finally, sec. 83 applies where the work crosses a highway (except _
a public carriage way) on the level. All the roads referred to
are roads legally existing at the time the obstructing operation
are conducted ; and, therefore, the case of land that had up
resumption been a road, and had then ceased in law to be a road, _
is outside the purview of sec. 80.
One case, the Attorney-General v. Barry Docks and Railwa;
Co. (1), was relied on by counsel for the respondents as assisting _
his argument that sec. 80 applied to an obstruction of a former];
existing road extinguished by resumption.
Ihave carefully examined that case, and can find in it no sup
port whatever for the contention. The action was brought, as
the report states, to restrain the company from using a part of ES
their railway on the site of a part of the Llantwist Road where it -
had been diverted for the purpose of the defendant's railway
until, &. There is not a word in the case to indicate that the
company had become the owner of the soil, or that the publi¢ -
right of way had been extinguished. Two or three references
will, I think, place the matter beyond controversy. The article _
on railways in the Hneyclopedia of the Laws of Englund, vol.
11, p. 202, clearly shows how distinct are the two powers. The
plans to be laid before Parliament describe the lands proposed by
any projected railway company to be taken compulsorily, and as
a separate thing must also show the course and extent of any
proposed diversions of roads, navigable rivers, canals, or rail.
ways.
It is impossible to suppose that mere diversion of a navigable
river, canal, or other railway means compulsory acquisition with -
consequent extinguishment of public rights, and for this purpose
rivers, canals and railways are in no different position from roads.
(1) 35 Ch. D., 573.