Robbins v. Omnibus Railroad
Before: Shafter
Synopsis
Street Railroads in San Francisco.—Companies operating street railroads in San Francisco are only required to keep in repair that part of the street lying between the rails along which the cars run and between which the horses travel. They are not required to keep in repair that part of the street lying between a double track.
Meaning op Word used in Two Acts.—When two Acts are in pari materia, or one is an amendment of the other, it will be presumed that a word used in a certain sense in the first Act was used in the same sense in the subsequent one.
By the Court, Shafter, J.: The complaint alleges that the defendant owns and operates a horse railroad, consisting of a double track, in and upon. Third street, between Howard and Folsom streets, in the City of San Francisco, and the purpose of. the action is to recover of the defendant five hundred and twenty dollars for “ repaving the space between the rails of defendant’s said railroad, to wit: the space of two thousand feet.” It appears that on Third street the defendant’s road has a single track for a part of the way and a double track for the residue; that the double track is but a continuation of the single track, running out of it and into it. The space for the repaving of which the suit is brought is the space between the double tracks, and it is stipulated that the only question involved is as to the obligation of the defendent to keep this space between the two single tracks—constituting the double track—in repair.
The question turns upon the construction to be given to the [473]second section of an Act passed on the 2d of April, 1866, entitled “An Act to regulate the rates of fare and paving on certain street railroads in the City and County of San Francisco.” (Laws 1866, p. 850.) The section is as follow’s: “All persons or corporations owning, maintaining or operating railroads heretofore or hereafter constructed in the City and County of San Francisco for the transportation of passengers in cars drawn by horses, shall keep the space between the. rails in thorough repair by paving, planking or macadamizing the same, as required by the Board of Supervisors of said city and county; but shall not be required to pave, plank or macadamize any portion of the street outside of the track of such road; and in all contracts for street work the contractor shall pave, plank or macadamize the entire width of the street let, except that portion between the rails of any street railroad above referred to.” It will be seen that the space which the companies named in the Act are to keep in repair is defined as the “ space between the railsand the only question to be considered is as to what rails are here referred to. It is insisted by the defendant that the rails between which it is bound to repair, are the rails along which the cars run and between which the horses travel—and that where there are two such sets of pairs of rails, forming what is called a double track, the test of liability is the same nevertheless. The respondent, on the other hand, while he both admits and claims that the space between the rails named is covered by the liability, insists that the rails bounding the space between two single tracks—and over which rails the cars do not run and between which the horses do not travel—are rails within the meaning of the Act; and that the companies are therefore bound to repair the space between these rails also.
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