25 N.Y.S. 265 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
The proceeding was under section 12 of “the railroad law,” being chapter 565 of the Laws of 1890, as amended by chapter 676 of the Laws of 1892. Issue was joined in the proceeding by an answer of the defendants to the plaintiff’s petition, and the issues so made were referred to a referee “to hear and
We are unable to see that there was any good ground for the appeal. The grounds assigned by the appeUants are two: (1) That the provisions of the railroad law which authorize the crossing or intersection of one railroad by another, and prescribe the proceedings by which such right may be enforced, do not apply to the case of street-surface railroads of whatever motive power;, and (2) that the use of the electric trolly system “in the places and in the manner proposed by the petitioner” for its crossings would be “unnecessarily dangerous,” “a public nuisance,” “a conversion of a highway or street into an entirely new use,” and “an invasion upon and disturbance of the rights of the defendants.” The latter objection was raised by an averment to the effect above stated in the answer of the defendants, and by their offer, on the hearing before the referee, to prove the facts so particularly averred. The evidence so offered was excluded on the objection of the plaintiff, which was sustained, as appears by the referee’s memorandum opinion, on..the ground that the question of the place and manner of the crossing was not within the matters referred to him, nor to be passed upon by the court on the application for the appointment of commissioners, but to be determined by the commissioners after they should be appointed;, and such is distinctly the provision of the statute in question, viz. that “if the two corporations cannot agree upon * * * the line or lines, grade or grades, points or manner of such intersections, * * * the same shall be ascertained and determined by commissioners * * * to be appointed by the court,” etc. Laws 1892, c. 676, art. 1, § 12. The commissioners, then, are the tribunal by which all questions of “the places and the manner” of the crossings to be made by the plaintiff’s road are to be determined, and that determination must necessarily be made in view, among other things, of the motive power employed, and the mode of its application. If the commissioners do their duty, no nuisance will be created at the crossings fixed upon by them; but in any case it is clear that objections to their determination cannot anticipate the determination itself.
The other ground of objection to the proceeding is the one principally relied upon, but is, we think, untenable. It is, as we have seen, to the effect that the provisions of section 12 of article 1 of the railroad law, above cited, have no application to street-surface railroads. An examination of that section shows that