72 A.D. 496 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The plaintiff corporation was organized under the General Railroad Law of 1850 (chap. 140), about 1864, for the purpose of constructing a single track railroad, about three miles in length, from East New York southerly to Oanarsie on Jamaica bay. At Canarsie this railroad connected with a small steamboat which conveyed passengers to Rockawav Beach. Section 47 of the General Railroad Law was amended in 1867 (Chap. 775), so that it was provided that “If any corporation formed under ” this act “shall riot, within five years after its articles of association are filed and recorded in the office of the Secretary of State, begin the construction of its road and expend thereon ten per cent on the amount of its capital, or shall not finish its road and put it in operation in ten years- from the time of filing its articles of association, as aforesaid, its corporate' existence and powers shall cease.” This act applied to plaintiff as will be seen by the -provision that this extension of time shall apply to all corporations that did not begin the construction of their roads within five years after the filing and recording of their articles of association. With its road completed between the original terminal points the plaintiff, we 'may assume, sought and procured the passage of a special act (Laws of 1871, chap: 759) by which it was provided : “ The Brooklyn and Rockaway Beach Railroad Company is hereby authorized and empowered to extend its railroad to Hunter’s Point, in the county "of Queens, by the most direct and feasible route, and . use thereon a rail of the same weight as that now in use by said company, and also operate and maintain its present sidings and branches, and construct, operate and maintain such other sidings, turnouts and branches in connection with its present track, or with such extension, as. the board pf directors of said company may from time to time deem necessary for its business, using thereon a similar rail. All the provisions of
It may be assumed that the language contained in the above-cited act was the language chosen by the plaintiff to define the rights and franchises which it sought by the act. As the act conveyed to it franchises and special privileges, its language must be construed most favorably to the People, and all reasonable doubts in construction must be resolved against the plaintiff. Words and phrases which are ambiguous, or admit of different meanings, are to receive, in such cases, that construction which is most favorable to the People. (People v. B. R. R. Co., 126 N. Y. 29, 36, 37, and authorities there cited ; Trustees of East Hampton v. Vail, 151 id. 463, 472.) Under this rule, we believe that the plaintiff had a franchise for the construction of a new road from the terminus of its'then existing line to Hunter’s Point (afterward Long Island City) which it was bound to exercise within a period of five years from the time of the passage of the act granting the franchise. The plaintiff having accepted the law of 1871 was bound to act under it.' It could not accept the franchises given to it and then leave them in abeyance. They are supposed to have been given, not exclusively for the benefit of the plaintiff, hut also in the interests of the public. It cannot be supposed that the Legislature meant to give them without imposing obligations upon the plaintiff to construct its road, nor can it be supposed that the Legislature meant to confer these franchises upon the plaintiff, leaving it optional with it whether it would build its road in one or fifty years. Such legislation would'be against public policy, and such a legislative intent cannot he presumed. It must be supposed that the plaintiff applied for the franchises and that the Legislature granted them intending that they should be used, at least to some extent, and so far as practicable, in the near future. (People v. B. R. R. Co., supra, 39.) Indeed, the statute expressly provided that the new grant should be subject to all of the conditions of the act under which the plaintiff was organized, and the amendments thereof, which provided that the construction of the road should be commenced and that ten per cent of the capital should be
Chapter 218 of the Laws of 1839 was concededly in force at the time of entering into the contract which we are presently to consider, and section 1- of this act provided : “ It shall be lawful hereafter for any railroad corporation to contract with any 'other railroad corporation for the use of their respective roads, and thereafter to use the same in such manner as may be prescribed in such contract. But nothing in this act contained shall authorize the road of any railroad corporation to be used by any other railroad corporation in a manner inconsistent with the provisions of the charter of the corporation whose railroad is to be used under such contract.” That is, no railroad corporation was authorized to lease the road of another corporation and to use it in such a manner as to prevent the discharge of the duties and obligations of the leased road to the public. It will be¡ remembered that under the provisions of chapter ,759 of .the Laws of 1871 the plaintiff was authorized to “ extend its railroad to .Hunter’s Point” (afterward Long Island City). In January, 1877, six years after the enactment of the statute under which the plaintiff assumed to act, the contract or agreement under which it is claimed the defendants have forfeited their rights in certain properties important to their usefulness* was executed and delivered. This contract was made between the New York and Manhattan Beach Railroad Company, as party of the second part, P. H. Reid, lessee of the latter road, party of the third part, and the plaintiff. The New York and Manhattan Beach Company was organized in 1876 to build a railroad from the East river at Green-point by the way of East New York to Coney Island and had filed a map of its route. The route shown on this map followed generally the lines of the plaintiff’s proposed extension from Atlantic avenue
The agreement entered into on the 29th day of January, 1877, recites the special act authorizing the plaintiff to extend its road to Hunter’s Point, and that the New York and Manhattan Beach Company “ desires to obtain the right to use and control ” so much of the railroad authorized by that act as it should construct under the agreement, and it provides for the consent of the plaintiff to the construction by the New York and Manhattan Beach Railroad Company of that part of such extension lying between the East New York terminus of plaintiff’s road and Metropolitan .avenue in the city of Brooklyn. This, it will be observed, is not a contract for the use of a road constructed by the plaintiff between its terminus in East New York and Hunter’s Point, which was the franchise granted by the State, and which it was bound to exercise in the discharge of its duty to the public, but was in effect a waiver of its right, if it had any, to that portion of its proposed route which was practically identical with that of the New York and- Manhattan Beach Railroad Company. When the plaintiff had, under the statute, located its line of road between its terminal points, pursuant to the requirements of its charter, it was concluded by that location and no change of its route could thereafter be made, in the absence -of legislative authority (Erie Railroad Co. v. Steward, 170 N. Y. 172, 179), and it requires no citation of authority for the proposition that a corporate franchise to operate a line of railroad between two given points is not satisfied by the construction and operation of a portion' of such line and a complete abandonment of the remainder. (Matter of Metropolitan Transit Company, 111 N. Y. 588, 603.). A charter must be accepted or rejected in toto. -If accepted it must be taken as offered by the Legislature. The one under which the present claim is made contains no permission and confers no power to accept in part
Here we have the plaintiff, which asks the aid of a court of equity to decree a forfeiture against these defendants, deliberately entering into a contract which makes it impossible for it either to construct or operate the line of railroad which it was permitted to construct between its terminus in East New York and Hunter’s Point. It assumes to accept the charter as to a short portion of this route and to abandon absolutely all of the remainder of the same, and to enter into a contract with the New York and Manhattan Beach Railroad Company by which it is precluded from constructing or operating a line of railroad between the terminals named in the statute, and its contract is based upon a covenant on the part of the New York and Manhattan Beach Railroad Company to “ transport passengers and freight,” not between its terminal in East New York and Hunter’s Point, but “ over its road between the City of New York and Greenpoint.” It should be remembered that the only power then existing for the lease of one railroad to another was found in chapter 218 of the Laws of 1839, and this expressly provided that “ nothing in this act contained shall authorize the road of any railroad corporation to be used by any other railroad corporation, in a manner inconsistent with the provisions of the charter of the corporation whose railroad is to be used under such contract.” Clearly this contract was inconsistent with the obligation imposed under the statute of 1871, assuming that the plaintiff had rights under it at the time of making this contract, for the franchises granted by that act are supposed to have been given, not exclusively for the benefit of the plaintiff, but also in the interests of the public. It cannot be supposed that the Legislature meant to give them without imposing obligations on the plaintiff to build its road (People v. B. R. R. Co., supra), and it has been
Taking this view of the contract, that it was prohibited by the statute under which the lease was intended to be made, we cannot - hold that because the New York and Manhattan Beach Railroad Company many years ago changed its route, so that it had a terminal at Hunter’s Point or Long Island City, instead of at Greenpoint, it has ■ forfeited its rights in that portion of the route involved in the contract under consideration. The learned court at Special Term based its decision upon the fact that the contract called for the transportation of freight and passengers between the terminal of plaintiff’s original road and Greenpoint,’ and provided in the event of a failure to perform all of the covenants that “ this lease and the term hereby granted shall cease and determine and it shall thereupon be lawful for the said party of the first part to re-enter upon said railroad and property and the same to have again, repossess and enjoy.” In our view of. the case the plaintiff had no rights under the act of 1871 ¡ or, if it did have any rights at the time of making the contract, it abandoned all rights by entering, into a contract which prevented it from discharging its duties and obligations under the act of 1871, and that such contract was void and it has done nothing since that time to regain any rights under the act of 1871, or to develop equities which this court can recognize or enforce. The change in terminal from Greenpoint to Long Island City was made in 1883 ; from that time up to the date of the commencement of this action, we find no evidence of the plaintiff making any specific objections to such change, and the learned court at Special Term refused to find that the plaintiff had suffered any damages by reason of the change, so that all there is of the plain tiff’s case is a naked legal right of forfeiture provided the com tract was valid in its1 inception, and upon this point,- for the reasons
The judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.