128 N.Y. 408 | NY | 1891
The Split Rock Cable Road Company, a corporation organized under chapter 462 of the Laws of 1888, entitled “ An act to authorize the formation of elevated tramway corporations and to regulate the same,” applied by petition to the Supreme Court for authority, to take for its corporate use certain lands of which the respondents are the owners. The right to take these lands was contested by the owners on several grounds, among them, that the use for which they were
“ § 1. Any number of persons, not less than thirteen, may form a company for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating an elevated tramway, constructed of poles, piers, wires, rods, ropes, bars or chains, for the transportation of freight in suspended buckets, cars or other receptacles for hire, and for that purpose may make and sign articles of association in which shall be stated the name of the company, the number of years the same is to continue, the places from and to which the said tramway is to be constructed, maintained and operated, and the length of said tramway as near as may be.”
The particular powers which such corporation may possess and exercise are enumerated and specified in the following provisions:
“ § 6. Every corporation formed under this act shall have power and authority:
“ 1. To cause such examination and surveys for its proposed tramway to be made as may be necessary to the selection of the most advantageous route; and for such purpose by its officers and servants to enter upon the lands or waters of any person, but subject to responsibility for all damages which shall be done thereto.
“ 2. To lay out its tramway and to construct the same as hereby provided.
Ҥ 7. In case any company formed under this act is unable to agree for the purchase, use or lease of any real estate required
i§ 9. Every corporation formed under this act shall have power and authority to erect and maintain all necessary and convenient buildings, stations, fixtures and machinery for the accommodation and transaction of its business.”
The articles of association of the petitioner, which are acknowledged June 13, 1888, and filed June 19, 1888, state that the subscribers “ have associated together as an elevated tramway corporation, to continue in existence for the. period of fifty years, for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating an elevated tramway between Split Rock and Onondaga Lake, a distance of about four miles, both of which places are in Onondaga county.”
The capital stock of the petitioner was all paid in, and in June 1889, it completed its tramway from Split Rock northerly to near the Erie canal a distance of about three and a half miles, and since then it has been in operation. The tramway consists of two elevated cables, held upon supports and parallel to each other, about ten feet apart, on which run buckets by means of a trolley or pulley, one line taking the buckets that have been filled, and the other fine taking back the buckets which are empty. The location of the southern terminus of this tramway is upon the land of the petitioner, just north of the lands now desired to be taken, and is in a gorge about 90 feet lower than the Hughes land.
There is nothing in the statute under which the corporation was formed nor in the objects of the corporation as expressed in the articles of association sufficient to warrant the conclusion that the business which it is organized to carry on is public in the sense that enables it to take private property under the power of eminent domain. The Special Term, however, found
The map of its route originally filed, taken in connection with the evidence, shows that the southern terminus of the tramway is upon the land of the petitioner and near the establishment of the Solvay Process Company, a corporation engaged in a large and growing business, consisting, as is to be inferred from the evidence, in the production of soda ash. This company owns one hundred acres of land upon which are stone quarries, and this land entirely surrounds the terminus of the tramway as well as the land in question. The northern terminus of the tramway as now built is also on the lands of the Solvay Process Company at the lime-kiln of their works, about 500 feet from the Erie canal. The incorporators of the petitioner were practically all stockholders and persons interested in the Solvay Company, and it' is quite apparent that the petitioner was organized and is operated as an instrumentality to facilitate the business operations of the Solvay Company. The only business that it has thus far carried on was for that company. As now constructed the limit of its carrying capacity cannot exceed 750 tons per day. It has thus far been operated practically night and day, and has succeeded in carrying for the Solvay Company 350 to 400 tons of stone a day. / There is no public highway leading to the northern terminus óf the road by means of which the public can. obtain access for its use; that the road has thus far been entirely for the benefit of
Under the doctrine of this and other cases, a possible limited use by a few, and not then as a right but by way of permission or favor, is not sufficient to authorize the taking of private property against the will of the owner. (Matter of Deans-ville Cemetery Assn., 66 N. Y. 569; Matter of Eureka Basin, Warehouse & M. Co., 96 id. 42; Matter of Rochester, Hornellsmlle & Lack. R. Co., 110 id. 119; Matter N. Y., L. & W. Ry. Co., 99 id. 12.)
The order appealed from is right, and should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed.