A judgment dismissing, on the merits, an equity action brought
by the Secretary of War against a railroad company to declare a
bridge over a navigable stream to be an unreasonable obstruction
and to require its removal under the Act of March 3, 1899, on the
ground that the provisions of the act did not apply,
held,
in a criminal trial on an indictment charging the same party with
violating the penal provisions of the said act, to be
res
judicata and decisive of the question.
Quaere how
far, if at all, a statutory grant to erect a bridge over navigable
waters of the United States on specified terms in an act of
Congress without reservation of the right to alter or amend
operates to limit Congress to directly legislate as to removal or
alteration of such bridge.
Quaere what the effect is on subsequent action by
Congress of a decree of a court in an action determining that a
bridge was properly erected over a navigable stream pursuant to
grant in an earlier act of Congress.
The facts, which involve the construction of provisions of the
Act of March 3, 1899, in regard to the authority of the Secretary
of War to require alteration of bridges over nav;gable waters of
the United States, are stated in the opinion.
Page 229 U. S. 245
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error seeks the reversal of a judgment discharging
the defendant in error here from further prosecution under an
indictment which alleged a violation of the Act of March 3, 1899,
30 Stat. 1121, c. 425, in refusing to alter, as directed by the
Secretary of War, a bridge across the Ohio River connecting
Parkersburg, West Virginia, and Belpre, Ohio. The case was tried to
a jury, and at the close of the evidence, by direction of the
court, a verdict of not guilty was returned, whereupon the judgment
was entered which is under review.
The facts established by the evidence, so far as material to be
stated, may thus be summarized.
The bridge in question was completed in the year 1871, in full
compliance with an act of Congress approved July 14, 1862, 12 Stat.
c. 167, p. 569, which prescribed the height, width of span, and
other requirements for bridges erected above the Kentucky line
(mouth of Big Sandy River), and in § 5 it was provided
that
"any bridge or bridges erected under the provisions of this act
shall be lawful structures, and shall be recognized and known as
post routes . . . , and the officers and crews of all vessels,
boats, or rafts navigating the said Ohio River are required to
regulate the use of the said vessels and of any pipes or chimneys
belonging thereto, so as not to interfere with the elevation,
construction, or use of any of the bridges erected or legalized
under the provisions of this act."
The act contained no express reservation of right to alter or
amend it in any respect.
On October 29, 1904, the United States Attorney for the Northern
District of West Virginia, by direction of the Attorney General,
filed in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern
District of West Virginia a bill of complaint on behalf of the
United States against the
Page 229 U. S. 246
Parkersburg Branch Railroad Company, a West Virginia
corporation, John W. Davis, its receiver, and the Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad Company. The bill in effect charged that the bridge
in question was owned, operated, and controlled by the defendants,
that the bridge had been constructed under the Act of 1862, and
averments were made as to the provisions of various statutes
subsequently passed by Congress concerning the construction of
bridges across the Ohio River,
viz., § 7 of the Act
of December 17, 1872, 17 Stat. 398, c. 4, and §§ 2 and 4
of the Act of February 14, 1883, 22 Stat. 414, c. 44, and the
provisions of other statutes conferring additional powers upon the
Secretary of War in regard to the control and regulation of the
navigable waters of the United States,
viz., §§
4 and 7 of the Act of September 19, 1890, 26 Stat. 426, c. 907, and
§ 9 of the Act of March 3, 1899, 30 Stat. 1121, c. 425. In
substance, it was charged that the spans of the bridge in question
-- the present main span being 349 feet in width and the adjacent
span of the same width -- were wholly inadequate to accommodate the
present commerce of the Ohio River at the point where built, and
constituted a serious and dangerous obstruction to the navigation
of the Ohio River at such point, and it was averred that the
Secretary of War, under the supervisory power conferred upon him by
the statutes referred to, "in recent years has required that all
bridges over the Ohio River shall have channel spans ranging from
600 to 800 feet in length." It was further averred that the
railroad company, under the pretense of renewing the old bridge,
was erecting a new structure on the site of the old, despite the
fact that the government, "through its proper officers," had
refused to grant authority so to do, except
"on condition of removing the pier between spans 38 and 39 of
the said bridge, and uniting spans 38 and 39 in one span, thus
making the channel span to the said bridge approximately 698
feet."
It was also alleged
"that the construction of
Page 229 U. S. 247
this proposed new bridge, without the consent or approval of the
United States, to which is entrusted by the Constitution the
protection of this great water way of commerce among the several
states, will be in violation of law, and to the great and
irreparable injury of the United States and the commercial
interests entrusted to its care."
The prayer of the bill was as follows:
"Your orator avers that there is no adequate remedy at law in
the premises, and therefore prays that a temporary restraining
order enjoining the defendants, their agents, servants, employees,
workmen, contractors, and others whomsoever from constructing or
proceeding to construct the contemplated bridge or any bridge
across the Ohio River from Parkersburg to Belpre, with a channel
span of not less than 698 feet, and without the consent of Congress
and the approval of the Secretary of War and the Chief of
Engineers, until the final hearing of this cause, when your orator
prays that such temporary injunction may be made perpetual, and
that the existing bridge operated by the said railroad company
between Parkersburg, West Virginia, and Belpre, Ohio, be declared
and decreed to be an unreasonable obstruction to the navigation of
the Ohio River, and that the said railroad company be required
within a reasonable time to remove the same, or replace same with
such a bridge as shall conform to existing law. And your orator
prays for such other relief as may be proper in the premises."
The defendants, in their answer, recited the history of the
bridge and alleged it to be a lawful structure, and averred that,
under the authority vested by the Act of 1862, they possessed the
right to maintain the bridge not only during the life of the first
superstructure thereof, but by the renewal of the superstructure
from time to time as might be required for the maintenance of the
bridge as a post route, etc. It was expressly averred that the
defendants were proceeding merely to renew the superstructure
Page 229 U. S. 248
of the bridge by providing a steel superstructure of much
greater weight and strength than that now in use, and that it was
not contemplated or intended to make any change whatever in the
piers of the bridge, any lowering of the height of the channel
spans, or any other change which in any respect or in any degree
will or can possibly affect the navigation of the Ohio, river at
the point where the bridge stands.
The motion for a permanent injunction as prayed in the bill was
heard upon bill, answer, and affidavits, and was decided on
February 4, 1905, in an opinion by District Judge Jackson. The
injunction was refused. 134 F. 969. It was held that the
construction of the bridge under the authority conferred by the Act
of 1862 created a vested right to the use of the bridge of which
the defendants could not be deprived without just compensation. It
was also held that the defendants were not building or attempting
to build a new bridge, but were simply replacing the old
superstructure, and that "the right to repair the bridge, to alter
it or to improve it, for the safety of the public, is incident to
the power to build it." The court thus concluded the opinion:
"It must appear from what we have said that an injunction
furnishes no remedy for the grievances complained of in the bill.
This is the third application that has been made for an injunction
before the judges of this Court against the Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Company involving the Act of 1862. Judge Goff heard the
case of the United States against the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Company, which was an application for an injunction to prevent
reconstruction of the Benwood Bridge. He dismissed the bill on
March 27, 1900. Judge Goff and I heard the case of the Baltimore
& Ohio Railroad Company against Leidecker, one of the United
States engineers, in which the same question was involved, in
which, upon a review of the case decided by Judge Goff, as well as
the
Page 229 U. S. 249
case then under consideration, we reached the conclusion that
the United States could not interfere with the reconstruction of
the superstructure of the bridge which was built under the Act of
1862. And now we have this application, which I have under
consideration, involving the same question. It would seem to me
that the action of the court heretofore had in previous cases
should be adhered to in this case. In all the cases, the judges of
this court, either sitting alone or together, have reached the
conclusion that the Act of 1872 and those acts subsequent thereto
do not in any wise affect the rights of the Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Company in relation to any and all of the bridges built
under the Act of 1862."
"For the reasons assigned, the court is of the opinion to refuse
the injunction in this case, and suggests that the only remedy is
to apply to Congress for an act to remove the bridge, if it is such
an obstruction to navigation as to justify their action, upon such
terms and conditions that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company
should receive compensation for the destruction of the bridge."
A decree denying the motion for a permanent injunction was
entered on February 27, 1905, and an appeal therefrom was
prosecuted to the circuit court of appeals. The assignment of
errors filed in that court, omitting title of cause and signature
of attorneys, is as follows:
"And now, on the 14th day of March, 1905, comes the said
plaintiff, the United States of America, by Reese Blizzard, United
States attorney for the Northern District of West Virginia, duly
authorized to appear in this behalf by the Attorney General of the
United States, and says:"
"That the decree entered in said cause is erroneous and against
the just rights of the said plaintiff for the following
reasons:"
"First. Because the court erred in overruling and denying the
motion of the plaintiff to grant the permanent injunction
Page 229 U. S. 250
prayed for by the plaintiff's bill, and heard on the 30th day of
November, 1904."
"Second. Because the evidence showed that the said bridge was a
serious and unreasonable obstruction to the navigation of the Ohio
River, a navigable river of the United States."
"Third. Because the court erred in entering the order entered by
it of record in the said cause on the 27th day of February,
1905."
"Wherefore the said plaintiff prays that the said decree be
reversed, and that the said court may be directed to enter a decree
in accordance with the prayer of the bill."
The appeal was decided on February 6, 1906, and, substantially
upon the grounds upon which the circuit court rested its
conclusions, it was held that error was not committed in refusing
to grant the injunction. 143 F. 224.
Nine months after the decision of the circuit court of appeals
just referred to, the Secretary of War, assuming to act under the
authority of § 18 of the River and Harbor Act of March 3,
1899, gave to the railroad company, the defendant, the notice the
failure to obey which was made the basis of the indictment. The
notice stated that the bridge in question was an unreasonable
obstruction to the free navigation of the Ohio River on account of
insufficient length of channel spans, and ordered "the removal of
pier No. 38, and the conversion of spans Nos. 38 and 39 into one
channel span" by December 1, 1908.
The case was heard upon an agreed statement of facts practically
embodying the essential facts presented in the equity cause and the
other facts to which we have referred above, and the record in the
equity cause was admitted in evidence over the objection of
immateriality and an exception by the government. It was also
agreed that the necessary cost and expense of altering the bridge
in the manner specified in the notice of the Secretary of War
Page 229 U. S. 251
"would exceed $500,000, and would entail great loss and
inconvenience to the defendant in the conduct of its business." At
the close of the evidence, the court, as we have stated, instructed
the jury to return a verdict of not guilty, which was done. The
instruction rested upon the hypothesis "that the legal and vested
right to maintain this bridge in its present condition has been
judicially determined by courts of competent jurisdiction" in the
equity cause to which we have referred. To the action of the court,
the United States duly excepted. Thereupon judgment was entered
discharging the railroad company from further prosecution upon the
indictment, etc., and this direct writ of error was sued out as
authorized by the Act of 1899.
In substance, it is assigned that the court erred in admitting
in evidence the record in the equity case, and in instructing the
jury to acquit the defendant. As the circuit court based its action
in directing the verdict of not guilty upon the doctrine
res
judicata, it is apparent that the effect of the proceedings in
the equity cause is the matter to be determined.
The section of the River and Harbor Act of March 3, 1899, 30
Stat. 1121, 1153, c. 425, from which the authority to issue the
notice in question was derived, reads as follows:
"SEC. 18. That whenever the Secretary of War shall have good
reason to believe that any railroad or other bridge now constructed
or which may hereafter be constructed, over any of the navigable
water ways of the United States, is an unreasonable obstruction to
the free navigation of such waters on account of insufficient
height, width of span, or otherwise, or where there is difficulty
in passing the draw opening or the draw span of such bridge by
rafts, steamboats, or other water craft, it shall be the duty of
the said Secretary, first giving the parties reasonable opportunity
to be heard, to give notice to the persons
Page 229 U. S. 252
or corporations owning or controlling such bridge so to alter
the same as to render navigation through or under it reasonably
free, easy, and unobstructed, and in giving such notice, he shall
specify the changes recommended by the Chief of Engineers that are
required to be made, and shall prescribe in each case a reasonable
time in which to make them. If, at the end of such time, the
alteration has not been made, the Secretary of War shall forthwith
notify the United States district attorney for the district in
which such bridge is situated, to the end that the criminal
proceedings hereinafter mentioned may be taken. If the persons,
corporation, or association owning or controlling any railroad or
other bridge shall, after receiving notice to that effect, as
hereinbefore required, from the Secretary of War and within the
time prescribed by him, willfully fail or refuse to remove the
same, or to comply with the lawful order of the Secretary of War in
the premises, such persons, corporation, or association shall be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall
be punished by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, and
every month such persons, corporation, or association shall remain
in default in respect to the removal or alteration of such bridge
shall be deemed a new offense, and subject the persons,
corporation, or association so offending to the penalties above
prescribed:
Provided, That in any case arising under the
provisions of this section, an appeal or writ of error may be taken
from the district courts or from the existing circuit courts direct
to the Supreme Court, either by the United States or by the
defendants."
Two attorneys general have delivered opinions that this act was
not applicable to the bridge here in question. 22 Opin.Atty.Gen.
346; 25 Opin.Atty.Gen.194.
Unlike the statutes thereafter enacted, nowhere in the Act of
1862, by which the authority to build the bridge was conferred and
under which it was built, was there an
Page 229 U. S. 253
express reservation of a right to alter or amend the act in any
respect. So also, it is not questioned that the bridge was
constructed in exact conformity to the requirements of the statute,
and that it has been so maintained ever since. No statute has been
passed expressly condemning the structure as an obstruction to
navigation, or ordering its removal or alteration. Indeed, when the
equity cause was commenced, the Act of March 3, 1899, was
operative, and under its provisions prior to the commencement of
that suit, the Secretary of War had been seeking to compel the
railroad company to alter the bridge precisely in the mode directed
in the notice upon which the indictment at bar is based. It is not
contended that the institution of the equity cause was directed by
Congress, and it manifestly was brought directly or indirectly
through the procurement of the Secretary of War in order to carry
into effect his conception of his duty to compel the radical
alterations deemed essential to be made in the width of the channel
spans. An issue plainly presented in the equity cause was whether
the bridge in question was subject to the Act of 1899, and was
within the jurisdiction of the Secretary of War under that act, and
whether the government had the right to enforce the decision of the
Secretary that pier 38 should be removed and one span made from
pier 37 to pier 39, and, among other things, the defendant denied
that the Act of 1899 had application, or that the Secretary
possessed jurisdiction in the premises. The final adjudication of
the circuit court of appeals necessarily decided this issue
adversely to the government, and conclusively determined as between
the parties that the Secretary had no power over the bridge, and
that the structure in its present condition was not subject to the
Act of 1899. We are of the opinion, therefore, that, as against
action by the Secretary of War, the decree in the equity cause was
properly held to be
res judicata as to the facts averred
in the indictment, and as decisive of the question
Page 229 U. S. 254
that, in the absence of changed conditions, the bridge in
question was not subject to the Act of 1899. How far, if at all,
the grant of the right to build the bridge under the terms
specified in the Act of 1862, with no reservation of the right to
alter or amend, will operate to limit the power of Congress to
directly legislate on the subject of the removal or alteration of
the bridge is a question we are not here concerned with, and
therefore express no opinion upon it. And, of course, we also
express no opinion as to how far the decree in the equity cause
would be applicable in case of such direct action by Congress.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY, not being a member of the Court when this
case was argued, took no part in its consideration.