12 N.Y.S. 116 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
In cases of this kind, it is incumbent on the petitioner to show—First, a legislative warrant; and, second, if the right is challenged, that the business, which it is organized to carry on, is public, and that the taking of private property for the purposes of the corporation is a taking for
The appellants own the property" in question, and it consists of a valuable quarry. Their contention is that the only object of this proceeding is to compel them to sell it for the benefit of the Solvay Company. If the question of public use is to be determined from the nature of the business of the cable company, as described in its articles of association, then there would be a failure to show a design to construct a way for public use. Ho such design is stated in the articles. An elevated tramway is not necessarily public. It may or may not be. The public use or purpose should affirmatively appear. Attorney General v. City of Eau Claire, 37 Wis. 401. If left optional with the future management of the company, it would at least be doubtful whether a good basis would be furnished for the exercise of the right of eminent domain. Hor does the statute of 1888 fix a public character upon such corporations, except, possibly, by way of inference. The organizations under that act are not limited to roads for public use, nor is the property acquired declared to be for public use. In this respect it differs from the present railroad act, (chapter 140 of 1850, §§ 1, 18,) and from the act for the organization of