Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge
Roger Taney, Chief Justice, Opinion of the
Court (Excerpts)
The questions involved in this case are of
the gravest character, and the court have given to them the most anxious and
deliberate consideration. The value of the right claimed by the plaintiffs is
large in amount; and many persons may, no doubt, be seriously affected in their
pecuniary interests, by any decision which the court may pronounce; and the
questions which have been raised as to the power of the several states, in
relation to the corporations they have chartered, are pregnant with important
consequences; not only to the individuals who are concerned in the corporate
franchises, but to the communities in which they exist. The court are fully
sensible, that it is their duty, in exercising the high powers conferred on them
by the constitution of the United States, to deal with these great and extensive
interests, with the utmost caution; guarding, so far as they have the power to
do so, the rights of property, and at the same time, carefully abstaining from
any encroachment on the rights reserved to the states.
No one will question, that the interests of
the great body of the people of the state, would, in this instance, be affected
by the surrender of this great line of travel to a single corporation, with the
right to exact toll, and exclude competition, for seventy years. While the
rights of private property are sacredly guarded, we must not forget, that the
community also have rights, and that the happiness and well-being of every
citizen depends on their faithful preservation.
The relative position of the Warren bridge
has already been described. It does not interrupt the passage over the Charles
River bridge, nor make the way to it, or from it, less convenient. None of the
faculties or franchises granted to that corporation, have been revoked by the
legislature; and its right to take the tolls granted by the charter remains
unaltered. In short, all the franchises and rights of property, enumerated in
the charter, and there mentioned to have been granted to it, remain unimpaired.
But its income is destroyed by the Warren bridge; which, being free, draws off
the passengers and property which would have gone over it, and renders their
franchise of no value. This is the gist of the complainant; for it is not
pretended, that the erection of the Warren bridge would have done them any
injury, or in any degree affected their right of property, if it had not
diminished the amount of their tolls. In order, then, to entitle themselves to
relief, it is necessary to show, that the legislature contracted not to do the
act of which they complain; and that they impaired, or in other words, violated,
that contract, by the erection of the Warren bridge.
The inquiry, then, is, does the charter
contain such a contract on the part of the state? Is there any such stipulation
to be found in that instrument? It must be admitted on all hands, that there is
none; no words that even relate to another bridge, or to the diminution of their
tolls, or to the line of travel. If a contract on that subject can be gathered
from the charter, it must be by implication; and cannot be found in the words
used. Can such an agreement be implied? The rule of construction before stated
is an answer to the question: in charters of this description, no rights are
taken from the public, or given to the corporation, beyond those which the words
of the charter, by their natural and proper construction, purport to convey.
There are no words which import such a contract as the plaintiffs in error
contend for, and none can be implied….
The whole community are interested in this
inquiry, and they have a right to require that the power of promoting their
comfort and convenience, and of advancing the public prosperity, by providing
safe, convenient and cheap ways for the transportation of produce, and the
purposes of travel, shall not be construed to have been surrendered or
diminished by the state; unless it shall appear by plain words, that it was
intended to be done.
Indeed, the practice and usage of almost
every state in the Union, old enough to have commenced the work of internal
improvement, is opposed to the doctrine contended for on the part of the
plaintiffs in error. Turnpike roads have been made in succession, on the same
line of travel; the later ones interfering materially with the profits of the
first. These corporations have, in some instances, been utterly ruined by the
introduction of newer and better modes of transportation and traveling. In some
cases, railroads have rendered the turnpike roads on the same line of travel so
entirely useless, that the franchise of the turnpike corporation is not worth
preserving. Yet in none of these cases have the corporation supposed that their
privileges were invaded, or any contract violated on the part of the state. Amid
the multitude of cases which have occurred, and have been daily occurring, for
the last forty or fifty years, this is the first instance in which such an
implied contract has been contended for, and this court called upon to infer it,
from an ordinary act of incorporation, containing nothing more than the usual
stipulations and provisions to be found in every such law. The absence of any
such controversy, when there must have been so many occasions to give rise to
it, proves, that neither states, nor individuals, nor corporations, ever
imagined that such a contract could be implied from such charters. It shows,
that the men who voted for these laws, never imagined that they were forming
such a contract; and if we maintain that they have made it, we must create it by
a legal fiction, in opposition to the truth of the fact, and the obvious
intention of the party. We cannot deal thus with the rights reserved to the
states; and by legal intendments and mere technical reasoning, take away from
them any portion of that power over their own internal police and improvement,
which is so necessary to their well-being and prosperity.
And what would be the fruits of this doctrine
of implied contracts, on the part of the states, and of property in a line of
travel, by a corporation, if it would now be sanctioned by this court? To what
results would it lead us? If it is to be found in the charter to this bridge,
the same process of reasoning must discover it, in the various acts which have
been passed, within the last forty years, for turnpike companies. And what is to
be the extent of the privileges of exclusion on the different sides of the road?
The counsel who have so ably argued this case, have not attempted to define it
by any certain boundaries. How far must the new improvement be distant from the
old one? How near may you approach, without invading its rights in the
privileged line? If this court should establish the principles now contended
for, what is to become of the numerous railroads established on the same line of
travel with turnpike companies; and which have rendered the franchises of the
turnpike corporations of no value? Let it once be understood, that such charters
carry with them these implied contracts, and give this unknown and undefined
property in a line of traveling; and you will soon find the old turnpike
corporations awakening from their sleep, and calling upon this court to put down
the improvements which have taken their place. The
millions of property which have been invested in railroads and canals, upon
lines of travel which had been before occupied by turnpike corporations, will be
put in jeopardy. We shall be thrown back to the improvements of the last
century, and obliged to stand still, until the claims of the old turnpike
corporations shall be satisfied; and they shall consent to permit these states
to avail themselves of the lights of modern science, and to partake of the
benefit of those improvements which are now adding to the wealth and prosperity,
and the convenience and comfort, of every other part of the civilized world.
Nor is this all. This court will find itself compelled to fix, by some arbitrary
rule, the width of this new kind of property in a line of travel; for if such a
right of property exists, we have no lights to guide us in marking out its
extent, unless, indeed, we resort to the old feudal grants, and to the exclusive
rights of ferries, by prescription, between towns; and are prepared to decide
that when a turnpike road from one town to another, had been made, no railroad
or canal, between these two points, could afterwards be established. This
court are not prepared to sanction principles which must lead to such results.
The judgment of the supreme judicial court of
the commonwealth of Massachusetts, dismissing the plaintiffs' bill, must,
therefore, be affirmed, with costs.