1 N.Y.S. 397 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
Lead Opinion
In the consideration of the question arising upon-this appeal, regard must be had to the rules controlling the interpretation of statutes. Although the resolution out of which the right of the defendant to enjoy its privileges grew was the act of a municipal body, such body had certain limited legislative powers, and the rights of the parties are to be considered and construed by the same rules as those which govern the interpretation of statutes. The claim made by the defendant that the act resulting in the rights conferred upon the defendant was a mere private contract, and not, therefore, subject to the rules of interpretation governing the construction of statutes, cannot prevail, because in the passage of the resolution the .common council of the city of New York were exercising a legislative power which they supposed they possessed. In the case of People v. Lacombe, 99 N. Y. 49, 1 N. E. Rep. 599, the highest court in this state has laid down this rule as governing the construction of statutes: “In the interpretation of statutes, the great principle which is to control is the intention of the legislature in passing the same, which intention is to be ascertained from the cause and necessity of making the statute as well as other circumstances. A strict and literal interpretation is not always to be adhered to, and, where the case is brought within the intention .of the makers of the statute, it is within the statute, al
The common council in this legislation evidently had in mind some particular license fee which was then allowed by law, and this license fee it was intended should be paid for each car. It is to be observed that it is not the car license fee now allowed by law which is to be paid, but the license fee now allowed by law. Can there be any doubt as to what license fee was referred to in view of the circumstances above mentioned ? For each of the vehicles which ran upon designated routes for the public accommodation a license fee was required to be paid and a license was necessary. The cars in question were intended to subserve the same purposes, they were to be accommodation coaches for the the use of the public, and can there be any doubt but that the license fee referred to in the resolution in question was the license fee paid by these vehicles ? It seems to be an entire perversion of the question to claim that it should be determined as though the words the “license fee” had read “car license fees.” The common council did not so restrict their language. They evidently intended that these cars should pay a license fee such as vehicles engaged in a similar work were compelled to pay, and that these cars should receive licenses as well as they. There is no mention of car license fees in the resolution, and the common council could not have had such license fees in mind, because none existed; but, as has already been said, a license fee was provided for in respect to vehicles engaged in the same work, and it is apparent that the license fee referred to was this license fee, and none other. That this is the true conclusion in respect to the intention of the common council is singularly strongly emphasized by the wording of- the resolution in respect to the Ninth-Avenue road, which passed one of the branches of the
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed. .
Bartlett, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) Action No. 1. It is true, as the learned justice says in his opinion, that it was the intention of the plaintiffs and defendant, at the time of making the agreement that there should be paid, for the use of the streets, some compensation or license fee; but it by no means follows that a mere intention on the part of both contracting parties, the one to demand and the other to agree to pay some license fee or compensation for the use of the streets, that resort may be had to an ordinance which manifestly in its inception W'as not'intended to be applicable to those vehicles which are run upon fixed iron tracks, and known always as horse cars. Indeed, the plaintiffs never presented this claim until nearly 23 years after the passage of the ordinance, and not until they had been defeated in an action to recover the license fee of $50 a car from the defendant, which had been imposed by virtue of an ordinance passed subsequently to the agreement mentioned above. See Mayor, etc., v. Railroad Co., 33 N. Y. 42. The true construction of the agreement and ordinance is that the defendant was required to pay a license fee only to the extent as was then provided for railroad cars. Id is not competent for the plaintiffs, after ascertaining that they as well as the defendant had been laboring under a mistake of fact, so to enlarge the terms of the agreement as to make the ordinance in reference to stage-coaches applicable. Why should that ordinance be hit upon as imposing the license fee contemplated by the parties rather than a license fee for the running of hackney coaches ? The explanation of the learned judge at the trial is that the stage-coaches ran upon routes very nearly the same as the route of the street-car company, and were actually replaced by the use of the street cars themselves. This seems to us to be an unsatisfactory reason, for any intention to resort to other ordinances than some one relating to street cars is not discoverable in the terms of the resolution or the agreement. At the time of the passage of the resolution, the term “car” had a well-defined, unmistakable, signification. It could never be confounded with stages or an accommodation coach. The stages ran from
Action Wo. 2. This case differs from action No, 1 only in this circumstance, namely, that the cars which it is claimed should pay the license fee, known as the “Grand Central Line,” which runs along Third avenue, from the City Hall as far north as Thirty-sixth street, where it branches off for a block to Lexington avenue, and thence runs up and down that avenue to Forty-second street, and thence again westwardly up and down that street to and from the Grand Central depot. The mere circumstance that the cars ran over the main line only as far north as Thirty-sixth street, and not the full length of the railway, is not of any significance in determining the defendant’s liability to the plaintiffs. If the ordinance of 1839, which was the subject-matter of the opinion in “Action No. 1,” was applicable to any of the cars of the defendant, it would be equally applicable to these. But, as we have already held, there was no ordinance in existence at the time of the agreement between the parties imposing a license fee upon cars run over the defendant’s tracks. It follows that the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the defendant to abide the event of the action.