New York Cable Railway Co. v. Forty-Second Street, Manhattan & St. Nicholas Avenue Railway Co.

13 Daly 118 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1885

J. F. Daly, J.

The plaintiff is a railroad company chartered under the provisions of the Rapid Transit Act (L. 1875 c. 606), to operate a railroad through certain streets of the City of New York, by steam power, according to what is called the “ cable ” system. The routes of the plaintiff, as laid out by the Rapid Transit Commissioners, are twenty-nine in number and embrace many miles of streets, among others apart of Forty-second Street and of the First Avenue, which is route No. 12. A preliminary injunction has been granted against the laying of the tracks by defendants through Forty-second Street and the First Avenue under authority derived from the act of 1884, and the plaintiff moves for a continuance of the injunction.

The plaintiff claims the exclusive right to construct a surface railroad upon the disputed street and avenue by virtue of the provisions of the aforesaid act of 1875. By the 4th section of that act the commissioners have “ exclusive power to locate the route or routes,” but such power is subject to the condition that the consent of the owners of one half in value of the property on the street and the consent of the local authorities “be first obtained,” and failing that, that commissioners appointed by the Supreme Court, after a hearing of all parties interested, shall determine that the railroad ought to be constructed and their determination be confirmed by the court.

The routes of the plaintiff through the streets of the city have been located by the Rapid Transit Commission, but *120the railway has not been constructed, nor has the plaintiff obtained the consent of the property owners or of- the local authorities, or the determination of commissioners appointed by the Supreme Court. These are indispensable to any claim of right in the streets, exclusive or otherwise. The power of the commissioners under the act of 1875 to locate exclusive routes is dependent upon them. The authority conferred by the act of the legislature is merely the consent of the public (Matter of New York Elevated R. R. Co., 3 Abb. N. C. 426), and by the terms of the act, the public consent is conditioned upon the ability to obtain the consent of the property owners and the local authorities, or failing these, the approval of the Supreme Court. The public consent and the other permission must concur to give any right. One without the other is wholly ineffectual, and leaves the plaintiff Avithout any authority to construct its railroad. This is pointed out in one of the opinions of counsel on which plaintiff relies. A full compliance with the act of 1875 is necessary before any right attaches. The mere intention of applying for the consent of the property owners and local authorities in the hope or expectation of obtaining them, gives no right; and this is all that plaintiff has at present (Houston, W. St. & P. F. R. R. Co. v. Forty-second-Street R. R. Co., per Van Brunt, J., September, 1884). It is not necessary to discuss the question whether the consents of the property holders to any proposed route must first be obtained before the commissioners have power to locate, according to the letter of the act. It is a reasonable construction that the company organized under the act may apply for the consent to routes previously fixed ,by the commissioners, but it is certain that such consent must first be obtained before the location by the commissioners operates in any manner to confer any right, inchoate or other.

There seems to be a failure to comply with the act of 1875 on the plaintiff’s part, in another particular. The Rapid Transit Commissioners are required to fix and determine the time within which the plaintiff’s railway, or a portion of it, shall be constructed and ready for operation. The *121commissioners have designated as such time (as stated in plaintiff’s brief), eighteen months after the consents specified in the fourth section of the act have been obtained. As those consents depend upon the'will of the property owners and of the local authorities, and as the approval of the Supreme Court rests in its discretion after the commissioners appointed by it have exercised theirs, the time allowed the company is wholly indefinite and uncertain, notwithstanding the clear enactment that it should be a fixed time. Plaintiff claims that the courts will aid in determining the time by declaring what is a reasonable period to be allowed the company to obtain the consents, and that the eighteen months will run from the expiration of such reasonable time. But this construction of the act leaves it to the court, and not to the commissioners, to fix the period; and the positive enactment is that such determination is to be made by the latter. The legislature really intended that those officers should consider all the circumstances, pass upon the question of reasonable time, and leave nothing uncertain about the period fixed. There is no authority for a resort to the courts to determine the" question. As the case stands, the fixed period intended by the act fluctuates anywhere between eighteen months and a time which some other authority may at some indefinite period decide to be proper to allow the company.

C. P. Shaw, for appellant. Wm. C. Trull, for respondent.

These objections I believe to be too serious to warrant me in continuing the plaintiff’s injunction. It is therefore dissolved, with $10 costs.

From the order entered upon this decision, plaintiff appealed.

Van Hoesen, J.

We think that the order appealed from should be affirmed, for the reasons given by the judge *122at Special Term, as well as for other reasons that may he given hereafter.

Larrbmore and Allen, JJ., concurred.

Order affirmed, with costs and disbursements.