68 N.Y. 167 | NY | 1877
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *169 This case has already been before us. It then appeared from the certificate of the learned judges at General Term, that that learned court had not passed upon the important questions of law and of fact presented. The judgment of the General Term was then put solely upon the ground, that the Special Term had no power to inquire into aught but the mere regularity of the municipal proceedings, and as to who should be commissioners. Therein, as we conceived, the General Term was in error. It was the sole error which the record then presented. It was all that this court could then properly review or determine. We could not say, but that when the General Term should exercise the power which it had, but under a mistaken notion did not then use, it would determine the facts and properly declare the law applicable to them. In the discharge of its whole duty, this court corrected the sole error then presented, and the case was sent back for a consideration by that learned court of the facts and the legal questions arising.
The case now comes up again. And we may now proceed upon the ground that the General Term has looked into the facts, and considered the questions of law involved. The opinion delivered is ample, explicit and quite satisfactory, in its declarations that the General Term has exercised its powers, and that the judgment of the Special Term has been reviewed upon the merits and the law. We may now look into the whole case.
The lands in question are held or occupied by the several railroad corporations, in different rights, for the public purposes *171 which are served by their special instrumentality. It is true, that at the same time, and in greater degree perhaps, the private interests of the corporators, or of those who manage the corporations, are also advanced. But however much the doctrine may have been doubted and questioned, at the first assertion of it, it is now firmly fixed, that railroad corporations may acquire and hold lands for a public purpose. It is a part of the law of eminent domain. The courts, who are set to declare the law and not to find fault with it, are bound so to pronounce it, and to conform their adjudications to it.
These lands thus held for a public purpose, the city of Buffalo seeks to take for another public use, which it is charged to promote. The legislature may interfere with property held by a corporation for one public use, and apply it to another; and without compensation, where no private interests are involved or invaded. (The People v. Kerr,
In determining whether a power generally given, is meant to have operation upon lands already devoted by legislative authority to a public purpose, it is proper to consider the nature of the prior public work, the public use to which it is applied, the extent to which that use would be impaired or diminished by the taking of such part of the land as may be demanded for the subsequent public use. If both uses may not stand together, with some tolerable interference which may be compensated for by damages paid; if the latter use, when exercised, must supersede the former; it is not to be implied from a general power given, without having in view a then existing and particular need therefor, that the legislature meant to subject lands devoted to a public use already in exercise, to one which might thereafter arise. A legislative intent that there should be such an effect will not be inferred from a gift of power made in general terms. To defeat the attainment of an important public purpose to which lands have already been subjected, the legislative intent must unequivocally appear. If an implication is to be relied upon, it must appear from the face of the enactment, or from the application of it to the particular subject-matter of it, so that by reasonable intendment, some especial object sought to be attained by the exercise of the power granted could not be reached in any other place or manner.
With these rules to guide, we may now look into the facts of the case. It is hardly necessary, though not perhaps useless, to say that they are not novel or original, but are gathered from the considerations of former adjudications. (See 23 Pick, supra;Springfield v. Conn. Railroad Co., 4 Cush., 71; Central *176 Bridge v. Lowell, 4 Gray, 474; 53 N.Y., supra; Mohawk H.Railroad Co. v. Artcher, 6 Paige, 83; H. and D. Canal Co. v.N.Y. and E.R.R. Co, 9 Paige, 323; Boston and Lowell RailroadCo. v. Salem and Lowell Railroad Co., 2 Gray, 1.)
It is apparent from the affidavits that if the city is permitted to carry out its project, a very serious interference will be made with use by the railway corporations of their premises. The city proposes to excavate a canal sixty feet in width, entirely through the yards of one of them, at a place where there are numerous tracks, turnouts and switches. The present grade of these tracks, etc., is but a few feet above the natural level of the canal. It is beyond dispute, that the almost constant use of these tracks, etc., is absolutely necessary for the business of these corporations, which is but another form of saying, for the purposes of the public. It is quite apparent, that to continue the use of them, if the proposed canal is excavated, bridges must be built over it, of large dimension and at considerable expense, and at an elevation higher than the present grade of the track. It would not be impossible as matter of fact, to put up such bridges and to use them, nor are we disposed to lay much stress upon the expense of erecting them. The great question is, whether the railroad corporation could lawfully throw them across the canal, if the city should be unwilling and should refuse the permission. It is to be observed that by the charter, when the city has lawfully exercised the power to take lands, and has completed the proceedings therefor, it acquires a title in fee. (2 Laws of 1870, chap. 520, p. 1202, § 18.) There is not pointed out in the charter, nor in the resolutions of the common council, nor in the judgment of the courts below, any thing which secures or offers to these corporations the right or privilege to throw bridges over the canal. Indeed, the learned counsel for the city in argument before us, said that a right so to do, could not be enforced, and the dependence for a license so to do, must hang upon the good-will and grace of the municipality. This is far *177 from a legal certainty. So that, as the case stands before us, the city seeks to acquire the right to sever by a space of sixty feet, the tracks in the use of four railroad companies, which form highly important links in State and Inter-state railway traffic, and potentially to keep that space open and impassable by railway vehicles. It is manifest, that this would be, not a tolerable interference with an existing public use, which may be compensated for in damages; but an entire superseding of it, by another public use. Both uses cannot stand together. The highly important use to which the land is already appropriated would be defeated. We may not presume, that the legislature, by the general terms in which it gave power to the city to take lands, with no especial reference to this particular place or occasion, meant to produce such an effect. There is not express power, nor power by necessary implication, for the city to work such result.
It is suggested, that the lands once acquired by the city and put to the public use of a canal, could be in turn retaken by these railway corporations in the exercise of the sovereign power delegated to them. And if we adjudge that the city may now take them, there is no reason evident, why that might not be. But then the city could again retake, and so the pursuit of cross-purposes, go on ad infinitum.
It is better reason; to take the facts as they stand, and the legal rights of the parties as they exist; as the facts warrant the conclusion, that the excavation of the canal will sever the track of the railways and put an end to the use of them; and, as there is no legal right, the enforcement of which will permanently restore that use; to say that there is no legislative authority to the city, expressly given, or necessarily to be implied to work such result.
All concur.
Orders of General and Special Terms reversed and application denied. *178