33 Barb. 420 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
By the Court,
The justice who heard the motion for an injunction in this action, at the special term, determined that crossing the railway of the plaintiff by the rails and horse cars of the defendant, was not an appropriation of the property- of the former to the use of the latter, but a mode of exercising the public right of passage and travel over the highway known as Atlantic street when such rail was laid down. From this judgment we cannot dissent, for we ought not, upon a motion for a preliminary injunction, to affirm what has not yet been authoritatively affirmed in any court—that the mere crossing of the railway track of one city rail road company by the. horse or mule cars of another railway company, is such a clear and manifest invasion of
If what I have said be true, the grant of a franchise to the Jamaica Rail Road Company to lay down and operate a rail road through Atlantic street, cannot operate to exclude all other companies operating horse cars from crossing the street. That street was still to remain a public highway for public travel and public uses, and so long as the rail road company were not impeded or interrupted in running its cars and operating the road, it could not complain. The Jamaica company are not, and never were, the owners of the soil. Their rights were those of passage—a mere easement, and if the laying down of the rails of another company in the same street and the running of horse cars thereon, should be deemed and held to be another easement, how could the Jamaica company complain, so long as its right of passage over the street remained uninterrupted. Atlantic street commences at the shore of the bay and extends easterly, so that the route of the Jamaica company separates the city into two parts, one lying north and the other south of the track. The theory of the plaintiff is that no other railway laid down upon the surface of the street, and no other vehicle running upon such track and drawn by horses, can cross its track without its permission. So that all other city rail roads must limit their routes and operations to the districts north or south of Atlantic street. The same railway shall not extend itself from one to the other, because it cannot do so without crossing the track of the Jamaica road. If we look at another side of this controversy we shall see that the grant to the city rail road company, both by the resolutions of the common council and the act of the 23d March, 1854, is to construct and operate a railway upon routes some of which run north and south over streets and avenues which intersect and cross Atlantic street. If the claim of the plaintiff can prevail, wherever the city company reach the track of the plaintiff, their routes termi
Emott, Brown and Scrugham, Justices.]
The order of the special term should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs. ‘