178 N.Y. 75 | NY | 1904
This action was brought to restrain the defendant from constructing and operating an alleged proposed extension of its street surface railroad between the village *78 of Skaneateles and the city of Syracuse, in the county of Onondaga. The complaint was framed upon the theories: (1) That the alleged extension was invalid because the defendant had failed to obtain from the board of railroad commissioners a certificate that public convenience and necessity required it, and (2) that the so-called extension was such only in name and was in reality a new road, the construction and operation of which was illegal without such certificate. These allegations of the complaint were met by the denials of the answer, and upon the issue thus joined and the proofs made, the defendant was given a judgment, which has been affirmed by the Appellate Division.
The appellant now contends that the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the learned trial court do not support the judgment, because the allegations of the complaint and the evidence given in support thereof tend to prove the construction and operation of a proposed extension between Skaneateles and Syracuse, while the only findings and conclusions upon the subject are to the effect that a bona fide extension was projected and made between Skaneateles and Marcellus. Of this contention it is enough to say that there is evidence to support the findings and conclusions made, and these are sufficient to sustain the judgment rendered, unless the main contention of the plaintiff as to the construction of sections
The failure of the trial court to find certain facts which the appellant claims to have established by evidence is not, in the present state of this record, an error of law reviewable by this court (National Harrow Co. v. Bement Sons,
In the last analysis, therefore the only question that we can *79 review is whether the extension of defendant's road, projected and constructed as found by the trial court, was valid under the statute, without the certificate of the board of railroad commissioners as to the public convenience and necessity thereof.
The defendant was organized in 1895 for the purpose of constructing an electric street surface railroad over certain routes described in its charter. One of these routes extended from a given point in the city of Auburn in the county of Cayuga, over and along stated courses to the intersection of Genesee street with the easterly boundary of the village of Skaneateles in the county of Onondaga. The defendant had complied with the then existing requirements of section
The courts below have held that section
During the whole of the period from 1890, when the present Railroad Law was originally enacted, down to 1902, when section 59 was so amended as to bring proposed extensions of street surface railroads within the rule requiring the certificate of the board of railroad commissioners as to public convenience and necessity, section 90 has also been a part of the same law, and, although amended in 1893 and again in 1895, its substance has remained unchanged and it has always dealt exclusively with extensions and branches of street surface railroads. Thus we see that in 1890, when newly projected street surface railroads were concededly exempted from the changed policy of the state towards its steam railroads, as manifested in section
The reasons for this difference in the earlier legislative treatment of the two kinds of railroads are obvious. Under the law as it stood prior to 1890 the requisite number of persons with sufficient capital could organize a railroad corporation and construct a railroad at any time and over any route they might choose. In the formative period of our state this was doubtless a most beneficent policy and contributed very materially to the development of our commerce and resources. Experience, however, demonstrated that railroad enterprises are not exceptions to the ordinary trade laws of supply and demand. Ill-advised and speculative railroad enterprises soon emphasized the necessity of protecting, not only existing railroad corporations against destructive competition, but the investing public against the disastrous consequences of indiscriminate and unrestricted railroad schemes backed by alluring but impracticable promise of gain. These were the conditions *82
which brought about the enactment of section 59 as part of the Railroad Law. The reasons for then exempting street surface railroads from its operations are equally apparent. At that time street surface railroads were operated by horse power, chiefly in the larger cities, and they were comparatively few in number. With the advent of electricity as a motive power new conditions were created. Not only was urban traffic greatly augmented, but interurban street surface railroads were projected on every hand, until the history of steam railroads found its counterpart in this new outlet for corporate enterprise and capital. In 1895 the legislature again interposed, this time in favor of existing street surface railroads and the investing public, by striking out of section 59 the exemption in favor of street surface railroads, thus placing all railroads of every kind thereafter to be projected upon precisely the same footing. That this amendment of section 59 was not quite far reaching enough has been made evident by later developments and legislation. After the legislation of 1895, section
The construction of sections
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur; GRAY, J., not sitting; BARTLETT, J., taking no part.
Judgment affirmed. *84