10 Abb. N. Cas. 180 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1881
— The Elevated Bailway Company, defendant, was incorporated by an act passed May 26,1814. The authority
It is too late to deny the power of the court to prevent the commission of illegal acts by the members of the common council in a proper case and at the suit of proper parties. The members of the common council are mere agents with defined and limited powers (1 R. S., 337, sec. 22; Id. 599 secs. 1 and 3). While the court cannot rightfully control the proper exercise of the discretion invested in them, yet when they threaten an abuse or illegal exercise of such discretion, and especially when they claim the right to exercise powers which they do not possess, it is the duty of the court to interpose its authority whenever it becomes necessary for the protection- of public or private rights or interests. The action of the common council which the plaintiff asks the court to restrain, if unauthorized, must result in the creation of a public as well as private nuisance, for no argument is necessary to show -that such an interference with a street as would follow from the construction and operation
The decisive questions, therefore, are: 1. Whether the common council can exercise the power claimed, assuming its existence, in the mode adopted by them ? and, 2. Whether the power originally granted is still in force ? Both questions must, I think, be answered in the negative. The power forms no part of the mass of legislative powers which have been delegated to the common council by the city charter, but is a special authority conferred upon the mayor and common council by the statute incorporating the railroad company (See Matter of North agt. Carry, 4 N. Y. Sup. Ct. (T. and C.], 357 ; New York and Brooklyn Saw Mill Co. agt. City, 71 N. Y., 580). The statute plainly requires the consent of both. The unanimous consent of the common council would not be an effectual execution of the power, much less would the consent of two-thirds of the members thereof, however manifested. Nor was the exercise of the power committed to a single board composed of the mayor and common council. But if such was its nature, it could be exercised only upon a meeting of all or a meeting of a majority upon due and reasonable notice to the others (2 R. S., 555, see. 27 ; People agt. Nichols, 52 N. Y., 481). Upon either view of the subject the proposed action of the common council would be illegal. I am also clearly of opinion that the power has ceased to exist. It was conferred in 1874. The company has erected portions of its road and partially completed the same throughout the route designated in its charter, and on the 1st of September, 1879, mortgaged its railroad constructed, or to be constructed, including all the railways, ways and rights of way, acquired or to be acquired. Whatever has been done by the company toward the construction of its road has been done upon the streets named in its charter, and each of such streets has to a greater or less extent been
I think the injunction should be continued in such form as to effectually restrain the passage of the proposed resolution and the exercise in any manner of the power of naming more suitable streets, which was granted by the charter of the railroad company, and that the plaintiff should have ten dollars costs of this motion.
Note. — Despite the order of judge Gilbert continuing the injunction, tne seventeen aldermen who adopted the resolution passed the same over the veto of the mayor. Proceedings were taken and an order obtained hy Mr. David Barnett, counsel for the property owners, requiring the seventeen aldermen to show cause why they should not he punished for contempt. After a hearing of both parties, judge Gilbert imposed a fine of $250 upon each of the aldermen, and from ten to thirty days imprisonment in the county jail. An appeal has been taken hy the counsel of the aldermen and a stay has been granted, and the aldermen released from jail. — [Ed.