklyn *84bridge, the U. S. Circuit Court considered the effect of an act of Congress declaring a bridge over navigable waters to be a lawful structure, and after reviewing the authorities, said: “It results from the cases considered, that the authority of Congress is paramount in the regulation of commerce under the constitution; and that its determination in respect to interference with navigation by obstructions thereto is conclusive. What it authorizes may be justified upon its authority. What it forbids is necessarily unlawful. Nor is it to be forgotten that this power of Congress is at all times capable of exercise. If it should turn out that the judgment of Congress has been mistaken and that navigation is injuriously affected, it can by law require the bridge to be altered or removed and can adapt its regulation of commerce to its view of the public interests. ” This language was quoted with approval by the New York Court of Appeals, in People ex rel. Murphy v. Kelley, 76 N. Y. 475, and the decision was affirmed in Miller v. Mayor, 109 U. S. 385.

It must be apparent from the foregoing authorities, and from the nature of the case, that if Congress has declared this trestle, as now constructed and maintained, to be a lawful structure, this court cannot hear the plaintiff to complain that it unlawfully impedes him in navigating the channel and cove. In such case, the question of lawfulness or milawfulness of the structure has been taken from the court.

But the plaintiff contends that the act of Congress has not declared the trestle to be a lawful structure in presentí, but only in futuro, in case and when the defendant company shall perform the condition of the proviso of the act, viz: — “Provided that such modifications, are made in their [its] present position, condition and elevation as the Secretary of War may order in the interests of navigation.” He says, and truly, that it does not appear that the defendant company has made any such modifications, and he urges that such modifications are a condition precedent to the trestle becoming a lawful structure. But it does not appear, either, that the Secretary of War has ordered any modifications, or that he deems any to be necessary in the interests of navigation. The proviso is evidently a condition subsequent only. Tiie trestle is declared to be a lawful structure in pro*85senti. It is made such, until the defendant company shall fail to make the modifications ordered by the Secretary of War. If the Secretary does not order any modifications, and apparently he has not, then the trestle remains a lawful structure if kept up in its then present condition. It was competent for Congress to thus fix the matter, Miller v. Mayor of N. Y., etc. 109 U. S. 368; South, Carolina v. Georgia, 93 U. S. 13; and Congress having done so, persons desiring the removal or modification of the trestle as an obstruction to navigation should apply to Congress or to the Secretary of War. The courts have now no jurisdiction in the matter.

II. The plaintiff further contends that even if the trestle in its present condition is a lawful structure, and is lawfully maintained by the defendant company, he has nevertheless suffered much pecuniary loss from the action of the defendant company in building and maintaining it and should be re-imbursed therefor by the company. .He concedes that the company has not taken, nor even touched, any of his tangible property, real or personal. The trestle is three-fourths of a mile distant from the property described in this suit. But the closing of the channel by the trestle has undoubtedly reduced the earning powers and selling value of his property on the cove, and has lessened the profits of the business he was carrying on there. He claims he has a cause of action against the railroad company for the injury thus done to his property and business.

This claim cannot be sustained. The only right of the plaintiff interfered with by the defendant company was his right of navigation by wutev ill and. out of the cove through the channel. This right of the plaintiff] however, ivas not his private property, nor even his private right. It could not be bought, sold, leased or inherited. He did not earn it, create it or acquire it. He did not own it as against the sovereign. The right was the right of. the public, the title and control being in the sovereign in trust for the public and for the benefit of the general public, and not for any particular individual. The plaintiff only shared in the public right. He had no right against the public. The sovereign had the absolute control of it and could regulate, enlarge, limit or even destroy it, as he might deem best for *86the whole public, and this without making or providing for any compensation to such individuals as might be inconvenienced or damaged thereby. The sovereign cannot take private property for public, uses without providing for just compensation to its owner, but this constitutional provision does not limit the power of the sovereign over public rights. If, in the evolution of life and commerce, the sovereign comes to believe that the public good will be increased by the creation of some new or additional means of communication and commerce at the expense or even sacrifice of some older one enjoyed merely as a public right, the sovereign can so ordain, even to the detriment of individuals. If, in the judgment of the sovereign, a railroad across a navigable channel of water and completly obstructing its navigation is of more benefit to the public than the navigation of .the channel, he has the unrestricted power to thus close the channel to navigation, without making compensation to those who had been wont to use it. Every individual making use of a merely public privilege must bear in mind that he may be lawfully deprived of that privilege whenever the sovereign deems it necessary for the public good, and ho must order his business accordingly. Unless the person authorized by statute to obstruct or close a navigable channel is required by the statute to make compensation to persons injured by such action, he is under no legal obligation to do so. In such case the inconvenience and loss however great are damnum absque injuria. The company has damaged the plantiff but it has not wronged him. The defendant company has not interfered with the private property nor private rights of the plaintiff. It has lawfully, by express authority from the sovereign, merely abridged the use of a public right which was within the exclusive control of the sovereign. For this lawful act it is not obliged to make any compensation to the plaintiff any more, than to all other persons who might have occasion, however seldom, to navigate the channel.

The authorities Avhich support the foregoing statement of the laAV are numerous and uncontradicted. We cite a feAv only: Spring v. Russell, 7 Maine, 273; Rogers v. K. & P. R. R. Co., 35 Maine, 319; Gowen v. Pen. R. R. Co., 44 Maine, 140; Brooks v. Cedar Brook, etc., 82 Maine, 17, 17 Am. St. Rep. 459, 7 L. R. A. 460; *87Miller v. Mayor of N. Y. 109 U. S. 385; Gilman v. Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713; Pound v. Turck, 95 U. S. 459; Hamilton v. Vicksburg R. R. Co. 119 U. S. 280; Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, 107 U. S. 678; Cardwell v. Am. River Bridge Co., 113 U. S. 205; Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U. S. 141.

It follows that the plaintiff has no legal claim to compensation and cannot sustain the action. We regret that the plaintiff has been damaged by this new railroad being lawfully built across the channel he was wont to use, but lie is only one of many thousands who are being individually damaged every day by the frequent lawful changes in the means and methods of manufacture and commerce, and yet cannot be said to be wronged by illegal acts.

Judgment for the defendant.