192 N.Y. 97 | NY | 1908
The plaintiff, in this action, seeks to recover of the defendant a penalty of fifty dollars for a violation of the provisions of section
The provisions of section
It is contended that, by force of the provisions of the statute, no limitation could be imposed upon the right of transfer and that a transfer ticket must be available in any direction, according to the desire or whim of the holder. I am unable to assent to a construction of the statute, which finds no just support in a fair reading of its language and which would impose so onerous a burden upon the defendant. A passenger, under such a construction, would be able to accomplish a round trip on the defendant's lines for one fare. In this instance, the plaintiff, upon the one fare paid on entering the south-bound car on the Bowery, under his interpretation of the law, could have continued northerly from Chambers street on West Broadway to Canal street and there have boarded an east-bound car on the Canal Street line, which would have returned him to the Bowery near to his starting point; or he could have taken a still more circuitous route. The transfer privilege permits of an hour's stoppage at transfer points and it can readily be seen how far reaching is the plaintiff's contention. I do not think that the statute intended to confer any such extraordinary right and, in my opinion, the regulation of the defendant was a reasonable one and not *102
in contravention of the statute. It was as liberal in the privileges, which it accorded to the traveling public, as it was possible for the company to be; short of allowing a round trip upon payment of a single fare. It might happen, as in this case, that the passenger was taking as direct a route by the use of street railway lines, as was possible, from the point at which he boarded the car of the Third Avenue line to the point at which he left the car of the Eighth Avenue line. It is manifest, however, with the enormous number of passengers carried daily to and fro upon the defendant's cars, thirty to forty per cent. of whom are transferred, that it would be almost, if not quite, impossible by any plan, workable under congested conditions of travel, to provide for a transfer that would indicate the destination of a particular passenger, intending, in good faith, to reverse his direction of travel by taking the third side of a quadrilateral route. But, independently of this practical view of the subject, I do not think that the provision of the statute, when fairly considered, is susceptible of the construction, which is sought to be placed upon it. What was intended by the legislature, when authorizing a leasing, or consolidation, of competing lines of railroad, appears to have been the attaching of a condition, by which the public would gain some advantage from it and its convenience be promoted thereby. That condition was that the contracting companies should "carry * * * between any two points on the railroad, or portions thereof, embraced in such contract, any passenger desiring to make one continuous trip between such points for one single fare." The statute, more or less, defines the scope of the legislative enactment in the language used: "that the public convenience might be promoted by the operation of the railroads as a single railroad with a single rate offare". But a single railroad would never be required to give to a passenger a return transfer for one fare and it is hardly conceivable that it should be. A trip, ordinarily, conveys the idea of transportation in one direction. Unless connected with some other expression, it does not carry the idea of a return. *103
A "continuous trip" does not add to the import. A continuous trip, like a continuous line, is supposed to extend in the same general direction. (See People v. Boston, etc., R. Co., 12 Abb. N.C. 230.) If this statute is to be interpreted as imposing any such double obligation, it would be subjecting the defendant to a burden, to which no single railroad is ever subjected. A railroad corporation, in operating a single system, may operate two, or more, lines of road between its terminals; but a passenger, purchasing a through ticket to his point of destination, would have no option to take a circuitous route. He would be confined to the through route. (See Bennett v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.,
For these reasons, I advise that the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER and WILLARD BARTLETT, JJ., concur; CULLEN, Ch. J., and CHASE, J., dissent.
Order affirmed, with costs. *105