The writ of error in this case brings up a record of the conviction of the plaintiffs in error for a nuisance for obstructing a highway in the town of Sweden, by causing the said highway to be carried by means of a bridge and embankment over the railroad track of the plaintiffs in error. From the charge of the court recited in the judgment, it must be taken that the jury found the whole affair, carrying the highway over and across the railroad by means of said bridge and embankment, was in and of itself a nuisance, and judgment has been rendered in the case that the defendant abate the said nuisance, by entirely removing the same from the said highway at their own cost and expense, within sixty days after final judgment, or in default thereof, that the defendant pay a fine of $2,000, and that the sheriff abate the nuisance, so that, in fact, the defendant has been convicted of a nuisance for completing the crossing of a highway, by carrying the highway over the railroad by means of an embankment and a bridge. Under ordinary circumstances and in the absence of any legislative grant, such a public obstruction in a public highway would, without doubt, constitute a nuisance, and would subject the offender to an indictment, but the plaintiffs in error claim a legislative grant to do the act in question.
By the general railroad act (Laws of 1850, chap., 110) it is provided, in section 21, that “ whenever the track of a railroad constructed by a company formed under this act shall cross * * * a highway * * * such highway * * * may be carried under or over the track, as may be found most expedient * * * By section 28 of the same act it is provided that the corporation formed under the said act shall have power (sub. 5) “ to construct their road across, along or upon any * * * highway * * * which the route of its road shall intersect or touch, but the company shall restore the * * * highway * * * thus intersected or touched to its former state, or to such state as not unnecessarily to have impaired its usefulness.”
And the presiding judge at the Oyer and Terminer seems to have proceeded upon the theory, that this obligation to restore the highway to such state as not unnecessarily to have impaired its usefulness, was in the nature of a condition precedent to the exercise of *198the right to cross the highway at all, and therefore he instructed the jury as follows: “The main question is, whether the mode of crossing the highway, to wit, by means of the embankment and bridge, by which the highway is taken above its former level and is carried over the railroad track at a height of several feet, whether that, in, and of itself, is a nuisance, by reason of the obstruction it presents to travel * * * . I submit to you in the first place this pi’oposition. If the question as to the most expedient mode of crossing the highway at this particular place is simply a question in respect to which different engineers, of ordinary capacity, skill and experience in the business of laying out railroads would honestly diffei in opinion, having regard as well to the effect of the proposed crossing upon the condition and usefulness of the highway as to the interests of the railroad company, then the mode adopted cannot be regarded as a nuisance, in and of itself, although the jury should be of opinion that it was not the most expedient one. * * * The statute to which I have adverted says to them in express terms: ‘ You can cross the highway over or under as is most expedient; you can cross it in any way, provided you do not unnecessarily impair the usefulness of the highway. That condition you must observe. * * * On the other hand, I submit to you as a proposition of law, that if it appears by the evidence, that in deciding upon the mode of crossing the point in question the interests of the company alone were consulted, and due attention was not paid to the condition of the highway or the rights of the public in the use of the highway, and that the mode adopted had and continues to have the effect to unnecessarily impair the former condition and usefulness of the highway, then the jury will be warranted in finding the defendant generally guilty under the indictment, guilty of maintaining a nuisance in that mode of crossing under such circumstances.”
To this instruction the plaintiffs in error excepted, and this exception presents the main question in the case.
The indictment is for carrying the highway over the tracks instead of under it, or at grade, that is, upon a level with the highway. The statute, as we have seen, gives the railroad company the power to carry the highway over or under the track, “ as may be found most expedient.” Found by whom? There is no tribunal named in the act for determining the question of expediency, or *199which course will be the most expedient, clearly as it seems to me, the railroad company is to determine that question; and when it has determined it in good faith, though it may, in the opinion of the jury, have erroneously determined the question as to the relative expediency of the mode of crossing, can its judgment be reversed by a jury ? It seems to me not. The legislature of the State, whether wisely or unwisely, have conferred upon the railroad company the power of determining the question, and no appeal from the determination of the company is provided by the law either to a court or jury. If left to be determined by a jury after the company has deliberately determined the mode of crossing the highway, by adoping one of the alternatives authorized by the statute, one jury might determine that the manner of crossing, which would least impair the former usefulness of the highway, would be by crossing under the grade of the highway; another, by having the highway cross above the track, and still another might conclude that the most expedient method of crossing the highway would be at grade. It seems to me that the legislature has seen fit to confer the exclusive power to determine the question as to the relative expediency of the mode of crossing, upon the railway company, deeming the provision requiring the railway company to restore the highway so as not to have um/necessa/rily impaired its usefulness, a sufficient protection to that portion of the public which has occasion to use the highway for purposes of ordinary travel.
That the usefulness of the highway as such may, to some extent, be impaired by a railroad crossing, the statute impliedly concedes. If the railroad company fail, as far as possible, to restore the highway to its former condition, a mandamus, which shall direct the company what shall be done to complete such restoration, as in The People v. The Duchess and Columbia Railroad Company (58 N. Y., 152), may be issued to compel the performance of the omitted duty, or perhaps the railroad company may be subjected to an indictment, distinctly charging the acts which it might and ought to have done for the purpose of restoring the highway.
But I do not think the remedy is to be found in an indictment for a nuisance, founded on the manner of crossing, when, as I construe the statute, the railroad company has the exclusive power of determining that manner, and when it has been by it determined *200that the particular mode selected is the “ most expedient ” it has the warrant of the legislature for crossing the highway in that, particular manner.
These views lead to a reversal of the conviction and judgment, and if correct there is no occasion for a re-trial of the indictment.
Present — Talcott, P. J., Smith and Merwin, JJ.Judgment and conviction reversed.