63 N.Y.S. 659 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The plaintiff is a taxpayer of the city of Rochester, and commenced this action April 21, 1899, pursuant to chapter 301 of the Laws of 1892, amending chapter 531 of the Laws of 1881, and section 1925 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to obtain a judicial determination that the contract set forth in the complaint and a resolution of the common council authorizing the same
This, in condensed form, is the complaint, and it is apparent it is meager of facts on which to hinge the charge of fraud. The common council of the city is its legislative body, and within its sphere of action its legislative cognizance is supreme and cannot be fettered or obstructed by judicial interference. (Kittinger v. Buffalo Traction Co., 160 N. Y. 377; People ex rel. Sturgis v. Fallon, 152 id. 1, 11.)
Judge Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations (6th ed.), in discussing the independence of a legislative body from •interference by the courts, says at page 229: “ Restraints on the legislative power of control must be found in the constitution of the state, or they must rest alone in the legislative discretion. If the legislative action in these cases operates injuriously tó the municipalities or to individuals, the remedy is not with the courts. The courts have no power to interfere, and the people must be looked to, to right through the ballot-box all these wrongs.”
The charter of the city is the offspring of the Legislature. It
There is a class of cases where the authority exercised by the common council, though delegated by the Legislature, is purely administrative in its character, where a different rule prevails. (See Weston v. City of Syracuse, 158 N. Y. 274.)
If courts, even in a case of palpable fraud, possess the power to interfere and restrict a body executing its legislative authority within its prescribed compass, that power will be exercised only in an extraordinary case, and when public policy imperatively requires it. If the courts, on every general charge of fraudulent, collusive conduct against the members of a municipal body with delegated legislative power, should intervene to restrain the execution of its normal duties thus delegated, the clashing between the two co-ordinate branches would be fraught with immeasurable harm. The policy of our Constitution is to keep these two branches distinct, each to be supreme in its own domain, and transgression upon the province of the one would invite a like trespass upon the other until the barriers separating the two would be wholly removed.
In the present case the only fact upon which the charge of fraud hinges is, that the common council declined to accept the proposition of Mr. Gleason, involving, as it is claimed, loss to the city of $15,000. The petition presented did not apprise that body what the occupation, residence or responsibility of the petitioner was. It
The bare allegation that the conduct of the common council was fraudulent, or that the contract was illegal, does not state an issuable fact. (Talcott v. City of Buffalo, 125 N. Y. 280.)
It is a conclusion entirely proper to be stated in summing up an array of' facts which support the general charge; but, independent of any fact to uphold it, it is of no weight.
But beyond this we are decidedly of the opinion that the city of Rochester had no franchise to sell. As has been suggested, the tendency of modern legislation is to transmit to the local authorities the exclusive dominion over the streets of the respective municipalities, but the transmission of that authority must be evidenced by specific warrant, for the power is in the State primarily. (Skaneateles W. W. Co. v. Village of Skaneateles, 161 N. Y. 154,165 ; Ghee v. Northern Union Gas Co., 158 id. 510; Adamson v. Nassau Electric R. R. Co., 89 Hun, 261.)
In every instance, so far as I have been able to discover, where the consent of a municipal body has been held to be a necessary preliminary to the occupation of its streets by a corporation, that consent has been based upon the delegation of power by the Legislature. In the Transportation Corporations Law (Chap. 566, Laws of 1890), pipe line corporations (§§ 45, 46), gas and electric light corporations (§. 61, subd. 1), water works corporations (§ 80), and others enumerated in this act, are required to procure the consent or permit of the street-governing body before any right to the use of the street ’exists in the corporation.
By the same act (§ 102) the right of telegraph and telephone corporations to use the public streets and highways for the construction
By amendment to the charter of the city of Rochester, enacted in 1894 (Chap. 28, § 8, amdg. subd. 7 of § 40 of said charter), authority is given to the common council “ to regulate and control the erection, construction, laying, stringing, maintaining and removing of all wires, cables, poles, conduits and subways upon, over and under the streets, avenues, lanes, squares, parks, bridges, aqueducts and public places within said city.”
This provision does not relate to the right to the use of the streets, It is no infringement upon the power vested in the State Legislature to grant the franchise to telephone corporations. When a corporation of this kind is to avail itself of the legislative grant, the manner of its exercise, the location of its poles, the stringing of its wires, etc., are within the control and regulation of the local legislative body. That is one of the police functions committed to the municipality. This right of regulation is, however, entirely distinct from the original granting of the privilege. It is subordinate to that right. The local body has no authority to intervene until the corporation is seeking to exercise the privilege accorded it by the State, and then not to enjoin such exercise if within the letter of its authority, or to exact compensation for the franchise, but to protect the citizens and the public. It may intercede to reduce to a minimum this interference with the public usei-, to require that the privilege shall be exercised most beneficially to all people interested, or for any other purpose involving “ control and regulation ” by the local authorities. But this intervention recognizes the franchise as existing in the corporation.
The interlocutory judgment sustaining demurrers should' be affirmed, with costs of this appeal to each respondent and with leave to amend.
All concurred; Laughlin, J., concurring in result only.
Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs of this appeal to each respondent.