Whenever the exercise of a right, conferred by law for the
benefit of the public, is attended with temporary inconvenience to
private parties in common with the public in general, they are not
entitled to damages therefor.
A railroad company was authorized by the Legislature of
Louisiana to construct a railroad across that state, and as part of
such road to construct necessary bridges for crossing navigable
streams. The act made no provision for the form or character of
such structures. A bridge across a navigable stream was constructed
with a draw. In process of time, it became decayed, and defendant
in error, having succeeded to the rights of the company, employed a
contractor to construct a new bridge in its place, the work to be
done at a time of the year when it would least obstruct navigation.
The contractor complied with his contract as to the time, but owing
to unusual rains, the river continued navigable, and the work was
unavoidably prolonged, thereby obstructing its navigation and
preventing the vessels of plaintiff in error from passing beyond
the bridge.
Held that this was a case of
damnum absque
injuria.
Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, 107 U.
S. 678, and
Cardwell v. American Bridge Co.,
113 U. S. 205,
affirmed and applied.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court. The case in the
court below will be found reported in 34 La.Ann. 973.
Page 119 U. S. 281
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The authority vested by its act of incorporation in the
Vicksburg, Shreveport, and Texas Railroad Company to construct a
railroad from a point opposite Vicksburg to the state line of Texas
empowered it to construct, as part of the road, all necessary
bridges for the crossing of navigable streams which might be on its
line. It was so held by the Supreme Court of the State of
Louisiana, and it would seem to be a selfevident proposition. What
the form and character of the bridges should be -- that is to say,
of what height they should be erected and of what materials
constructed and whether with or without draws -- were matters for
the regulation of the state, subject only to the paramount
authority of Congress to prevent any unnecessary obstruction to the
free navigation of the streams. Until Congress intervenes in such
cases and exercises its authority, the power of the state is
plenary. When the state provides for the form and character of the
structure, its directions will control except as against the action
of
Page 119 U. S. 282
Congress, whether the bridge be with or without draws, and
irrespective of its effect upon navigation.
As has often been said by this Court, bridges are merely
connecting links of turnpikes, streets, and railroads, and the
commerce over them may be much greater than on the streams which
they cross. A break in the line of railroad communication from the
want of a bridge may produce much greater inconvenience to the
public than the obstruction to navigation caused by a bridge with
proper draws. In such cases, the local authority can best determine
which of the two modes of transportation should be favored, and how
far either should be made subservient to the other.
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713,
70 U. S.
729.
In the case at bar, no specific directions as to the form and
character of the bridges over the streams on the line of the
railroad were prescribed by the legislature of the state. The
authority of the company to construct them was only an implied one,
from the fact that such structures were essential to the continuous
connection of the line. Two conditions, however, must be deemed to
be embraced within this implied power -- one that the bridges
should be so constructed as to insure safety to the crossing of the
trains, and be so kept at all times, and the other that they should
not interfere unnecessarily with the navigation of the streams.
The line of road crossed a small stream, one of the tributaries
of the Ouachita River, called Bouff River, which was navigable for
about six months in the year. This river has its rise in Arkansas,
and by its connection with the Ouachita, which empties into Red
River, its waters find their way to the Mississippi. Over this
river the company constructed a bridge with a draw sufficiently
large to allow the passage of steamers. It was used for years
without complaint from anyone so far as the record discloses. But
in 1880 it was found, upon inspection, to be decayed and unsafe for
the passage of trains. The defendant, which had succeeded to the
property and interests of the Vicksburg, Shreveport, and Texas
Company, therefore determined to rebuild it. To carry out this
purpose with as little inconvenience as practicable to vessels
navigating the river, the
Page 119 U. S. 283
company contracted with an experienced builder to construct the
bridge during the summer months, when the river was usually too low
for navigation. The work could not be begun until the subsidence of
the water in July. In order to expedite its construction, the
company stipulated with the contractor to prepare the timbers at
its workshops and transport them to the ground as soon as the state
of water would permit the work to be commenced, and it carried out
its stipulation in that respect. In the construction of the new
bridge, it became necessary to dismantle the draw of the old one
and to erect temporary supports while the timbers and draw of the
new bridge were being put in place. To prevent the stoppage of its
trains while this building was going on, the company constructed a
temporary bridge adjoining the old one for their transportation,
expecting to have the new bridge completed before the winter rise,
which usually began near the close of December, should render the
river navigable. But early in August, rains set in and continued
almost incessantly for months, rendering the river navigable in
November, much earlier than usual. The work on the new bridge was
thereby greatly impeded. To obviate this impediment as far as
possible, the company added to the contractor's force a gang of its
own bridge laborers, who assisted by working at night and on
Sundays.
The court below found that the company did everything in its
power to accelerate the work on the new bridge, but it was not
completed until December 20th following. The water in the river
being increased by the unusual rains, there was sufficient depth on
the 6th of November to carry the plaintiff's steamer, with freight,
above the bridge, but the steamer could not pass, owing to the
temporary structure and the supports used in the erection of the
new bridge. For the losses alleged to have been sustained from this
obstruction between the 6th of November and the 20th of December,
the plaintiff brought this action.
The District Court of Louisiana gave judgment for the plaintiff
in the sum of $1,000, from which both parties appealed to the
supreme court of the state, the plaintiff because he did not
recover as much as he claimed and the
Page 119 U. S. 284
defendant because there was a recovery of any sum. The supreme
court reversed the judgment, holding that the company was
authorized by the charter of the original company, to which the
defendant had succeeded, to construct a bridge over the river for
the passage of its trains, and when out of repair and decayed, to
replace it with a new one; that the obstruction to navigation
caused by the construction of the new bridge was unavoidable, and
the company could not therefore be held responsible for any injury
resulting therefrom; that it was a case in which the defendant was
entitled to the protection of the rule of
damnum absque
injuria. It accordingly reversed the judgment and ordered that
the action be dismissed.
The plaintiff contends that Congress had previously acted with
respect to the navigation of this river and of all other navigable
waters in Louisiana, and had thereby interdicted the placing of any
obstruction in them, even of a temporary character, to the passage
of vessels. He cites in support of this position the Act of
February 20, 1811, enabling the people of the Territory of Orleans
to form a constitution and state government, the third section of
which enacted that the convention called to frame the constitution
should, by an ordinance, irrevocable without the consent of the
United States, provide, among other things,
"that the River Mississippi, and the navigable rivers and waters
leading into the same or into the Gulf of Mexico, shall be common
highways, and forever free as well to the inhabitants of the said
state as to other citizens of the United States, without any tax
duty, impost, or toll therefor imposed by the said state,"
2 Stat. 642, and also the proviso to the Act of April 8, 1812,
for the admission of Louisiana, which declares that it is upon a
similar condition that the state is incorporated into the union. 2
Stat. 701, § 1.
A similar provision is found in the acts admitting the States of
California, Wisconsin, and Illinois into the Union, with respect to
the navigable rivers and waters in them, the purport and meaning of
which have been the subject of consideration by this court.
Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, 107 U. S. 678,
Page 119 U. S. 285
and
Cardwell v. American Bridge Co., 113 U.
S. 205. In the latter case, we had before us the clause
in the act admitting California, and we held that it did not impair
the power which the state could exercise over its rivers, even if
the clause had no existence. We there referred to previous
decisions upon a similar enactment, and said
"that, if we treat the clause as divisible into two provisions,
they must be construed together as having but one object -- namely
to insure a highway equally open to all, without preference to any,
and unobstructed by duties or tolls, and thus prevent the use of
the navigable streams by private parties to the exclusion of the
public, and the exaction of any toll for their navigation, and that
the clause contemplated no other restriction upon the power of the
state in authorizing the construction of bridges over them whenever
such construction would promote the convenience of the public."
The objection to the authority conferred upon the company to
construct the bridge, from the legislation of Congress, is
therefore not tenable, and we agree with the ruling of the court
below that whenever the exercise of a right conferred by law for
the benefit of the public is attended with temporary inconvenience
to private parties in common with the public in general, they are
not entitled to any damages therefor. The obstruction caused to the
navigation of the stream during the progress of the work on the new
bridge therefore afforded no ground of action. The inconvenience
was
damnum absque injuria. Bennett v. City of
Orleans, 14 La. Ann. 120;
Barbin v. Police Jury
Avoyelles, 15 La. Ann. 559.
Judgment affirmed.