This is a taxpayer’s suit.to annul a certain permit issued by the commissioner of bridges to the defendant street railroad companies, including the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company, New York Railways Company and the Third Avenue Railway Company, and providing for the operation of cars over the Manhattan bridge, and also to annul a resolution of the board of estimate which purported to confirm the said permit. The defendant railway companies have demurred to the complaint. The city officials defendant have answered, and the sufficiency of the complaint is questioned by motions made by all the defendants for judgment on the pleadings dismissing the complaint. The complaint alleges that the bridge was constructed by the city at a cost of $30,000,000, and is a public highway designed to accommodate pedestrians, vehicular and electric railway traffic. It has “ two tracks fully installed and equipped,” but lying idle. Pending the unhurried consideration by the board of estimate of applications by some of the defendant railway companies for the extension of their franchise rights over the bridge the' commissioner, to meet the unquestionably great public necessity for some operation meanwhile, issued a permit to all the defendant railway companies providing for temporary operations only, on terms which are not claimed to be anything but proper, and making the same revocable upon thirty days’ notice. Thereafter the board of estimate passed a resolution in terms confirming said permit, but requiring that the companies should select a single line of cars to perform such temporary service for all the companies, and providing that “ the said permit shall be revocable by the said commissioner of bridges without notice.” The plaintiff contends that under section 242 of the Greater New York Charter, which provides that the “ exclusive power to grant * * * fran
Motions granted.