32 N.Y.S. 884 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The plaintiff is the owner of a lot of land fronting on Marcy avenue, opposite Tompkins park, a public park of the city of Brooklyn, and this action is brought to restrain the defendant from constructing a surface railroad on that part of said avenue on which said park fronts. The railroad law of 1890 (chapter 565, § 91) contained the following provision in relation to surface railroad companies obtaining the consents of property owners to the construction and operation of their roads:
“But when such railroad runs through a street or avenue bounded on one side by a public square or park, the consent of one half of the property owners on the opposite side of such square or park shall also be first obtained.”
Chapter 723, Laws 1894, amended section 91. It re-enacted the section with certain changes, and omitted the provision quoted above. It is the appellant’s claim that the provision quoted was not repealed by the amending act of 1894, but is still in force, and this claim is based upon' the language of the amending act, which is that “section ninety-one * * is hereby amended as follows”; and in the appellant’s argument a distinction is drawn between the expression in an amending act which declares a prior statute to be “amended as follows” and one which declares a prior act to be “amended so as to read as follows.” When it is intended to supersede a prior statute by a new act, the latter form of expression is the usual one; and it has been repeatedly decided that a'statute declaring a former statute to be thereby amended so as to read as prescribed in the amending act is a repeal of the original statute. People v. Wilmerding, 136 N. Y. 363, 32 N. E. 1099. But the rule is well settled that a later statute covering the same subject-matter, and embracing new provisions, operates to repeal the prior act, although the two acts are not in express terms repugnant People v. Jaehne, 103 N. Y. 182, 8 N. E. 374, and cases cited.
While it is true that there is nothing necessarily repugnant in the act of 1894 to the requirement that the consents of the owners of property on the opposite side of a public square or park should be
The order must be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.