18 F. Cas. 142 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1858
The only question which I deem it material to consider, on this motion for an injunction, is, whether or not the common council of the city of New York possessed the power to pass the ordinance of the 27th of December, 1854, prohibiting the running of locomotives on the Fourth avenue below Forty-Second street, (1) as it respects those belonging to the Harlem Company, and (2) as it respects those belonging to the New Haven Company.
It is insisted, on the part of the plaintiffs, that, under the charter of the Harlem Company, of the 25th of April, 1831, the common council, after giving their consent to the construction of the road along the Fourth avenue to Twenty-Third street, possessed no power to prohibit the use of it as authorized by said charter, namely, the carrying of property and persons, by force of steam, &c., and that, if the Harlem Company cannot be deprived of this right, neither can the New Haven Company, as they possess an equal right with the Harlem Company, under the sixth section of the act of March 29th, 1848. The plaintiffs further insist, that, even conceding the power of prohibition to exist in the common council, as it respects the Harlem Company, such power does not, as it respects the New Haven Company, come within the true meaning of such sixth section.
(1.) As it respects the Harlem Company. That company expressly covenanted, under its corporate seal, at the time the common council consented to the construction of its road, that the latter should retain the right of regulating the description of power to be used in the propulsion of cars within the limits of the city. In answer to this, it is said, that the condition thus annexed to the eon-sent was not authorized by the act of 1831. I have looked into the provisions of that act with some attention, and find nothing in the same, either expressly, or by implication, forbidding a qualified consent to the construction and use of the road. The propriety and fitness of annexing conditions by which some control should be exercised by the municipal authorities over tlie running of the cars, in a city rapidly increasing in population and business, are too obvious to require argument. The charter confers on the company the power to construct a road, and to transport their cars by the force of steam, of animals, or of any mechanical power, or by any combination of them. But the sixteenth section forbids the construction of their road within the city without the consent of the city authorities. The terms or conditions of that consent are not prescribed, and would seem, therefore, to be left to be arranged and settled by the parties concerned. The burden lay upon the company to procure this consent, and, there being no restraint upon them in their charter, as to the terms they might choose to offer, nor upon the common council, in giving the consent, it was natural, and even a necessity, that the terms should be a matter of arrangement, and such as might be satisfactory to both of the parties. Therefore, I can see no reasonable objection, within the provisions of the act of 1831, to a consent originally on condition that steam power should not be used at all within the city, or that none but horse power should be used, or to the limitation of the company to the use of any one of the descriptions of power enumerated in their charter; nor any objection to the reservation of the right to prohibit the use of steam power, when, in the judgment of the common council, its use should become inconvenient or detrimental to the public interests of the city.
Besides this view of the true meaning of the terms of the charter, it is a general principle, that an unrestricted power to make a grant or concession enables the party to make it upon conditions. In other words, a person possessing a given power may do less than such power enables him to do, in the execution of the same, "omne rnajus in se con-tinet minus.”
Again, independently of the view above taken in respect to the power reserved to the city, to consent to the construction of the road, I am of opinion that the sixteenth section of the charter confers upon the common council the authority to forbid the running of locomotives on the road within the city, at any time when, in their judgment, the. interests of the public demand it. The section provides, that, after the road shall be constructed, the common council shall be authorized “to regulate the time and manner of using the same, and the speed with which carriages shall be permitted to move on the same, or any part thereof.” The authority here conferred upon the city is ex
Upon the whole, I am satisfied that the authorities of the city had full power to pass the ordinance of the 27th of December, 1854, as it respects the Harlem Company.
(2.) The remaining question is, whether or not the New Haven Company possess any rights, in this respect, superior to the Harlem Company, so as to enable them to run their locomotives, against the ordinance of the city.
I agree, that the rights and powers of the New Haven Company depend upon the act of the legislature of New York, of .March 20th, 1848, and are independent of the Harlem Company, and that the eighth section of that act does not, in terms, restrict those rights and powers to those possessed by the latter company. In other words, the New Haven Company do not come into the city under a grant from the Harlem Company, so as to be restricted to what that company can grant. But, construing the sixth section of the act of 1S48, in connection with the charter of the Harlem Company (and they must be taken as acts in pari materia), I cannot resist the impression, that the meaning and intent of the legislature were to confer upon the New Haven Company no greater privileges than had been or might be conferred on the Harlem. They are authorized to run their cars, &c., over the road of the latter company, from the junction at Williams’ Bridge, to the city of New York, and “as far into the said city as the said Harlem Company may extend.” The power conferred on them is simply to use the Harlem road and nothing more, and they possess no right to construct a road in the city. And it would be singular, if the legislature had vested in the New Haven Company a right, as against the common council, superior to that of the Harlem Company.
Besides, I am of opinion, that both the New Haven Company and the legislature are to be presumed to have had a knowledge, at the time of the .passage of the act of 1848, of the limitation of the use of the road by the Harlem Company, and, hence, that the privileges granted should be construed as subject to such limitation. The act of 1831 reserved, in express terms, to the city, the right to consent to or prohibit the construction of the road, and the right to regulate the use of it after its construction. Of that act the New Haven Company and the legislature, of course, had notice, and it should be presumed that they inquired into the terrire^and conditions upon which the consent was given, and under which the road was constructed and the cars were run into the city.
Without pursuing the argument further, I am satisfied that the city authorities possessed the power to pass the ordinance of the 27th of December, 1854, and that the motion for the injunction should be denied.