Cadwell v. Connecticut Co.

Acts done within the limits of a highway may work an actionable injury to the property rights of an abutting proprietor and occupant by virtue of either his ownership of the fee of the land covered by the highway, or his ownership and possession of the abutting property. Cadwell v. Connecticut Ry. Ltg. Co., 84 Conn. 450, 452, 80 A. 285. In the former case, the acts may constitute a trespass. This is the case whenever the acts, being without authority, or in excess of authority, are such as impose an additional servitude upon the land covered by the highway.Canastota Knife Co. v. Newington Tramway Co.,69 Conn. 146, 161, 36 A. 1107; Norwich Gas Light Co. v.Norwich City Gas Co., 25 Conn. 19; Nicholson v. NewYork N. H.R. Co., 22 Conn. 74; Munson v. Mallory,36 Conn. 165, 172. In the latter case, the injured party has his remedy as for a nuisance. Cadwell v. ConnecticutRy. Ltg. Co., 84 Conn. 450, 454, 80 A. 285.

This action, unlike that last cited, which was also brought by this plaintiff against this defendant, and dealt with the same general situation, is one which belongs to the former class. It seeks redress, as the former did not, for an alleged invasion of the plaintiff's rights, as owner of the soil of the highway, through certain *Page 405 conduct of the defendant therein, which is set out, and claimed to have been without right. The two cases thus have little in common. In the former, we were dealing with an alleged nuisance affecting injuriously the rights of the plaintiff as an abutting owner; in the present, with a claimed trespass done to the land within the highway limits.

This complaint is not drafted with precision, in that it does not directly aver either the plaintiff's ownership and possession of the land over which the highway is laid out, or the defendant's invasion of the plaintiff's rights therein by its acts set up. There are, however, allegations from which these averments may well be inferred, and in which it was evidently intended that they should be included, so that the purpose of the pleader to charge a trespass upon the land within the highway, through the operation of the recited acts of the defendant in imposing an additional servitude thereon, is apparent. Counsel for the plaintiff so interprets his pleadings, and counsel for the defendant accept it as sufficiently alleging a cause of action of that character.

The latter suggest that a cause of action for a nuisance may also be within the purview of the allegations. Plaintiff's counsel makes no such claim, and there appears to be no substantial basis for it. It is quite evident that the averments respecting rails and structures, which the plaintiff makes, and which alone give color to the suggestion that the complaint may be regarded as comprehending a cause of action for a nuisance, were made for no other purpose than as pertinent to the charge that a servitude was being imposed upon the land of the highway in excess of that resulting from the existing highway easement.

We have, then, before us for determination the single question whether or not the allegations of the complaint *Page 406 show the imposition upon the soil of the highway of an additional servitude. In answering this question it is first of all important to know that legislative authority, if any, the defendant had to construct and operate an electric street-railway in front of the plaintiff's premises. The complaint is silent upon this subject, and unless we can gather adequate information upon it through the exercise of that judicial knowledge which we have of its charter rights, the defendant will be left in the position of one who invades a highway with a street railway without legislative authority. If that is the position which the defendant occupies before the court under its demurrer, it is clear that it was improperly sustained. It is not easy to discover how it can escape from this position, with its inevitable result, since the charter informs us only that it has legislative authority to construct and operate, for the carriage of both persons and property, its tracks through a portion of West Main Street. Where that portion is in relation to the plaintiff's property we are not told, and neither legal presumptions, nor § 3840 of the General Statutes, suffice to supply the deficiency.

If, however, it be assumed that the defendant has constructed and operated its road in front of the plaintiff's property under such conditions as to entitle it to the full benefit of the charter and statute authority to utilize it for the transportation of passengers and property, as counsel agree that the fact is and ask us to assume, we are under the necessity of examining the allegations to learn whether they set up any conduct on the defendant's part outside of the limits of the authority thus attempted to be conferred, or within those limits, but without the power of the General Assembly to confer, in the absence of compensation to landowners.

The allegation that it has constructed its tracks with T-rails, and that its cars are operated upon such tracks *Page 407 and by the use of certain wires and poles, in the absence of further information, may be dismissed from present consideration. It is true that an additional servitude may result from methods of construction and operation, but the bald facts here stated are altogether insufficient to establish such a condition as that principle contemplates.Canastota Knife Co. v. Newington TramwayCo., 69 Conn. 146, 159, 36 A. 1107; Nieman v. DetroitSuburban Street Ry. Co., 103 Mich. 256, 260,61 N.W. 519; Newell v. Minneapolis, L. M. Ry. Co., 35 Minn. 112,27 N.W. 839; Mordhurst v. Ft. Wayne S. TractionCo., 163 Ind. 268, 71 N.E. 642.

The other conduct complained of is the unlawful entry upon the land of the highway for the purpose of maintaining its electric railway, of operating this railway upon said land as a common carrier of persons and property by means of street-cars, and of operating said railway upon said land as a common carrier of property by means of cars designed solely for and carrying property exclusively, and which run without stopping between termini located in different towns, which termini are the only points where what is carried is either taken on or discharged, and the continued doing in fact of these things for the period of several years prior to the commencement of the action.

Here are three distinct grounds of complaint. The first, that the defendant is maintaining in the street an electric street-railway using poles and wires in its operation and T-rails for its tracks, calls for no extended consideration. The Canastota Knife Co. case effectually disposes of any contention that the construction and operation according to customary methods, and without especial features creating exceptional conditions, of an electric street-railway having its rails laid on a level with the surface of the highway, and designed and used for the accommodation of passenger *Page 408 travel, imposes an additional servitude upon the soil of the highway. There is no suggestion in this portion of the complaint that the service performed by the defendant's railway is other than the customary passenger service, that the manner of its construction, operation, or use differs in any respect from the ordinary, or is marked by special features which would tend to give to it a different character from that of the regulation electric street-railway, except perhaps the fact that T-rails are used. The inadequacy of this isolated fact we have already had occasion to notice.

The two remaining grounds of complaint import another factor into the situation, and one which takes it outside of the direct application of the decision in the Canastota Knife Co. case, and of all other Connecticut decisions. It calls for a consideration of the rights of an electric street-railway company in the matter of property transportation, directly for hire, and not as an incident of passenger service. The complaint contains certain charges involving this subject. If in the doing of any of the things so charged, the defendant is going further in its use of the highway than it can properly do within the limits of the highway easement, a good cause of action is stated.

The subject of the ability of an electric street-railway company, having the customary construction and operation in a highway, to become a carrier of things without imposing an additional servitude, has been much discussed in the cases and by text-writers, and with widely varying results. In at least one jurisdiction it has been broadly held that highways are as open to use in the transportation of property by street-railways as in that of persons, and that such carriage of property generally is not a new and independent use. Montgomery v. Santa Ana Ry. Co., 104 Cal. 186,37 P. 786. *Page 409

This broad conclusion has not met with general acceptance, and we are unable to appreciate the force of the reasoning by which it has been supported. To say that because highways ever have been and are established and maintained for purposes of public travel, and in their conception and purpose are, and from the earliest times have been, set apart for transportation thereon of things as well as persons, and for the convenience and service of the public by providing means for such transportation, it follows that any and all use of the highway for the transportation of things, no matter what they are, or how, or for what purpose or end, or for whose benefit or convenience they are carried, or what effect their carriage, or the method of it (physical features of the system apart), may have upon the enjoyment of the highway by the public generally or by the abutting property owner, is, we think, to ignore possible factors in a situation which might possess large, if not controlling, importance.

The highway conception involves the idea of an agency for the common use and accommodation of all the public — of a use from the enjoyment of which no one shall be unreasonably excluded by the operations of others, and in the enjoyment of which no one shall be unreasonably hindered or annoyed. Canastota KnifeCo. v. Newington Tramway Co., 69 Conn. 146, 156,36 A. 1107. In that conception, the highway becomes a place set apart for the convenience and benefit of members of the local community and of the adjacent landowner among others. It contemplates that its use and enjoyment by those who have occasion to use it shall not be of such character as to unreasonably interfere with its free and beneficial enjoyment by these persons, or to be the "proximate cause of special damage, of a new description, to the owner of the soil." CanastotaKnife Co. v. Newington Tramway Co., 69 Conn. 146, *Page 410 159, 36 A. 1107; New York, N. H. H.R. Co. v.Fair Haven W. R. Co., 70 Conn. 610, 615, 40 A. 607. We are therefore unprepared to say that any change in highway use which might attend the carriage of property over public ways, whatever its character and however conducted, construction of the road and structures in the highway aside, would be one of degree only and not of kind, and that the highway would remain in all essential particulars unchanged in character, purpose, and use under all conditions of property transportation over it. It is easy to conceive of conditions, and by no means remote ones, under which it could not be said fairly that the use was in aid of the identical use for which the way was created, and not a new and independent use; and this is a test which must be met and satisfied. This view is one which was plainly foreshadowed in the Canastota Knife Co. case and the earlier case of Imlay v. Union Branch R. Co., 26 Conn. 249. In fact, the opinion in the former case went so far as to suggest certain conditions of passenger traffic, independent of construction, which would destroy the identity of use between it and highway use. 69 Conn. 154,36 A. 1107.

Other cases have gone to the other extreme, and held that, where there is carriage of property, there an additional servitude is necessarily imposed. Wilder v.Aurora, D. R. E. Traction Co., 216 Ill. 493,75 N.E. 194; Birmingham Belt Ry. Co. v. Lockwood, 150 Ala. 610,43 So. 819; Rische v. Texas Transportation Co.,27 Tex. Civ. App. 33, 66 S.W. 324. The argument upon which this conclusion is based is one to the general effect that, where such conditions exist, the carrier becomes closely assimilated to ordinary railroads, and should therefore be classed with them in their relation to the highway easement. Some authorities, including text-writers, elaborate this argument by dividing carriers using tracks *Page 411 as a medium of transportation into two classes, to wit: (1) the street railway, which is defined to be one laid in highways, and designed and used for passenger transportation only; and (2) the commercial railroad, which term is employed in the classification to embrace the ordinary steam road and all others, whatever the kind of power utilized, and wherever laid, which are carriers of things. This classification having been established, it is said that those of the former class impose no additional servitude, while those of the latter do. 1 Lewis on Eminent Domain (3d Ed.) § 150; 1 Nellis on Street Railways (2d Ed.) § 83; Linden Land Co. v.Milwaukee Elec. Ry. Lt. Co., 107 Wis. 493, 511,83 N.W. 851; Wilder v. Aurora, D. R. E. Traction Co.,216 Ill. 493, 75 N.E. 194; Rische v. Texas TransportationCo., 27 Tex. Civ. App. 33, 66 S.W. 324; Schaaf v.Cleveland, M. S. Ry. Co., 66 Ohio St. 215,64 N.E. 145.

The logic of the general proposition enunciated in this class of cases and of this classification is not apparent to us. The purposes for which highways always have been, and now are, laid out, and the right of way therefor acquired, include their use for the transportation thereon of property as well as that of persons. Their intended ministration to the public convenience and advantage is one which comprehends a public service in both capacities. What basis in reason there is for a distinction between conditions which result from the application of like improved methods when made to the carriage of persons and when made to the carriage of things, unless reason for that distinction be found in something besides the bare fact that in the one case it is persons and in the other property which is concerned, we are unable to discover. It well may be that the application of the new methods to property carrying in given cases, or conceivably in all cases, may take *Page 412 such shape and involve such incidents as to create reasons for a recognition of the fact that in those cases an additional servitude will thereby be created. But that is a very different thing from saying that there can be no property carrying without destroying the identity of the highway use for the simple reason that the subject of the carriage is property.

It is easy to conceive how the denial of the right to utilize new methods in the carriage of things over a highway without transgressing the right of way involved in the highway easement might result in serious inconvenience and disadvantage to the public, whose interest the highway was designed to serve, and to the local public most directly concerned, and a material diminution of the highway privilege which they are entitled to enjoy. Mordhurst v. Ft. Wayne S. Traction Co.,163 Ind. 268, 71 N.E. 642. Inability to carry property includes inability to carry mails, or packages for local delivery, or to accommodate the strictly local public in any manner of transportation of things. Can it be fairly said that in no service of this character can conditions be found which, by reason of the inherent nature of the service, will not be in excess of the highway privilege. We think not, and, furthermore, that the incidents of such service are not necessarily such that it must be said of them that they are incompatible with highway use.

There are other cases which have drawn a distinction between urban and interurban service, and attempted to find in that distinction a feature of significance, if not controlling significance, in the determination of the question before the court. Zehren v. Milwaukee Elec.Ry. Lt. Co., 99 Wis. 83, 74 N.W. 538; Younkin v.Milwaukee Light, H. T. Co., 112 Wis. 15,87 N.W. 861; Harvey v. Aurora G. Ry. Co., 174 Ill. 295,51 N.E. 163. See 3 Dillon on Municipal Corporations *Page 413 (5th Ed.) § 1258. We can discover no good reason for this distinction, at least under our system where the public easement is for the benefit of all the public alike without regard for territorial subdivisions, and where the character of a highway and of the highway easement is the same wherever it is located, and however great or small the extent of its service. Canastota Knife Co. v. Newington Tramway Co., 69 Conn. 146, 154,36 A. 1107; 3 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) § 1258.

We are satisfied that the question for solution is one which cannot by reason of its nature be resolved in any of the ways indicated. It is one which may present itself under too many widely differing aspects to be resolved in respect to all which may arise by any such artificial process as the application of a simple test which regards a single fact or incident only, and ignores all others. The several tests indicated possess the merit of simplicity, but no one of them is founded in a sound logic, avoids practical difficulties, or escapes what may be harsh results to the public, and results defeating the very purpose of a public way. The practical difficulties attending their application are apparent. We are satisfied that there can be no short cut to a reasonable and just conclusion under the varying conditions which may arise, and one which shall serve the best interests of the public, including abutting owners themselves. Such a conclusion is one which can be reached only by a study of the conditions which are present in a given case, or in given classes of cases, and by bringing to bear upon these conditions those pertinent considerations which are best calculated to disclose whether the new use is in aid of the highway use, or an essentially different and independent use.

We have no occasion here to attempt an exhaustive recital of those considerations. We have already had *Page 414 occasion to notice a number of them, and, sufficiently for present purposes, called attention to the objective point of inquiry, the general direction of it, and the salient suggestive facts to be looked at.

The fact that this is the only method by which satisfactory results can be arrived at is emphasized by a study of the cases which have sought to adopt more direct methods. Dillon and other writers, realizing the difficulties which must beset an attempt to adopt shorter and simpler processes, have asserted, and we think correctly, that after all each situation must be dealt with upon its own merits. 3 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) p. 2032 note; Nichols on Eminent Domain, § 100. This is substantially the attitude which certain courts have taken. White v. BlanchardBros. Granite Co., 178 Mass. 363, 366 et seq.,59 N.E. 1025; Mordhurst v. Ft. Wayne S. Traction Co.,163 Ind. 268, 71 N.E. 642; Schaaf v. Cleveland, M. S. Ry.Co., 66 Ohio St. 215, 64 N.E. 145.

Turning now to the allegations of the complaint, we find that it is there charged that the defendant in the operation of its road has been and is transporting property as well as persons. This charge, standing, as it does, by itself and without amplification, is under our conclusion insufficient to establish conduct which is outside of highway rights. It is, however, further averred that its road is operated as a carrier of property by means of cars designed for and carrying property exclusively, and which run from terminus to terminus, presumably some miles distant from each other, without stopping to receive or discharge contents, and receiving and discharging such contents at the two termini only.

In the Canastota Knife Co. case it was suggested that a passenger traffic road running under similar conditions, and not serving and accommodating the public as it ran, might not be rightfully operated in a highway without *Page 415 creating an additional servitude. Here is set up a situation where all local accommodation is prima facie excluded. The company in the operation of its property carrying cars does not serve and accommodate as they run, and the highway is apparently put to a use in which there is no purpose to facilitate its most natural and normal use. Under the allegations the transportation might well be for the general purposes of commerce rather than as an adjunct of ordinary street travel, and the service rendered thus brought into close affiliation with that rendered by ordinary freight carrying roads of the steam variety. 3 Dillon on Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) § 1259; Kinsey v. Union Traction Co.,169 Ind. 563, 584, 81 N.E. 922. The allegations are not as full and as informing concerning the situation as they should have been made, but they are sufficient to enable the plaintiff to establish under them an invasion of his rights as fee owner; and they ought not to have been disposed of upon demurrer, but should have been allowed to stand to be dealt with after the pertinent facts of the situation had been more fully developed by the pleadings or upon a hearing.

There is error, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to be proceeded with according to law.

In this opinion HALL, C. J., THAYER and RORABACK, Js., concurred.