Taylor v. Rutland
Taylor v. Rutland
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
— This is a proceeding by petition to take the franchise of a Turnpike company lying partly in all the towns, but very unequally, and much less in Rutland, than in the other towns. The committee have appraised the franchise, at a sum, which seems to he satisfactory to all concerned. The only question made is, in regard to the rule of apportionment among the several towns. The statute allowing the franchise to
This may indeed be very obviously proper; but the inference is not as natural a one as could be desired. If the purpose of the committee had been to apportion the burden according to the ability of the several towns, the course taken is a very intelligible one. For there is an apparent connexion between the premises and the conclusion. But how there is any general connexion, between the grand list of several towns, and the benefit to arise to such towns, by converting a turnpike into a free road, is certainly not very obvious. And although it may be true, that in this instance they happen to coincide, the coincidence must be regarded, as rather fortuitoixs, than necessary, or natural, as it seems to us.
As there is then no connexion, between the benefit to the towns and the amount of the grand lists of such towns respectively, we think such a false basis of apportionment should be stricken out of the report, lest it might hereafter be drawn in as a rule of apportionment, fixed by this court.
It seems to us, that it is the value of the franchise, lying in the several towns, rather than the benefit to be derived, by the towns, from making the turnpike a free road, which should be the governing rule in the apportionment. The benefit here spoken of is not, we suppose, a corporate benefit. For in that sense the thing is more a burden, than a benefit. But it is probably meant, a benefit to the inhabitants and to the business by the use. And hence there may be an evident coincidence, between the value of that portion of the franchise, in a town, and the relative benefit to the town, but being merely accidental, the case should rather be left to stand upon the value of the franchise.
And hence it is sufficiently obvious, that the rule proposed by
Report set aside and recommitted for a new apportionment..
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.