This action was brought to recover the expense incurred by tha plaintiff in laying certain pavements in West Broadway in the city of New York through which a line of street cars was operated by the defendant. There was no substantial dispute about the facts. Both parties requested the court to direct a verdict and there was no request to submit any question to the jury.
The Metropolitan Crosstown Railroad Company was authorized to construct, maintain, use and operate a street railroad through certain streets and avenues in the city of New York, which included South Fifth avenue from Spring street to Fourth street, by a resolution of the common council of the city of New York approved by the mayor on December 31, 1889. This ordinance was adopted upon the condition that the provisions of chapter 252 of the Laws of 1884 should be complied with; that the right, franchise and privilege of using the said streets and avenues to construct, maintain, use and operate a street surface railroad upon said streets and avenues subject to all the provisions of chapter 252 of the Laws of 1884, and of chapter 642 of the Laws of 1886, should be sold at public auction to a railroad company organized to construct, maintain and operate a street railroad in the city of New York which would agree to give the largest percentage per annum of its gross receipts; that, the bidder to which the aforesaid sale should be made “ shall be absolutely and unqualifiedly bound, and any person or company using or operating a railroad upon the tracks, or any part of the tracks, constructed upon the said route under or by virtue of the consent hereby, given or the Sale had in pursuance thereof, as to the tracks so used by it or him, shall be jointly and severally bound with the said bidder absolutely and unqualifiedly to repair and keep in permanent ■ repair the portion of said streets and avenues upon which the tracks shall be so constructed, between the tracks, the rails of the tracks, and a space two feet in width outside of and 'adjoining the outside rails of the track or tracks/so long as such tracks so. constructed shall continue to be used, and this obligation in respect to the repairing of the streets shall not be depend
It further appeared that on the 6th day of June, 1905, there was served upon the vice-president of the defendant a notice signed by the president of the borough of Manhattan which gave notice to the defendant.that that portion of West Broadway from Dey street to West Fourth street between the tracks, the rails of the tracks, and two feet in width outside of the tracks of the street surface railroad used'by the defendant in said West Broadway was out of repair and in need of repavement, and that the defendant was accordingly required to place and keep the same in repair under the supervision of the president of the borough of Manhattan and in such manner as he might prescribe, and that in case of the defendant’s neglect to make such repavement or repairs after the expiration of thirty days from the day of service of the notice, the president of the borough of Manhattan would proceed to make the same at the defendant’s expense. Hotice was also given that the city of Hew York was about to repave with wood block pavement the roadway of West Broadway in accordance with specifications on file in the office of the commissioner of public works, and that the repairs or pavements made by the defendant in accord with the foregoing notice must be in the manner prescribed in and by said specifications ; that a contract for such repavement was about to be advertised for and let in the manner prescribed by section 419 of the Greater Hew York charter ;
There is thus presented the question as to whether the railroad company was bound to repave a street where the railroad company has maintained an existing pavement in good repair within the railroad area, but where the pavement of the street ás a whole has become so out of repair that a new pavement was necessary and the proper local authorities have determined that the public interests require that a pavement should be laid of a different character and description than that then existing in the street; and to construct the new pavement within the railroad area or any p.art thereof to conform to the new pavement to.be laid in the remaining portion of the street. The defendant was occupying and using certain streets in the city of New York as a conimoir carrier for the: conveyance of passengers for which it was authorized to receive and ■ did receive, compensation from the passengers carried. It had been granted a franchise for that purpose by the State with the consent of the city of New. York, and as a condition of the use and occupation of the streets had agreed to be absolutely and unqualifiedly bound “ to repair and keep in permanent repair the portion of said streets.and avenues upon which the tracks shall be so constructed, between the tracks, the rails of the tracks, and a space two feet in width outside of and adjoining the outside rails of the track or tracks, so lone; as such tracks so constructed shall continue to be used:”
If to keep the street in a proper condition for travel and to meet the requirements of the public it became necessary from time to time to lay out new and improved pavements in the street as a whole, it is quite evident that the street itself would not be in a proper condition for the use of the public if the new and improved pavements stopped two feet outside of each track of the railroad, leaving the antiquated pavements in use within this railroad area. The requirements of the public as-to the pavement in each particular street must be determined by the municipal authorities having charge of. the streets. They are charged with determining the question as to the proper pavements the public require and with the duty of providing such pavements to make the street available and convenient for public use, and it is but reasonable to require the corporations to whom are granted the franchise of using the streets to bear the expense of providing for a new pavement when the public use of the streets required it to be substituted for an existing pavement. It seems to me that this was in the contemplation of the parties when the ordinance consenting to the use of the street by the railroad company was passed by the common council and accepted by the railroad company, and within the intention of the Legislature when it imposed the duty to have and keep in permanent repair a specified portion of a street on a corporation which was authorized to use the street. In no other way could the streets be kept in a proper condition for public use than by requiring these corporations from time to.time to repave the streets within the railroad area
The Court of Appeals has decided that such is to be the construction given to obligations of this character. In Conway v. City of Rochester (157 N. Y. 33), in construing section 98 of the General Railroad Law, that court held that this section provided that the streets within the railroad area should be kept in repair by the railroad corporation using the street; that this provision is mandatory, and the, -municipal authorities were given no authority to relieve the railroad corporation of the Whole or any part of the needed repairs, or to impose the whole or any portion of the cost upon abutting owners or the city at large; that the statute undertakes to provide the method by which the' duty enjoined by the statute was to' be enforced by providing that such repairs shall be made under the supervision of the proper local authorities whenever required- by them to do so and in such manner as they may prescribe ; that under this statute the local authorities weré vested with the authority of determining when the repairs should be made, and when the local authorities decided that the entire street should be repaved and the material to be used should be asphalt, the statute intervenes and requires the railroad company -to make the repairs thus ordered, under the supervision of the local authorities; that the language employed in this section is broad enough to include! repavement as well as repairs, and thus when the local authorities determined that the street should be. paved with a certain material, the, statute imposed Upon the railroad company the obligation to lay such pavement as the, local authorities had prescribed for the street within the railroad area. In Mayor. etc., of N. Y. v. H. B., M. & F. R. Co. (186 N. Y. 304) the statute required the railroad company to keep the surface of the streets inside the rails and for one foot outside thereof in good and proper order and repair, and conform the tracks to the grades of the streets and avenues, and it was held, that when the proper authorities, in view of the condition of the street as, shown to exist, decided that a granite block pavement should be laid, the requirement of repairing and keeping in good order the surface of the. street compelled-the defendant to co-operate with the city and put the space between its rails in the same condition as the rest of the street,, even though that necessitated th¿ lay
The defendant also takes the position that it had a constitutional right to be heard as to the question whether the requirement to lay the new and improved pavement was reasonable and proper. But this claim, we think, is based upon a misconception of the nature of the obligation imposed upon the railroad company. As before stated, the statute has directly imposed the obligation upon a railroad company using the tracks. It imposes no obligation upon the railroad company to use the tracks, but as a condition of such use and as compensation to the city for the use of its streets by the railroad company, the condition is imposed that it shall bear the cost of keeping the streets in proper repair within the railroad area. Such an obligation is not taxation or the imposition of an assessment for the benefit derived by the property assessed by reason of a local improvement. The statute authorizes the public officials who have charge of the streets to determine when a new pavement should be laid, and then requires the railroad company to pay the expense of such new pavement within the railroad area. When the railroad company accepted the franchise to use a public street it accepted the obligation to discharge the conditions imposed by the sovereign power as a condition for such use. We think that under the charter the borough president was the proper local authority to determine when and how and under what circumstances a. street should be paved, subject, of course^ to the control of the board of estimate and apportionment. There was no quasi-judicial or legislative power delegated to the borough president, but the borough president having under section 383 of the charter cognizance and control of the paving, repaving, resurfacing and repairing of all streets and of the relaying of all pavements removed for any cause and the board of estimate and apportionment having granted a sum of money
The other objections to which our attention has been called by counsel for the appellant do not require discussion.
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be¡ affirmed, with costs.
Patterson, P. J.,. McLaughlin, Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
See Laws of 1901, chap. 466, § 419.— [Rep.