This case comes before us at the present time upon exceptions taken by the town of .Bath to a report of the commissioners for Grafton county, laying out a new highway in accordance with the prayer of the petition; those exceptions resting entirely upon the alleged errors and misconduct of the commissioners in their proceedings. The grave character and serious importance of the charges preferred against a tribunal established by law, and selected by the people to adjudicate in the first instance upon the necessity of the contemplated *104highway; the protracted nature of the litigation between the parties, not less than the great zeal and rare ability displayed by the learned and distinguished counsel upon both sides, in accumulating, arranging and analyzing the testimony, and in elucidating and discussing the legal questions raised, have demanded and secured a diligent examination of the evidence, and the most careful consideration of the arguments laid before us. We shall, therefore, proceed to state briefly the conclusions at which we have, without difficulty or hesitation, arrived in the premises.
The sixth exception rests on an alleged error of the commissioners, assumed to be apparent on the face of their report; to wit, that it “ does not state, as the ground for the laying out of the new highway, that there is occasion for it for the accommodation of the public.”
How entirely this exception is without even the shadow of a foundation, cannot be more clearly shown than by quoting the language of the report. After stating various preliminary proceedings, notice to land-owners, &c., the commissioners say in their report, that “ after a full examination, we are of the opinion, and think it expedient and necessary, for the due accommodation of the public, that the burden of making and maintaining a highway on the proposed route, and paying the land damages to the owners of land, should be imposed upon said towns of Bath and Landafl', and that the lands of individuals should be taken for that purpose; we have, therefore, laid out a highway on the proposed route,” &c.
It is difficult to conceive in what terms the commissioners could more clearly and distinctly have stated that the sole ground, in their judgment, for laying out the new highway, was the due accommodation of the public.
The second, third, fourth and fifth exceptions impute improper conduct, corruption or partiality, to the commissioners, or some of them, in various ways, whereby it *105is contended that their action was so influenced and tainted, that the report should be set aside as invalid.
[After referring to and copying the opinion of the court, in Peavey v. Wolfborough, 37 N. H. 286, which had been cited by the counsel for Bath, as going fully to sustain the positions taken in the present case, the court proceeded to analyze and comment upon the evidence contained in eighteen depositions, taken for the town, and eight taken for the petitioners, and to show that, taking the decision in Peavey v. Wolfborough to be sound law, exactly and literally as it is printed, the evidence fell entirely short of bringing the commissioners for Grafton county, or either of them, within its condemnation, and utterly failed to prove the petitioners guilty of the improprieties charged against them. As this discussion and analysis of the evidence could not be of general interest, they are omitted. The opinion concluded as follows :]
"We have thus adverted to all the exceptions charging the commissioners with corruption, partiality and improper conduct, and to all the substantial portions of the evidence by which those charges are attempted to be sustained, and the result, at which we have most unhesitatingly arrived, is, that the charges are entirely unsustained. So far as we can discover, the evidence discloses nothing to prove that either of the commissioners acted corruptly, under any improper bias or prejudice, or was in any way guilty of conduct unbecoming his official position. On the contrary, the very full and satisfactory statement of Mr. Parker, the chairman of the board, in his deposition, of the way and manner in which the whole case was considered by them after the close of the hearing, and of the very deliberate and careful examination they gave to it for nearly twenty-four hours, almost demonstrates that there never could have been the slighest foundation in truth for the numerous charges and assumptions involved in the various exceptions taken to the conduct and motives *106of the commissioners. Indeed, the testimony offered by the town shows most clearly the honesty and purity of purpose of Mr. Culver, whose conduct is most strongly assailed, and that he could have been actuated only by his conviction of what the public accommodation demanded ; for it proves that, when the town proposed to him to change the route so as to lay out the new road to the foot of Bradley hill, instead of laying it in the place where it was ultimately laid, he utterly refused to do so, even if the petitioners, as well as the town, would agree to it, because he said he believed the other to be the right place for it, and no consideration* could induce him, as a commissioner, to consent to lay the road where he thought it ought not to be laid. On the whole, therefore, the entire mass of evidence on both sides, taken together, only goes to establish and confirm what the court, in Peavey v. Wolf-borough, say is the ordinary legal presumption in such eases, “ that the people had elected commissioners in whom they could confide, as men of such integrity, prudence, candor and good judgment, as not to be likely to be influenced by anything but the law and the evidence regularly laid before them.”
The first and only remaining exception relates to the admission by the commissioners, as evidence before them, of the agreement or contract between the White Mountains Railroad and Daniel Whitcher, in relation to the construction of a side track at Deming’s Landing. As we understand the matter, Deming’s Landing is a point on the White Mountains Railroad, near the lower or western terminus of the proposed new highway, at which the lumber and other freight to be accommodated by its construction would naturally and unavoidably seek to obtain facilities for transportation over that railroad to market. By the contract between Whitcher and the railroad it was agreed, substantially, that in a reasonable time after the completion of the proposed road, the railroad would *107put in a side track at that landing for the accommodation of the freight which might there seek transportation to market in the ears. Upon the hearing, the petitioners offered, and the commissioners received this contract, against the objection of Bath, as evidence tending to show the probability that, if the proposed road should be laid and built, persons drawing lumber over it would enjoy railroad facilities at that point.
Was the evidence competent and proper to be considered by the commissioners, in the view with -which it was offered ? It seems to us very clear that it was so. The existence of the railroad at the point in controversy was a fact not to be ignored by the commissioners, in their consideration of the demand for and the occasion requiring the construction of the proposed road. They were bound also to consider the obligations of the railroad, imposed by public statute, to provide suitable depot and other facilities for the public accommodation. [Laws of 1850, eh. 953, sec. 6; Comp. Laws 353.] Although the railroad existed and was in operation at that point, it could not well accommodate the lumber and other heavy freight business of the proposed road, without a side track and other facilities for loading it. Hence the probability that such side track would be constructed had a direct, positive and necessary bearing on the question whether or not there was occasion for the proposed road, so far as the lumber and other freight to be transported over it to the railroad were concerned. Whatever tended to render it probable that such side track would be constructed, if the proposed road should be built, was, therefore, proper to be considered and weighed by the commissioners. The contract in question was an existing fact, having more or less tendency to show that such side track would be constructed. It might be enforced between the parties to it; or, if not specifically enforced, it might legitimately be used as an admission by the corporation of the necessity *108of the proposed facilities, and their obligation to furnish them, upon a subsequent application to the railroad commissioners to compel the construction of such side track, for the accommodation of freight from the new road when constructed.
It is well settled that in laying out a highway, the^existence of a charter for a railroad, and its probable construction within the limits of its charter, are proper matters for the consideration of the commissioners; [Bethlehem’s Petition, 20 N. H. 210; Hopkinton’s Petition, 27 N. H. 133]; while the actual construction of such railroad may be good cause for the discontinuance of some roads, and the establishment of others. Indeed, the demand for the construction of a new highway must always be more or less a question depending upon the probabilities of the happening of future events, and the force and strength of those probabilities must necessarily be a proper matter for the consideration of the commissioners, upon any evidence having a legitimate and necessary bearing thereon.
In the ease before us, we can entertain no doubt that the contract in question had a legitimate and necessary tendency to show the probability of 'the construction of a side track at Deming’s Landing, for the accommodation of the lumber and other heavy freight from the proposed new highway ; and that it was, therefore, evidence legally competent and proper for the consideration of the commissioners in determining the propriety and necessity of the proposed road.
The conclusion at which we have arrived on this branch of the case renders it unnecessary to consider and detei’mine the question, so fully and elaborately discussed by the counsel on both sides, as to the constitutionality and applicability to the present case of the statute of .June 26, 1858, making county commissioners final judges of the competency of all evidence presented before them in hearings upon road petitions.
*109As in the judgment of the court no one of the various exceptions taken to the report of the commissioners is sustained, they must all be overruled, and judgment rendered upon the report establishing the road as laid out by the commissioners.
Exceptions overruled — judgment on the report.
Sargent, J., having been of counsel, did not sit.