83 N.Y.S. 622 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The relator applied to the Special Term for a mandamus requiring the defendant to carry for one single fare of five cents any pas-' .senger desiring to make one continuous trip between any point upon its Eighth avenue line and any point upon its One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Amsterdam avenue line, and upon demand, and without extra charge, to give to each passenger upon either of said lines paying one single fare a transfer operative at the intersection of said lines at the corner of Eighth avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, in the borough of Manhattan, entitling such passenger to one continuous trip as aforesaid. The court denied that application upon the ground that the remedies provided for in the statute which imposed this duty upon the defendant were
The affidavit upon which the application was made states that the relator is a citizen and resident of the city of. Hew York; that the defendant is a domestic corporation, organized under the provisions of section 3 of the Stock Corporation Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 688); that on the 8th day of April, 1902, the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, a domestic street surface railroad corporation, operating certain lines of street railway in the city of Hew York, which includes a line upon Eighth avenue from Canal street to the Harlem river, and a line in One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Manhattan street, in the city of Hew York, the two roads, intersecting at the corner of Eighth avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, leased its railroad, including the Eighth avenue line and the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street line, to the defendant corporation for the term of 999 years, to be used, maintained and operated by the said Interurban Company, subject to the various burdens, obligations and duties under which they were held by the Metropolitan Company; that prior to said lease the Metropolitan Company operated these two lines of railroad, and since the said lease the defendant “ has refused and does refuse to carry passengers desiring to inake one continuous trip between any point upon the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Amsterdam avenue line and any point on the Eighth avenue line' for one single fare, and has refused and does refuse upon demand and without extra charge to give to each passenger paying one single fare a transfer entitling such passenger to such continuous . trip, but demands and collects two fares of five cents each therefor, although said lines of railroad intersect at the corner of Eighth avenue and One Hundred and.Twenty-fifth street in the borough of Manhattan. The single fare charged upon all the lines operated under said Interurban lease is five cents.”
There is no allegation that the relator has applied for or been refused a continuous ride upon these two lines mentioned for a single
The right of the People through the Attorney-General or the district attorney of the county to make this application is not presented. To entitle the relator to this relief, it must appear from his affidavit that, upon the facts which are not disputed, he as an individual is entitled as a matter of law to the relief for which he asks. The relator, so far as appears, has been denied no right to which he is entitled. He seeks to enforce in this proceeding the right that the People have to require the defendant to obey the law under which it exercises certain franchises in the city of New York. Whether or not the defendant should comply with these provisions of law is generally a question for the State to determine, and not for an individual, and the statute which imposes this obligation provides the method of its enforcement. By the Railroad Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, as amd.) there is constituted a Board of Railroad Commissioners, which is required to examine railways and keep informed as to their condition and the manner in which they are operated for the security and accommodation of the public, and to enforce a compliance with the provisions of their charters (§ 157); and if in the judgment of the board it shall appear that any railroad corporation has violated any constitutional provision or law, or has neglected in any respect to comply with the terms of the law by which it was
There can be no doubt but that the People of the State have the right to call corporations to account for ”a failure to exercise their franchises or to conrply with the provisions of law which impose a duty or obligation upon the corporation accepting a public franchise. This question was examined in People v. New York Cen. & H. R. R. R. Co. (28 Hun, 543), and the' opinion in that case has been recognized and followed by the courts of this State, but it was the Attorney-General representing the State who instituted that proceeding. As was said by the presiding justice in that case, the State “ is not bound to inquire whether some one or more of its citizens has not thereby received a special injury for which he may recover damages in his private suit. Such an injury wounds the sovereignty of the State, and thereby, in a legal sense, injures the entire body politic. The State in such a case as this has no other adequate remedy. It may proceed, it is true, to annul the corporation, as has been held in. many cases where corporations had neglected public duties. * * * But that remedy is not adequate, for it only destroys functions where the public interests require their continued existence and enforcement. It has, therefore,'an election which of these remedies to pursue. * * .* II ndonbtedly a sound discretion is vested in its law officer to decide whether the exigency is such as to call for the use of either remedy, as it is ultimately for the court to judge whether the elected remedy should be applied.
This duty to enforce the performance by the railroad corporations of the obligations imposed upon them having been imposed upon the Railroad Commissioners and the Attorney-General, with a discretion as to the method and time of the enforcement of such obligations, the question is presented whether a private individual, who has been denied no right to which he is entitled, can, in the name of the People of the State, aslc the court to enforce the law applicable to railroad corporations by mandamus. I know of no case in which this court 'or the Court of Appeals has determined that a private individual can thus usurp the powers vested in the Attorney-General and institute a proceeding in the name of the People of the State, where he alleges no private right that has been refused, and denied no right to which he was entitled. The case of People ex rel. Case v. Collins (19 Wend. 56) has been cited to support this principle. In that case Judge Cowekt says: “ It is a general rule that a relator must show an interest or title to interfere. If he do not, it seems to be an objection even on error. * * * Most of the cases respect private or corporate rights. Courts or officers or corporations are to be put in motion with a view to enforce some matter of private interest. In such case the title to relief at the suit of the relator must appear, and he should present himself as a party ; otherwise, a mere stranger might obtain a mandamus officiously and for purposes not at all desirable to the real party. "x" * In matter of mere public right, however, it is otherwise; here the people are the real party, as in the other case they are the nominal. Yet it is well known that they cannot act except through individual information, by their Attorney-General or some private person.” In that case the question was whether public officers should open and work a highway which had b.een laid out by the Legislature, and the right to apply for a mandamus was put upon the ground that “ the wrongful refusal of the officers to act is no more the concern of one citizen than another, like many other public offences. It is at least the right, if not the duty, of every citizen to interfere and see that a public offence be properly pursued and punished, and that a public grievance be remedied.”
In People v. Rome, W. & R. R. R. Co. (103 N. Y. 95) this distinction between the writ applied for by the Attorney-General on behalf of the People, which could be issued only to subserve the public
We have not overlooked the cases to which the learned counsel for the relator calls our attention. He bases the right of the relator to. thus mandamus upon “ the long settled rule in this State, as in the greater number of other States, in the Federal Courts and in England, that to protect a public right, any citizen may appear as relator; ” but this public right is the right in the public streets and highways which was under the control of public officers, and other public rights of that character. Such was the case of People ex rel. Pumpyanshy v. Keating (168 N. Y. 390), where the court say: “We agree with the Appellate Division that the relator is entitled to maintain this proceeding as a citizen, he seeking to enforce •a right in which the general public is interested, to wit, that the streets of the city shall remain unobstructed and unincumbered.” This public right is one that exists in favor of every individual, to have certain public officers perform a duty imposed upon them of protecting the rights of the public; and in such a case, there is no doubt of the right of any one entitled to the use of the streets to apply to compel the public officers to perform the duty imposed upon them. The obligation of a corporation to comply with the laws of the State from which it received its corporate franchise is quite different from this duty that is imposed upon public officers for the protection of the rights of the public in public streets and avenues. It is the People collectively who have granted the franchise or corporate existence that have the right to determine and to enforce the obligations imposed upon the corporation; and where provision is made in the statute creating the obligation for a proceeding to enforce it by public officers, who are vested with a discretion as to the time and method by which it shall be enforced, it would seem to follow that the application to enforce the provisions of the
For these reasons, without passing upon the other questions presented, we think the order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs..
’ Yah Bruht, P. J., Pattersoh, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred. ■
Order affirmed, with costs.