17 Barb. 435 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1854
Whether the corporation of New-York has an estate in fee, either absolute or qualified, in the streets of that city, or a mere right of way, held for the public use, is quite immaterial, for the purposes of this action. In either case, it must be conceded the corporation has the right of control over the streets. By the Dongan charter, it was invested with “full power, license and authority to establish, appoint, order and direct the establishing; making, laying out, ordering, amending and repairing of all streets, lanes, alleys, highways, &c. in and throughout the city, necessary, needful and convenient for the
That the powers of the corporation may be surrendered, I do not deny ; but I "think it can only be done by authority of the legislature. Thus, it was provided by the charter of the Hudson River Railroad Company, that its railroad might be located on certain streets of the city of Hew-York, “ provided the assent of the corporation of the city be first obtained:” (Sess. Laws 1846, p. 274, § 4.) Authority to give such assent is implied in the act itself; and the corporation having, in pursuance of such authority, given its assent to the location of the railroad, and the railroad Company having located their road accordingly, the assent became irrevocable. The company acquired a right to the use of the streets for the purposes of its road, and, to a corresponding extent, the corporation was deprived of its power to regulate and control the use of the street. So in the case of the Harlem railroad, (Sess, Laws 1831, p. 327, § 11;) that corporation waá
I agree with Mr. Justice Bosworth, that “ it would be an anomaly if, after the grant had been made and accepted, and the road built in every respect in conformity with the terms of such a grant as is contained in the resolution in question, the common council may rescind the grant and divest the rights acquired under it, precisely as they may order a street to be widened or extended, or repeal any police ordinance or regulation.” The same view is expressed by Mr. Justice Strong in the opinion delivered by him upon the motion for an injunction in this cause. After referring to the prominent features of the resolution, that learned judge says: “ Surely all these provisions indicate something more than a mere revocable license. They convey a valuable right, which, upon the performance of the primary acts required from the defendants, would vest in them, and of which they could not be deprived by a repeal of the resolution.”
Mr. Justice Duer, too, in a very able opinion recently delivered by him upon the decision of a kindred action, says: “I am yet to learn that a contract, valid when made, can be rescinded by either of the parties, unless the power of rescinding it is expressly reserved, or was given by some constitutional or statutory provision in force when the contract was made. The licenses contemplated by the resolution must, therefore, be regarded as perpetual and irrevocable. If it takes effect at all, the right of way, now vested in the corporation, so far as it is necessary for the purposes of the defendants, will become vested in them. The exercise of the legislative powers of the corporation, in respect to that street, must be in subordination to the vested rights of the defendants. We have already seen that a corporation cannot, without the consent of the legislature, thus divest itself of its own powers. The resolution itself is, therefore, unauthorized and void.”
Again, the corporation has “ full power and authority to make and pass such by-laws and ordinances as it shall from time to
The associates of the Broadway railroad are, by a provision in their contract with the corporation, authorized to demand and receive from every passenger whom they may carry from one point to another, five cents. Although the legislature has declared that the corporation shall have the power and authority, from time to time, to regulate the rates of fare to be charged for the carriage of persons, the corporation has said, by this resolu
Having come to the conclusion that the resolution in question is not within the powers conferred upon the common council, and is, therefore, void, I have not felt fnyself called Upon to examine the questions of fact presented by the pleadings, and to which the evidence presented upon the trial was directed, with the care
In respect to the circumstances under which the resolution was adopted, I do not think the evidence would warrant the conclusion that the members of the common council who voted for the resolution were governed by corrupt motives or acted in bad faith. And yet the pertinacity with which they persisted in conferring upon these defendants privileges so extraordinary in their character, and which are supposed at least to be of so very great value, is calculated, it must be conceded, to excite a lively suspicion. Other propositions, apparently more favorable both to the corporation and the public in their terms, were before them. That they should reject these and adopt the proposition of the defendants, can only be accounted for—if the members of the common council who voted for the resolution are to be acquitted of dishonesty—upon the theory assumed by the counsel for the deféndants upon the arguments, that they had no confidence in the good faith of those who made the propositions, inasmuch as they were avowedly opposed to the enterprise. But, whatever' may have been the motives which induced the members of the common council to support the resolution, they transcended their power, and* therefore, even though it may have been unintentional, were
The only other question which I deem it useful to notice is* whether the plaintiffs are entitled to the remedy for which they ask 1 The corporation had assumed authority to grant permission to the defendants to lay in Broadway a railroad track. By virtue of such permission, and yet without legal authority, the defendants were about to proceed to the execution of their purpose. The illegal act thus about to be committed would, if consummated, result in special, and perhaps irreparable injury to the plaintiffs, and others, who, like them, are owners of real estate upon Broadway. Besides their interest in common with other corporators and tax payers, they had the other special and more important interest to be affected by what might be done by the defendants under their pretended license from the corporation; Upon this state of facts I cannot doubt that the plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction. The act about to be committed by the defendants was unlawful, but whetherit would amount to a publie nuisance, may, as the evidence in the case stands, be questionable. But whether a public nuisance or not, it would, I have no doubt, prove injurious to the property of the plaintiffs. If so, whatever the public rights may be, they are entitled to have such unlawful act restrained.
A nuisance may be both public and private. To the individual who has sustained actual damage as the result of the wrongful act, it may be regarded as a private nuisance, even where the party chargeable with such wrongftil act might also be convicted of a public nuisance. (See First Baptist Church v. Schenectady and Troy Railroad Company, 5 Barb. 79, and cases there cited. See also Code, sec. 219; Christopher v. The Mayor of New- York, 13 Barb. 567.) In the latter case it was held that where an act is clearly illegal, and the necessary effect of such act is to injure the property of another, the court is Warranted in restraining the illegal act by injunction. The plaintiffs present such a case. The act sought to be restrained, as we have already seen, is wholly unauthorized, and clearly ille
Harris, Justice.]
The Attorney General and others v. The Mayor of New-York and others, (12 Leg. Obs. 17, 23.)