This action is brought to enjoin the defendant, as receiver of the Mu tual Gras Light Company, upon the ground mainly that the right which said company had acquired of laying pipes through the streets of the city cannot pass to or be exercised by the defendant as such receiver. The theory of the plaintiff is that the permission to thus use the streets was a mere license, and could not be transmitted to any other corporation or person.
The company was organized under the general act passed in 1848, and the several acts amending the same. It is provided by section 18 of the original act that any corporation formed under the act shall have power to lay conductors for conducting gas through the streets, lanes, &c,, of the city, where the same shall. be located, with the consent of the municipal authorities of said city, and under such reasonable regulations as they may describe. The Mutual Gras Light Company obtained the requisite consent from the proper authorities of the city of Brooklyn, upon such terms as were agreed upon between it and them. The affidavits on the part of the plaintiff contain such statements designed tó show that the company did not comply with the terms of its agreement. The opposing affidavits tend to show that it did, except so far as its defaults might be excused. But the action is not
It will thus be seen that the right which the Mutual Gas Light Company acquired was something much higher than a mere license. Now, when we turn to the general act already referred to, we find that by section 2, as amended in 1872, the company organizing under it may, from time to time, borrow money for carrying on its operations, and mortgage the corporate pi'operty and franchises of said company, to secure the payment of any debt contracted by it for the purposes aforesaid. This was done by the Mutual Company, and if my reasoning is correct, the right to use the streets for the purpose of conducting gas was a part of the “property and franchises” mortgaged, and certainly a very essential part. This mortgage is being foreclosed, and in the action brought for that purpose in the supreme court, as well as in an action or proceeding for winding up the corporation, the defendant has been appointed receiver, with directions, among other things, to take charge of the laying of gas pipes through the streets. The regularity or propriety of this order cannot be reviewed here, nor does the defense depend upon the particulars alluded to. The defendant does not present himself as the grantee or
To my apprehension we are brought to the result that while the receiver is in charge of the mortgaged property and franchises, as the officer of the court, he is not open to attack by injunction, at the instance of the city, upon any of the grounds stated in the complaint.
The preliminary injunction must be dissolved, with $10 costs.
See p. 19, ante.