Union Railway Co. v. Mayor of Cambridge

Hoar, J.

This case comes before us upon demurrer to the bill and supplemental bill of the plaintiffs, and presents the question whether the orders of the aldermen of the city of Cambridge, passed' on the 21st of December 1864, and the 22d of March 1865, are valid and authorized by law; or are in violation of the franchise of the Union Railway Company. As the former' order has been repealed, so far as it relates to the tracks mentioned in the second order, the chief question of present practical importance is the validity of the latter.

The order of the 22d of March absolutely forbids the removal of snow and ice from the tracks of the Cambridge Railroad Company, the road leased and used by the Union Railway Company, between Harvard Square in Cambridge and the di viding line between Cambridge and Boston.

*291The p.aintiffs allege that they have by their charter, and that of the Cambridge Railroad Company whose road they lease, a franchise to lay down upon the surface of the public streets a railway, and to run upon the tracks of such railway cars for the transportation of passengers at all seasons of the year; that having the right to use the tracks with cars, they have, as incident thereto, a right to do whatever is necessary to make the use available, and therefore the right to remove the obstructions of snow and ice which may impede or wholly stop the running of the cars.

The defendants chiefly rely upon the authority vested in them under St. 1864, c. 229, § 16; which provides that “ the board of aldermen of any city, or the selectmen of any town, in which a street railway is operated, may from time to time establish by an order such rules-and regulations as to the rate of speed, mode of use of the tracks, and removal of snow and ice from the same, as in their judgment the interest and convenience of the public may require.” Does this section Authorize the passage of an order entirely prohibiting the removal of snow and ice by the railway company from any part or the whole of its road, and thereby suspending for a time the possibility of running its cars upon the rails ?

The St. of 1864, entitled “ An Act concerning Street Railway Corporations,” seems to have been a revision and digest of all the previous legislation on the subject; and, in construing any one of its numerous provisions, it is proper to regard the whole scope and design of the enactment, and the nature of the subject matter to which it applies.

The establishment of street railways was originally an experiment, for the purpose of accommodating the public travel with a cheap and convenient mode of transportation through the streets of towns and cities, which it was supposed would be found compatible with the continued use of the streets for ordinary purposes. They have been found to be of great public benefit; and have now been in use long enough to afford an opportunity for the legislature to determine, in the light of experience, the extent and nature of the privileges which could be *292intrusted to the railway companies, and to make their powers and duties to some extent the subject of judicial construction. And it will be found that the legislature have adhered with great uniformity to the policy which was adopted from the outset, of making these corporations subject in a great degree to the direction and control of the board of aldermen of the cities, and the selectmen of the towns, in which their franchise is to be exercised. This control is given to these municipal officers, not as representing a conflicting interest, but as independent bodies, charged with the duty of protecting the rights and promoting the convenience of the whole public. Cambridge v. Cambridge Railroad, 10 Allen, 57, 58.

That part of the community who use the street cars have the same voice in choosing the aldermen or selectmen, and the same opportunity to influence their judgment, with those who use the streets in other ways. It is obvious that at particular times, and under some circumstances, the right to use the streets with horse cars, and with other vehicles, may conflict with each other. One or the other must yield; and some tribunal must determine which it shall be. In such cases the general convenience must govern.

By the St. of 1864, the board of aldermen of cities, and the selectmen of towns, in which street railroads are authorized by law, are in the first place to “ locate ” the tracks, or such of them as in their judgment the public convenience may require; and may afterward alter the location and position of any tracks. After one year from the opening of the railway for use, they may revoke the location of any tracks, and require the street to be restored to its previous condition. They may order the railway company to discontinue temporarily the use of any tracks, whenever they adjudge that the safety or convenience of the inhabitants requires such discontinuance. Towns and cities may take up the streets in which street railways are “ located,” and discontinue them, as other streets, without liability to the railway companies for damages.

It is in connection with these broad and comprehensive provisions that we are to consider the power of the defendants “to *293make such regulations as to the removal of snow and ice from the tracks as in their judgment the interest and convenience of the public may require.” And whether in their judgment it will be for the interest and convenience of the public, giving due consideration to those who use the cars, as well as to all others, that the snow and ice shall be removed by the railway company, or under the direction of the officer having the general charge of the streets, or that it shall be left to the operation of the sun and rain, we think is in each case left wholly to their decision. Whether in any street, having regard to its width, its exposure, and the position of the tracks, it will be practicable to remove the snow to such an extent as to make it passable for the cars without an unreasonable interference with other uses, we cannot determine, and we do not think the legislature meant to determine. If the prohibition to remove the snow occasions the temporary disuse of the tracks, the consequence is no more than is included in a power expressly given.

The reasoning by which the plaintiffs support their claim is very forcible, and would be sound if their franchise were an absolute, instead of an extremely limited and qualified one. Their use of their tracks is necessarily to some extent exclusive, and modifies the right of other persons in travelling. But the use of the whole street is granted to them only in common with others. The snow and ice, which it may be desirable or necessary for their purposes to remove, it may be very important for the convenience of other travellers to retain. The preponderance of public convenience should govern. The power and the duty of deciding which course is advisable are vested by law in the defendants, and we cannot suppose their decision will be made without good reason.

An argument has been pressed upon our attention, derived from the connection in which the power to regulate the removal of snow is found, namely, in the same section which provides for regulating the rate of speed of cars, and the mode of use of tracks; and it is said that in neither case can the power to regulate include the power to prohibit. But it is by no means clear that the right to regulate die mode of the use of the tracks *294would not justify a regulation that certain tracks, or those in certain streets, should not be used when there is snow on the ground which would require removal to make the tracks available. And further, while the tracks and the cars are the property of the companies, the snow is not their snow. It comes without their consent or procurement, and its removal is not a necessary part of their franchise. Removing it from the railway tracks might in some cases make the street impassable for ordinary travel, unless great expense and trouble were incurred to remove it from the whole surface. From the nature of the subject, it seems to us that the power of regulation must include the power of partial, and sometimes of total, prohibition.

The only distinct objection made to the order of December 21st 1864, which is not applicable to the order of March 22d 1865, is, that it prohibited the removal of snow and ice without first obtaining the consent of the superintendent of streets ; and that the board of aldermen could not delegate their power to another officer. This objection we do not think substantial. The board of aldermen, in passing their order, first create the power, and act in a quasi legislative capacity. The nature of the duty is such that it would be difficult to fix beforehand by definite rules the mode and extent of the removal of snow. The exigency is sometimes pressing, not admitting a new order of the board for particular occasions; and the work to be done may be as various as the form and size of snowdrifts. It is a sufficient compliance with the intent of the statute to intrust the execution of the work to the officer having general charge of the condition of the streets; and is in entire analogy with the other provision, which requires the repairs of streets by the railway companies to be made by them “to the satisfaction of the superintendent of streets, the street commissioner or the surveyors of highways.”

Being of the opinion, therefore, that it was competent for the defendants to pass either of the orders complained of, the demurrer must be sustained, and the

Bill dismissed, with :osts.