196 N.Y. 158 | NY | 1909
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The learned Appellate Division seems to have disposed of the case on the theory that what it terms the secondary franchise, that is to say, the consent or permission of the municipal authorities to the railroad company to construct its tunnel and railroad in the city streets, not having prescribed any limit of time within which the road should be constructed, was, when acted upon to some extent, a property right not subject to defeasance or forfeiture by the failure of the company to comply with the terms of the General Railroad Act under which it was incorporated, which prescribes that on the failure of the company to finish its road and put it in operation within ten years from the time of filing its articles of incorporation, its corporate existence and powers shall cease. (Railroad Law of 1855, § 47, as amended by L. 1867, ch. 775; R.R. Law of 1890, § 5.) In other words, it treated such consent as if it were a grant of a franchise wholly disconnected from the legislation of the state which authorized the incorporation of the railroad company, and, therefore, held that it passed to the directors of the corporation at the time of its dissolution with the other property which the company might have had at that time, to be administered for the benefit of its creditors and stockholders. It is unquestionably true that the franchise to construct and operate a railroad is different from the franchise to be a corporation. As pointed *164
out by Judge VANN in Lord v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc'y
(
Treating the case, therefore, from the point of view assumed by the Appellate Division, the statement of facts was inadequate to enable the court to render any judgment. In that statement we have simply the fact that the company "commenced and prosecuted the construction" of its railroad on specified portions of its line. But as to the extent of the work done by the company, whether the work had been prosecuted with reasonable diligence, and whether the company at the time of its dissolution was still engaged in its *165
prosecution, the statement is silent. It is true the statement recites that in an action brought by the company against the city it was adjudged on December 26th, 1906, that the company was entitled to construct and maintain its line of railroad. But it was also adjudged that the time of the company to complete its tunnel would expire on December 31st following. So it is not very clear how that judgment helps the defendants. If the doctrine of the Appellate Division is correct, that the franchise granted to a railroad company upon its commencing the construction of its road within five years and expending 10 per cent of its capital thereon, is thereafter subject to no limitation, defeasance or forfeiture, the defendants are under no obligation to ever complete or operate the railroad, and the consideration for which the grant was necessarily made — the convenience and accommodation of public travel — fails. (Fanning v. Osborne,
But the consent of the municipal authorities was not the grant of an independent franchise like the deed from the owner where the railroad runs through private property. Not only the franchise to be a corporation, but the franchises granted to a corporation when formed, spring from the state. It is the elementary definition of a franchise that it is a grant from the sovereign power. (3 Kent's Comm. *458; Fanning v. Osborne,
It appears that the subsoil of Forty-second street is occupied by the defendants' tunnel from the East river to Fourth avenue, but west of that point neither the defendants nor the company have entered upon the street. If the defendants should seek to enter upon the streets or parts of streets of the city not already in their possession, the city authorities doubtless could resist such action, for the franchise of the company in respect thereto has ceased. (Brooklyn Steam Transit Co. v. City ofBrooklyn,
We are of opinion, therefore, that the judgment should be reversed and the proceedings dismissed, without costs to either party.
EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT and CHASE, JJ., concur; GRAY, J., absent.
Judgment reversed, etc. *169