4 Daly 355 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1873
—The statement of facts discloses that defendants operate a railroad between New York city and New Haven, which, at Bridgeport, connects with the Housatonic railroad, operated by the Housatonic Railroad Company between Bridgeport and Pittsfield, Massachusetts, passing through Sheffield ; that for the convenience of passengers and themselves, and by agree
The judge who tried this cause, without a jury, under these facts found as matters of law, that the defendants sold the ticket from Bridgeport to Sheffield as the agent of the Housatonic Company, and checked the baggage as such agent.
The main exceptions are to these conclusions of law from the facts stated. There do not appear any other special circumstances tending to fix any other liability upon the defendants, or to show that they in any other way agreed to carry the passenger or his baggage from Bridgeport to Sheffield, than that upon application for such passage tickets, those mentioned were sold to him, and his baggage was thereupon checked with a check of the Hotisatonic Company. Although the defendants are not a corporation of this State, and are only through the comity of the laws of the State authorized to extend and operate their road therein, they are yet within the prohibition of our statute against exercising corporate powers beyond such as are expressly conferred by law, or are necessary to the exercise of the general powers conferred (1 R. S. 600, § 3), and are prohibited from maintaining suits for, or in respect to, any such acts (2 R. S. 457, § 2). Public policy would also debar any actions against them for acts done here, in violation of the prohibitions of our statutes against domestic corporations. All persons dealing with corporations are bound to take notice or have knowledge of their corporate powers, as they must exist in positive statute.
The defendants, as appears from the act of 1846, were incorporated for the purpose of constructing a railroad from New New Haven, by way of Bridgeport, westerly to the line dividing the State of Connecticut from New York, and there is nothing in the evidence offered in the present case indicating that they ran their cars over any part of the Housatonic road between Bridgeport and Sheffield, or even exercised the functions of common carriers thereon.
The contract between the defendants and the Housatonie Company did not establish any community of interests or profits between them ; it had only relation to the respective charges, or rather the proportionate division of the charge or amount, to be exacted from the through passenger to be carried from the line of the one to some other place on that "of the other. The coupon tickets sold in the present case sufficiently evidence such separate undertaking, and that they had each been issued under authority of the respective companies. They constituted full notice, if such were necessary, of the separate obligations of the several companies. The case of Hood v. The New York & New Haven Railroad Company, 22 Conn. 1, though much criticised as a restriction upon railroad corporations in contracting for the carrying of freight or passengers beyond their termini, is yet authoritative as a construction by the courts of Connecticut upon the corporate powers of the defendants, and that they had not the unrestricted powers of contracting as common carriers at large, and has been followed in Converse v. Norwich & N. Y. Trans. Co. 33 Conn. 166.
Irrespective of these considerations limiting the operation of contracts made by railroad corporations, as ultra vires, it would seem to be well settled that in the ordinary assumption of the duty of a carrier of freight and persons between certain
Under these considerations the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed.
Present, Robinson and Larremorb, JJ.