129 N.Y.S. 55 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1911
The plaintiff. Hew York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company operates the Putnam division of its railroad system through the village of White Plains, and there maintains station buildings, consisting of a passenger station and freight buildings, with a platform running -about parallel with the railroad tracks, which run substantially north and south, and two other platforms, one being on the east side of and adjoining the passenger station and parallel therewith, and the other being at the southerly end of the passenger station and running substantially east and west. East of the long plat-form which rung parallel with the railroad track and north of the station, there is a strip of ground between said platform and the Orawampum Hotel property; -and east of the passenger station buildings there is a large open square, which has always been used as an approach to the station by the patrons of the railroad company, and from which is the principal entrance to said station or depot and the ticket office therein for the people who are about to take trains at said station.
The plaintiff William- ¡Marshall is a livery stable proprietor with whom the railroad company has made a contract, by which said Marshall is to have and enjoy certain hacking privileges at said station, and to have the exclusive ■right to stand his hacks along the platform which runs parallel with the plaintiff’s railroad tracks at the north end of the passenger station. The defendants, about forty in number, are hackmen who have been accustomed to carry passengers to and from the said station and to solicit patrons upon the arrival of trains at said station.
Prior to the commencement of this action, the railroad company put up a fence with gates in it, around the large square on the east side of the station, and excluded or attempted to exclude therefrom these defendants, and assigned them and attempted to force them to occupy, with, their hacks, positions on the south side of thé platform at the south end of the said station, which runs east and west, and also to exclude them from the space on the east side of the platform running parallel with the said railroad tracks, and between said tracks and the Orawampum Hotel property,
The Hew York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company is the owner, and has been for many years, of the square on the east side of this passenger station building, and the part which it fenced in as aforesaid; and it is also the owner, and has been for many year’s, of the strip' of land east of and parallel with the tracks and between them and the Orawampum Hotel property; and the said railroad company has been for many years in possession of both of those pieces of land, in the sense that it has paid taxes upon them and used them in its freight and passenger business, while its patrons have used them in going to and from its station and trains.
The defendants claim that these pieces of land have become public highways, inasmuch as they have been open to and used by the public for so many years. There is no claim of an express dedication and acceptance of these lands for highway purposes, but the defendants claim that an intention to dedicate and use the same for highway purposes is to he inferred from the fact that they have been used by the general public for so many years, with the knowledge and consent of the railroad company; and, ordinarily, such an open and notorious user would justify, if not require, such an inference. But it seems to me that the fact that, during all those years, the lands in question were used by the railroad company in its business and for its convenience and by its patrons in going to and from the station and trains, negatives such an intention on the part of the railroad company to dedicate the land for general highway purposes. In other words, during all of this time the lands in question, owned
To make out a dedication by the plaintiff railroad company, it must appear that its intention was deliberate and unequivocal to make the lands in question village streets, and to permanently surrender and abandon its property to the public use. The fact that the public used the lands in question for street purposes, with the consent of the railroad company, does not, in my opinion, establish an unequivocal and unmistakable intention to dedicate for street purposes, in- view of the .fact that, during all of the time in question, ’ said lands were used by the railroad company in the operation of its business and for the use and convenience of its patrons.
My conclusion, therefore, Upon this branch of the case is, that the lands in question are not public streets, or public places, and that the .fee thereof is in the railroad company, and that it may make reasonable rules and regulations for the use thereof by its patrons and these defendants and all others who have business at its station or freight house. The law is well settled that a railroad company can make a contract with a hackman and give him special privileges and protect him in the enjoyment thereof against others engaged in the same business. It was so held in.the case of New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Co. v. Flynn, 74 Hun, 124, in which case the court, construing section 34 of the Railroad Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, as amd. by Laws of 1892, chap. 676), said: “ Section 34 of the Railroad Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, as amended by Laws of 1892, chap. 676) is to be contraed as meaning that no preference for the transaction of the business of a common carrier upon its cars, or in its depots or buildings, or upon its grounds, shall be
“ This statutory prohibition does not give all the hackmen . of a city or village the absolute right to intrude upon or make a stand of the premises of a railroad corporation for the purpose of soliciting passengers, nor does it prevent a railroad corporation which, by contract, has conferred upon a transfer company the exclusive privilege of going upon its premises with hacks for the purpose of soliciting passengers, from prohibiting other hackmen, having no contract relations with the railroad corporation or its passengers, from doing so.”
In the case of Brown v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Co., 75 Hun, 355, the facts were these: The defendant had a yard, adjoining the depot, around which it had erected a fence in such a manner as to prevent access thereto-, except through gates provided for that purpose. There was a platform along one side of the yard leading from the stopping place of the cars to the passenger depot. The defendant had entered into a written agreement with the Miller. & Brundage Coach Company, by which for a valuable consideration the coach company was given the exclusive right to have its agents upon the defendant’s trains of cars running to and from the city of Niagara Falls, for the purpose of soliciting business; the contract also gave the coach company the exclusive right to enter the said yard, with its coaches and carriages, and solicit and receive any passengers stopping at the said station who might desire to go to points in the city of Niagara Falls. Passengers, after alighting from defendant’s cars, passed along the platform mentioned, adjacent to the yard, where they might, if they so desired, enter the Miller & Brundage carriages and be driven out through the gate onto the street. The plaintiff and others engaged in like business were not allowed to enter the yard. They stood with their carriages upon the street. near the depot and there solicited such passengers as had not already been secured by the Miller & Brundage Company.
The order appealed from was reversed, and the motion for an injunction denied. In the opinion, written by Lewis, J., the court says (p. 362) : “ The contract between the defendant and the Miller & Brundage Company is not against public policy. It conduces very much to the comfort and convenience of passengers visiting the Falls of Niagara, as those who have occasion to visit that place know. While upon the cars, travelers are at liberty to make their arrangements for the use of carriages at the falls, and when they alight from the train they can enter the carriages within the inclosure and avoid the unpleasant ordeal of running the gauntlet of a score or more of the proprietors of carriages who are in waiting upon the street adjoining the depot soliciting emplovment.” N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Sheeley, 57 N. Y. St. Repr. 766; 27 N. Y. Supp. 185, was an action brought by plaintiff to restrain the defendants from entering upon the plaintiff’s station grounds at. the city of Niagara Falls. It appeared from the complaint and affidavit upon which the injunction was granted that the plaintiff was a railroad corporation, and the defendants were hackmen; that the plaintiff had offered to admit the defendants to the privileges of its station grounds at Niagara Falls, upon their complying with the terms and conditions exacted by the plaintiff. The defend
In N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Warren, 31 Misc. Rep. 571, the facts disclosed by the papers were that the plaintiff railroad company, as lessee of the West. Shore railroad, was in possession of certain lands about the railroad station at Marlborough, Ulster county, N. Y., and maintained said grounds for its railroad business, for the accommodation of the public traveling on its railroad, and laid out and maintained a private highway and approaches to the said station over said lands for passengers, on foot or in vehicles, going 'to or departing from said station; that, for the purpose of preventing annoyance to "passengers from the defendant and other persons engaged in that business, i. e., stage and hack drivers, the plaintiff railroad company entered into a contract with the plaintiff McMullen by which there was granted to McMullen, for a valuable consideration, the exclusive privilege of going on said lands with vehicles • for the purpose of bringing intending passengers to said station; and by the said agreement McMullen agreed to furnish at all times a suitable number of vehicles for receiving passengers and baggage and carrying them to and from said station.
Betts, J., writing the opinion of the court, says (p. 578) : “ Upon the facts as they now appear, an injunction is denied the plaintiffs restraining defendant, until the trial of this action, from delivering intending passengers (of the railroad company), by whom he has been employed for that purpose, upon the grounds of the railroad company provided for the use of arriving and departing passengers and vehicles, and is also refused for restraining defendant from going to said place after passengers, arriving on incoming trains, or whom he expects to arrive on incoming trains, who had previously employed him to meet them at the station, for the purpose of carrying them to their homes or places of destination. The defendant, however, after depositing his passengers for the incoming train, may not loiter upon the premises of the rail
In the case of Alexandria Bay Steamboat Co. v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 18 App. Div. 527, it was held: “A railroad company, whose railroad terminates at a point at which the boats of two rival steamboat companies touch, may enter into an agreement with one of said steamboat companies, permitting it to enjoy the use of said railroad company’s terminal facilities, without thereby becoming obliged to permit the other steamboat company to use and enjoy its terminal facilities.
“ Neither section 7 of chapter 564 of the Laws of 1890, providing that1 No stock corporation shall combine with any other corporation for the prevention of competition,’ nor section 7 of chapter 688 of the Laws of 1892, providing that ‘ No stock corporation shall combine with any other corporation or person for the creation of a monopoly or the unlawful restraint of .trade, or for the prevention of competition in any necessary of life,’ can be invoked to compel a railroad company which, for a valuable consideration, has concluded a traffic contract with a steamboat company, by which each becomes the agent of the other for the transportation of passengers and freight, to enter into a similar arrangement with a rival steamboat company and afford it the same facilities.
“ The refusal of the railroad company to thus become in effect the agent of the rival steamboat company for the transportation of passengers and freight, is not a violation of section 47 of chapter 565, of the Laws of 1890, requiring a railroad company, when supplied by a steamboat company with the latter’s tickets and checks, to sell the tickets and account for the proceeds thereof, and to make use of such checks.
“ The provisions of section 34 of chapter 676 of the Laws of 1892, that ‘ No preference for the transaction of the busi
In the case of Barney v. Oyster Bay & Huntington Steamboat Co., 67 N. Y. 301, the syllabus read: “A common carrier of passengers may establish on his car or vessel an agency for the delivery of passengers’ baggage, and may exclude all other persons from entering upon it for the purpose of soliciting or receiving orders from passengers in competition with such agency.
“ Plaintiff, an expressman, sought passage upon defendant’s hoat for the purpose, among other things, of taking, while on the boat, orders from the passengers for the delivery of baggage. Defendant had granted the privilege of transacting this business on the boat to another, and as plaintiff continued it after having been directed to desist, and refused to promise to discontinue it, defendant caused him to be ejected from its boat, and refused him passage. In an action to recover damages, held, the defendant’s action was justifiable, and that it was not liable.”
Donovan v. Pennsylvania Co., 199 U. S. 279, was an appeal from an injunction order enjoining the defendants from entering the passenger station of plaintiff to solicit business from incoming passengers for cabs, carriages, express wagons or hotels. The railroad company had granted to the Parmalee Transfer Company the exclusive privilege of going into its station for those purposes. In affirming the decree of the court below, Hr. Justice Harlan, writing the opinion, said (p. 295) : “ It was therefore its duty to see to it that passengers were not annoyed, disturbed or obstructed, in the use either of its station house or of the grounds over which such passengers, whether arriving or departing, would pass. It was to that end — primarily as we may assume
It is, therefore, plain from the foregoing authorities that the railroad company had a right to make the contract with the plaintiff ¡Marshall, and that Marshall, thereunder, is entitled to be protected in his use and enjoyment of the privileges granted him thereby. The defendants, however, have a right to use the square east of the passenger station, which is the principal approach to the depot, for the purpose of meeting and conveying their patrons from trains upon their arrival at the station and to deliver passengers to departing trains; but they cannot loiter there nor stand there to solicit business. The railroad company cannot deny its patrons the ordinary and usual means of going to and from its trains, nor can it deny them the privilege of selecting their own hackmen, nor can it refuse the hackmen the right to deliver their patrons at the usual entrance to the station and take them therefrom. There can be no discrimination by the railroad company in its treatment of its passengers respecting the manner of getting to and from the trains at the station ; and, inasmuch as the passengers have a right to choose their own hackmen, such hackmen must be given equal privileges with all other hackmen (whether they have special privileges by virtue of contracts with the railroad company, or not) in the matter of delivering passengers at and conveying them from the depot or station. On the other hand, the railroad company has a right to assign the general hackmen, including these defendants, to positions south of the platform at the south end of the station which .runs east and west, for the purpose of soliciting business upon the arrival of trains. So that the effect of this decision is, to hold:
First. That.the railroad company is the owner and in possession of, and entitled to, the reasonable control of the lands in question as approaches to its railroad buildings and trains.
Second. That the plaintiff had a legal right to enter into the contract by which the plaintiff Marshall is to have and
Third. That the defendants for the purpose of soliciting new business must occupy the positions assigned to them by the railroad company, south of the platform at the south end of the passenger station.
Fourth. That the defendants have a right to enter upon and drive over the large square on the east side of the passenger station, for the purpose of delivering passengers whom they may be carrying to the station and receiving patrons whom they may expect upon the arrival of trains.
Findings and judgment in accordance herewith will he made; hut, inasmuch as the plaintiffs are not altogether successful, the judgment will he without costs.
Judgment accordingly.