47 N.J. Eq. 380 | New York Court of Chancery | 1890
The complainant owns lands abutting on Kinney street and Belmont avenue, in the city of Newark. His lands have a frontage on Kinney street of two hundred and thirty-six feet and on Belmont avenue of about one hundred and thirty-three feet. His title extends to the middle of the street. The defendant is a street railway corporation. It was organized under a general statute approved April 6th, 1886, entitled “An act to provide for the incorporation of street railway companies and to regulate the same.” Rev. Sup. p. 363. The defendant has laid two railroad tracks in Kinney street, and intends to. lay two others in Belmont avenue. One of those laid in Kinney street is on that part of the street in which the complainant owns the fee of the land. No claim is made that these tracks were put down without authority of law, or in violation of the complainant’s rights. They are unquestionably lawful structures. They were put down by permission of the city authorities and under their supervision. The defendant intends to use electricity as the propelling power of its cars, and for the purpose of applying this force to the motors on its cars, it has, with the permission of the city authorities, erected three iron poles in the centre of Kinney street and strung wires thereon. The. poles stand partly on the complainant’s land. The erection of these poles and' the use to which the defendant intends to apply them constitutes the only ground on which the complainant rests his right to the relief he asks. The bill describes these three poles as standing one hundred and eleven feet distant from each other, about twenty feet in height, ten inches by six in diameter at the base, set in a guard or frame, in the form of an inverted cup, which at its base is twenty-two inches by eighteen in diameter. To what depth below the surface the poles have been sunk, or what are the dimensions of the part extending below the surface, or whether they have been put in the earth at all or simply set up on the surface, are matters, in respect to which, neither the bill nor the answer gives any information whatever. Both pleadings, however, -agree that the poles stand in the centre of the street, so that it is an undisputed fact in the case, that the whole extent of the
The question on which the decision of the case must turn is this: Has the complainant’s land in the street been appropriated to a purpose for which the public have no right to use it ? It is of the first importance in discussing this question to keep constantly before the mind the fact that the focus in quo is a public highway, where the public right of free passage, common to all the people, is the primary and superior right. The complainant has a right in the same land. He holds the fee subject to the public easement. But his right is subordinate to that of the public, and so insignificant, when contrasted with that of the public, that it has been declared to be practically without the least beneficial interest. Mr. Justice Depue, in pronouncing the judgment of .the court of errors and appeals in Hoboken Land and Improv
It is not denied that the railway tracks which the defendant has laid on the complainant’s land were placed there by authority of law, nor that the defendant has a legal right to use them in the transportation of passengers, but the complainant’s claim is this: that by the erection of the three poles, his land in the street has been appropriated to a use entirely outside of the public easement, and that it follows, as a necessary legal consequence, that such use constitutes a wrongful taking of his property. Stated more briefly, his claim is, that the erection of the poles puts an additional servitude on his land, and attempts to give the public a right in his land which, as yet, has not been acquired, nor paid for. That the poles will, to a trifling extent, obstruct public travel and prevent infinitesimal parts of the street from being
A doubt as to whether the complainant’s land in the street has been appropriated to a purpose for which the public have no right to use, will, at this stage of the cause, be fatal to his claim to an injunction. In a case where the complainant’s right is doubtful and no irreparable damage will result from the doing of the act which he seeks to have enjoined, a preliminary injunction should not be granted. Hinchman v. Paterson Horse R. R. Co., 2 C. E. Gr. 75, 81. The rule on this subject has recently been stated by the court of errors and appeals, in a form so lucid and imperative as to remove all doubt respecting the judgment which this court must pronounce on applications of the class just described. This is the form in which the rule is laid down: “ It is impossible to emphasize too strongly the rule so often enforced in this court, that a preliminary injunction will not be allowed where either the complainant’s right, which he seeks to have protected in limine by an interlocutory injunction, is in doubt, or where the injury which may result from the invasion of that right is not irreparable.” Hagerty v. Lee, 18 Stew. Eq. 255, 256. The poles have been placed on that part of the complainant’s land where, if their erection constitutes a legal injury at all, they will do the least possible harm. They have been placed on the edge of his boundary line, at a point where, so long as his land remains subject to the public easement, it is not possible for him to make any use whatever of the land. Had they been placed on the sidewalk in front of his premises, rights, growing out of a duty incumbent upon the abutting owner in respect to that part of the street, might have made it the duty of the court to consider questions not at all involved in this case. “A sidewalk,” said Chief-Justice Beasley, in Agens v. Newark, 8 Vr. 415, 423, “has always, in the laws and usages of this state, been regarded as an appendage to, and a part of, the premises to which it is attached, and is so essential to the beneficial use of such premises, that its improvement may well be regarded as a burthen belonging to the ownership of the land, and the order or requisition for such an improvement as a police regulation. On this ground, I conceive
The question here, however, is, what are the rights of an adjacent owner in that part of the street in which he holds the naked fee, but which has been set apart, by municipal regulation, for public use by means of vehicles. Mr. Justice Haines, in speaking of his rights in an ordinary highway, not an urban way, said, in Starr v. Camden and Atlantic R. R. Co., 4 Zab. 592, 597. “ He may lay water pipes, gas or other pipes below the surface; may excavate for a vault, or dig for mining purposes, and use the soil in any other manner that does not interrupt the free passage over it.” In a recent case, heard by the chief-justice and Justices Dixon and Reed, Mr. Justice Dixon, in pronouncing the opinion of the court, said, in substance, that an abutter may use the highway in front of his premises, when not restrained by positive enactment, for loading and unloading goods, for vaults and chutes, for awnings, shade trees, &c., but only on condition that he does not unreasonably interfere with the safety of the highway for public travel. The public right is paramount, and includes the right to have the street safe for travel. That of the abutting owner is subordinate. Weller v. McCormick, 23 Vr. 470. Some of the rights mentioned in these definitions cannot,
The court might very properly, I think, at this point deny the complainant’s application, on the ground that he has shown no such injury as entitles him to relief by injunction, but as this course would leave the principal question of the case undecided, it should not, in my judgment, be adopted. The litigants, X' think, are entitled to a decision on the question, whether or not the complainant’s land in the street has been appropriated, by the erection of the poles, to a use not within the public easement. That is the question which received the principal attention of counsel on the argument, and which has occupied the greater part of the time devoted to the consideration of the case.
The right of the defendant to use electricity as its motive power is clear. The defendant was organized under a general statute, authorizing seven or more persons to associate themselves together, by articles in writing, for the purpose of forming a corporation to construct, maintain and operate a street railway for the transportation of passengers. Rev. Sup. p. §68. The motive power to be used by corporations formed under this statute is in no way limited or defined; the statute does not say that they shall use animal, mechanical or chemical power; it says nothing at all on the subject of power; hence, under the general grant of power to maintain and operate a street railway, it would seem to be clear, that a corporation formed under this statute, takes, by necessary and unavoidable implication, a right to use any force, in the propulsion of its cars, that may be fit and appropriate to that end, and which does not prevent that part of the public which desires to use the street, according to other customary
By the terms of the statute just construed, no street railway corporation can use electricity as its motive power until it has-' obtained the consent of the proper municipal - authority. The1 defendant has such consent. It was given by resolution adopted by the common council and approved by the mayor. The complainant contends that consent cannot be given by resolution, and insists that the municipality, in such a matter, can only act by ordinance. But the rule, according to the adjudged cases, is firmly settled the other way, and may be stated as follows: Where a statute commits the decision of a matter to the common council or other legislative body of a city, and is silent as to the method in which the decision shall be made, it may be made either by resolution or ordinance. Or — to state the rule in another form — where no method is prescribed in which a municipality shall exercise its power, but it is left free to determine the method for itself, it may act either by resolution or ordinance. One method is just as effectual in point of law as the other. State v. Jersey City, 3 Dutch. 493 ; City of Burlington v. Dennison, 13 Vr. 165; Butler v. Passaic, 15 Vr. 171.
In view of the legislation and the action of the city authorities just discussed, it would seem, to be clear, that'the right of tire-defendant to use electricity as its motive power, stands, at least so far as the public are concerned, on a sure foundation. The poles and wires are to be used to apply electricity to the motors on the cars. They form a part of what is called the overhead system. In the present state of the art, they constitute a part of the best, if not the only means, by which electricity can be successfully used for street car propulsion. The proof on this point is decisive. Thomas A. Edison is perhaps the highest authority on this subject in this country. He says, in an affidavit annexed to the defendant’s answer, that the only method of applying elec
The authority on which the complainant principally relies to maintain his right to an injunction, is the judgment of the court of errors and appeals in Wright v. Carter. That ease arose out of the following facts: The legislature authorized a turnpike company to construct its turnpike on a public highway, but directed that the highway should be vacated before the construe
The averment that the use of electricity by the defendant, as its propelling power, will render the street so extremely dangerous as practically to- destroy it as a public way for any other use than that which the defendant may make of it, is not supported by the proofs; on the contrary, I think it is very clearly shown,
The complainant’s application must be denied, with costs.