150 N.Y.S. 76 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
This proceeding was instituted by the plaintiff, which is the owner of and engaged in operating an electric plant by both water and steam power, situate in the town of Oneonta, Otsego county, N. Y., to condemn the right to overflow three and eighty-seven one-hundredths acres of land, a portion of which is now covered by the water of plaintiff’s dam, The final order appealed from by the defendant confirmed the report of commissioners appointed to ascertain the compensation to be made therefor to the defendant Arthur Schwarzenbach who is the owner thereof, but awarded the costs of the proceeding to said defendant who resides in the State of New Jersey, the defendant Haines being the tenant of the property and residing within this State.
“ § 2. Such corporation may construct, maintain and operate upon the Susquehanna river, at any and all points within the town of Oneonta, * * * all necessary dams, reservoirs, * * * canals and other appliances, for the proper use of the water of such river in the development of hydraulic and electrical power and for generating electricity for heating, lighting and other purposes. Such corporation may acquire lands necessary for carrying into effect the powers granted by this act; may sell, lease and convey lands or other property for the purposes of its business; may accumulate and store water from such Susquehanna river and sell, lease, furnish and operate the power developed from the flow or storage of such water; may dispose of the electricity generated by such power for heating, lighting and other purposes to any municipality, corporation, association or person, and shall have all the powers of a corporation organized under the Transportation Corporations Law in the State in respect to the furnishing of electricity to municipalities and the inhabitants thereof. * * *
Ҥ 4. Such corporation may acquire lands by condemnation in the manner provided by the Condemnation Law of the State for any of the purposes herein specified. * * *
“ § 5. Such corporation shall possess all the powers and be subject to the same liabilities as a corporation organized under the general law of this State.”
As bearing upon the claim of the defendant that the act in
In Matter of Mayor, etc. (99 N. Y. 569, 577) the court said: “ Where one, reading a proposed bill with the title in his mind, comes upon provisions which take him by surprise, which he could not reasonably have anticipated, and so both citizen and legislator are' misled and thrown off their guard, it is our duty to declare the condemnation of the fundamental law.”
In Astor v. Arcade Railway Co. (113 N. Y. 93, 109) the court said: “ When the subject is expressed, all matters fairly and reasonably connected with it, and all measures which will or may facilitate its accomplishment, are proper to be incorporated in the act and are germane to the title. The title must be such, at least, as fairly to suggest or give a clue to the subject dealt with in the act, and unless it comes up to this standard it falls below the constitutional requirement.”
In Economic P. & C. Co. v. City of Buffalo (195 N. Y. 286) Judge Chase collated the various holdings of the Court of Appeals upon this subject and said: “ When a special franchise is given in a private act to incorporate a company it can only be sustained because such special franchise is a necessary incident to the corporation formed. The name of the corporation included in the title of the act may clearly indicate the necessity for a special franchise from some source.” “The serious question presented by the defendants is whether the title fairly expresses to the legislators and the public the subject of the act or whether it is deceptive, misleading and consequently violative of the Constitution, even if it could be sustained if it had been given a more comprehensive title.”
In People ex rel. Olin v. Hennessy (206 N. Y. 33) the decision of the court is well expressed in the head note as follows: “An act may include such provisions as are incidental to its main purpose and subject, as expressed in the title of the act, unless such incidental provisions are so foreign to its main purpose and subject as to mislead and deceive or tend to mislead and deceive the members of the Legislature or the public. A provision for the abolition, discontinuance and avoidance of grade crossings includes, among other things, acquiring property rights and making compensation therefor; hence, the title of
It cannot be held as contended by the defendant that the title of the act in question must be construed as expressing the purpose simply to “incorporate” the water power company. The title indicated the necessity for a franchise to acquire and operate a water power. It would certainly be assumed that there would be expressed in the act, in conformity with the statute, the purposes for which the corporation was created, and that its powers would also be specified. In Freeman v. Panama R. R. Co. (7 Hun, 122) the title of the act was simply “An act to incorporate the Panama Railroad Company,” and one of the objects expressed in the act of incorporation was “ purchasing and navigating such steam or sailing vessels as may be proper and convenient to be used in connection with the said road.” (Laws of 1849, chap. 284.) The court held that it was not required by section 16 of article 3 of the Constitution that the title of an act incorporating a company should set forth all the powers of the company; that so long as the objects of the corporation were limited by the act to one body corporate, they constituted, in mass, the single subject which the act must contain; and the court construed the title as not simply relating to “incorporating ” the company, but to the construction of a railroad, and held that the power of purchasing and navigating vessels was conferable in conjunction with the power to construct a railroad.
In Harris v. Supervisors of Niagara County (33 Hun, 279, 286) it was said in reference to the effect of section 16 of article 3 of the Constitution: “The title should have a fair and reasonable interpretation, not an unnecessarily restricted one. It is not important that it might have been more explicit than it is. It is only necessary that the general subject of the act be expressed in the title. The details may constitute its provisions. And whatever legitimately comes within the general purpose appearing in the title is permissible.”
It can hardly be claimed that as to the act in question the right to condemn lands for the purpose of a dam was so foreign to the main purpose and subject of the act, as expressed in its title, as to tend to mislead and deceive, or that a person reading the proposed bill with the title in mind would be surprised upon coming upon a provision permitting the taking of condemnation proceedings in order to acquire necessary lands for the purpose of the act; that the electric water power company was to operate by water power was definitely indicated by the title; that it could possess no water power until it could acquire one subsequent to its incorporation was certain. It was, therefore, reasonably to be anticipated that there should be contained in the bill a provision for acquiring lands necessary for carrying into effect the purpose for which the company was incorporated, and that such action was fairly and reasonably connected with the subject as expressed in the title, and was a measure which might facilitate its accomplishment, and was germane to its title, and that if necessary, resort must be had to proceedings for condemnation.
Title to the lands in question could not be acquired by the plaintiff under section 61 of the Transportation Corporations Law, as that is applicable only to towns and villages and not to cities. (See Consol. Laws, chap. 63 [Laws of 1909, chap. 219], § 61, subd. 2, re-enacting Laws of 1896, chap. 446.) The act in question is not violative of any of the provisions of section 18 of article 3 as claimed by the defendant, neither can the contention be successfully made that the act is violative of section 1
In February, 1909, the plaintiff entered into a contract with the city of Oneonta, which at the time of instituting these proceedings and at the time of the trial the plaintiff was carrying-out, to furnish to said city for five years from March 1, 1909, at least 100 regular commerical standard 2,000 nominal candle power arc lamps to be located on the streets or other public places ■ of the city and to burn continuously every night; also to light the municipal and other public buildings of the city with a current day and night; also to maintain and operate a day and night incandescent lighting circuit to all applicants within the city limits; also to be prepared to supply unlimited power service to all applicants upon reasonable notice and at a reasonable price, the plaintiff agreeing to maintain steam and water power, thus providing a duplicate system against emergencies. The rights acquired by the plaintiff were for public use. As was said in the case of Pocantico Water Works Company v. Bird (130 N. Y. 249, 258): “The term ‘public use,’ as used in connection with the right of eminent domain, is not easily defined. The Legislature has no power to take the property of one individual and pass it over to another, unless the use to which it is to be applied is for the public benefit. The question of public, use is a judicial one and must be determined by the courts. It is not affected by the agency employed, for it may be vested in private persons, who may be actuated solely by motives of private gain, if the use to be made thereof is for the benefit of the public. It has consequently been held that railroads, canals, turnpikes, ferries, sewers, gas and water com
So long as the intended use of an improvement, sought to be accomplished through an exercise of the right of eminent domain, is not restricted to private parties or private interests, but is open to the whole public, it is no valid objection to the act authorizing it that it will benefit one person, or some class of persons, more than others, or that it originated in private interests and was intended in some degree to sub-serve private purposes. (Matter of Burns, 155 N. Y. 23.)
In Matter of Niagara, Lockport & Ontario Power Co. (111 App. Div. 686, 692) it was said: “The extent of the business contemplated, including as it does the furnishing of electricity for the use of the inhabitants in a thickly settled and extensive territory for illuminating purposes and for the use of extensive street surface railroads, we think constitutes a public use within the definition of that comprehensive term. (Pocantico Water Works Co. v. Bird, 130 N. Y. 249, 258 et seq.; Matter of Burns, 155 id. 23.) ”
The Legislature has considered electric light companies operating under contracts similar to that of the plaintiff as engaged in the public service, and by the Public Service Commissions Law has provided for regulating its operations in practically every detail of its business, even including the prices
The defendant further urges that it has not been shown that necessity exists that the property be acquired and the dam maintained at its present height for the purpose of furnishing-electricity used in lighting the public places of the city of Oneonta, as there would be ample water power for that purpose without flooding the defendant’s lands, and that the plaintiff seeks to acquire defendant’s lands simply for the purpose of increasing its power so that it may furnish private individuals with electricity. The evidence shows that practically the whole business of the plaintiff consists in furnishing light to the municipality and the inhabitants of the city of Oneonta, and establishes the necessity of plaintiff’s acquiring the land in question in order that the plaintiff’s reservoir may be maintained at sufficient height and volume to supply power during a considerable portion of ordinary seasons. When the defendant states that it requires only about fourteen per cent of the total present steam and hydraulic power, or well towards one-half of the steam power, to furnish lighting for strictly municipal purposes, he has neglected to take into consideration the necessities of the public at large for light and power, and the importance of a duplicate plant for service in the event of one plant becoming insufficient or disabled. Ooncededly plaintiff’s plant can be operated at much less expense by water power than by steam power, and it may be assumed that the prices charged by plaintiff for light and power are more or less based upon the fact that the plant can be operated a considerable portion of the year by water power, resulting in a reduced price for the public use.
By necessity is meant not an absolute but a reasonable necessity of the corporation in the discharge of its duty to the public. (Matter of New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co., 77 N. Y. 248.)
£ £ 1ST ecessity, within the meaning of this rule, does not mean an absolute but only a reasonable necessity, such as would combine the greatest benefit to the public with the least inconvenience and expense to the condemning party and property-owner consistent with such benefit. ” (15 Cyc. 633.)
As regards the matter of necessity, the learned referee before whom the case was tried was justified in finding, “ That in order to enable it to generate electricity in such quantities and to such advantage that it may carry out its contract with said municipality for such public lighting, said Oneonta Light and Power Company has constructed, and now maintains, a reservoir for the storage of water taken from the Susquehanna river, in the town of Oneonta aforesaid, and adjoining the lands above specified, with which it develops hydraulic and electrical power for generating electricity for the said purposes of furnishing-light and power to said city of Oneonta and the inhabitants thereof; that the operation of said dam and the impounding of such waters cause the land in question of the defendant, Schwarzenbach, to be in part unavoidably flooded and in part saturated with water. That said premises are necessary for the purposes of its incorporation, the proper operation and use of its said reservoir and hydraulic plant, and the supplying of electric lights to the city of Oneonta, N. Y., and its inhabitants, and without the same the business of said company cannot be properly operated.”
At the close of his opinion the referee said: “ In justice and fairness, I believe that the plaintiff is entitled to acquire these lands by condemnation. Nor will the defendants suffer any hardship. The land itself consists of about four acres, unoccupied and without buildings, and of no especial value for any particular purpose. The only question in which the defendants are in fact interested is the price which they shall obtain for such lands, and it is the general experience that the defendant in such cases obtains the full value therefor.”
The defendant does not question the adequacy of the consideration, not having appealed from the report of the commissioners awarding damages. We conclude that as to the merits of the controversy the final order should be affirmed.
Upon the question of the right of the court to impose the
While the offer to purchase made by the plaintiff in April, 1906, is printed in the record, it is not marked as an exhibit, and, so far as the record discloses, was not offered in evidence upon the trial.
It appears, however, that a proceeding for the condemnation of this real property, to which the plaintiff and defendant herein were the parties, was on trial July 27, 1906, and it is apparent that the offer above mentioned was made in such proceeding. At that time the merger of the two companies had not been consummated. The plaintiff was not then possessed of the right to maintain such proceedings, and the offer may have been made in view of that fact. In any event the offer does not appear to have been renewed or to have been recognized by either party as a continuing offer, as upon the trial of this proceeding it was conceded that the parties had made an effort to agree upon the value of the land and had not been able to do so. The only proof in the record as to the plaintiff’s estimate of the value of the land is the testimony of the one
“ The Constitution (Art. 1, § 6) requires that private property shall not be taken for public purposes except upon the payment of ‘ just compensation,’ and a man who is forced into court, where he owes no obligation to the party moving against him, cannot be said to have received ‘ just compensation ’ for his property if he is put to an expense appreciably important to establish the value of his property. He does not want to sell; the property is taken from him through the exertion of the high powers of the State, and the spirit of the Constitution clearly requires that he shall not be thus compelled to part with what belongs to him without the payment, not alone of the abstract value of the property, but of all the necessary expenses incurred in fixing that value. This would seem to be dictated by sound morals as well as by the spirit of the Constitution, and it will not be presumed that the Legislature has intended to deprive the owner of property of the full protection which belongs to him as a matter of right.” (Matter of City of New York [Town of Hempstead], 125 App. Div. 222.)
“We fully agree with the opinion of the judge at Special Term that an extra allowance should be made to the appellant for defending the proceedings to acquire its property, provided
These reasons lead to an affirmance of the order appealed from; but as each party to the proceeding has in part succeeded, the affirmance should be without costs of the appeal to either party.
Order unanimously affirmed, without costs in this court to either party.
Chap. 684.— [Rep.