64 N.Y.S. 973 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
In 1897 the trustees of the New York and Brooklyn bridge; pursuant to an act of the Legislature passed in that year (Chap. 663, Laws of 1897), made a contract with the Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, whereby that corporation was enabled to have its trains operated over the bridge by persons in the employ of the trustees. Under this contract the trustees did not wholly withdraw the independent train service which had previously been maintained, but ran some trains for themselves and some for the Brooklyn Elevated' Railroad Company. By the Greater New York charter the ¡lowers and duties of the trustees of the New York and Brooklyn bridge were devolved upon the newly created commissioner of bridges and the- municipal assembly. (Laws of 1897, chap. 378,. § 601.) Mr. Shea, the first incumbent of the office of commissioner, having reached the conclusion .that the contract of 1897 operated disadvantageously to the city, procured a modification of that, agreement in June, 1898, so as to require the Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company to operate its own cars over the.bridge
The appellant concedes that the courts have held that it is hot necessary to give a hearing or to afford an opportunity for an explanation where a position is legally abolished in good faith for purposes of economy ; but argues that even in such cases it is still
The bridge commissioner’s defense that the relator’s position was ' abolished rests of. course*'upon the amended contract of 1898 with the Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, and the acts done in pursuance of that contract. The appellant attacks the agreement.
¡Neither of these points seems to me to be tenable.
Under section 595 of the Greater Hew York charter, the commissioner of bridges “ shall have cognizance and control (1) Of the management and maintenance of the Hew York and Brooklyn bridge. (2) Of the operation of the railroad on the Hew York and Brooklyn bridge. (3)' Of the collection of fares and of tolls on the Hew York and Brooklyn bridge.” This section did not impose upon the commissioner the obligation to operate the existing bridge railroad through agents or subordinates directly employed by him •or by the municipality. It must be read in connection with section 601, devolving upon the commissioner the powers and duties vested in the'trnstees of the Hew York and Brooklyn bridge “by any law >or statute.” One of the statutes thus referred to was chapter 663 of the Laws of 1897 (passed after the charter in the same year), •entitled “ An act providing for and regulating the carriage of passengers across the Hew York and Brooklyn bridge and affecting the rates of fare therefor.” It was this act which authorized the trustees to make contracts with railroad corporations for the carriage ■of passengers across the bridge. The 2d section thereof reads ¡as follows: “The said trustees may continue to maintain and to ■operate the present railroad on said bridge and to charge such fares for the carriage of passengers thereon as they may deem fit, but not, however, in excess of the present rate.” The language is permissive, not mandatory ; may, not shall ox 'must. The intent of the Legislature seems to have been to leave the matter to the discretion •of the trustees to be exercised as should seem to be most advantageous to the public interest by them and by the commissioner of bridges as their successor. In ceasing to operate, the" local line by aid of the former employees and turning the operation thereof over to tile Brooklyn Elevated Railroad Company, the commissioner did not part with the cognizance and control conferred upon him by
If I am correct in the conclusion that the commissioner of bridges-has not divested himself of his authority in this respect, it becomes unnecessary to inquire at any length whether he would need the sanction of the municipal assembly or.other city functionaries in order to-•do so. ■ A few suggestions may be made, however, as to this portion of the argument for the appellant. The amendatory contract ivas in no proper sense the grant of a franchise within the meaning of the-charter; nor was it a lease of city property such as falls under the* control of the commissioners of the sinking fund. Indeed, it cannot-properly be characterized as a lease at all. It was simply a modification of a pre-existing agreement which had been entered into by express legislative authority. It is argued that inasmuch as section 601 of the charter devolves the former powers of the bridge trustees-not only upon the new commissioner of bridges but also upon the municipal assembly, it follows that the municipal assembly was a.. necessary party to the amendatory contract. This provision,-however, must be construed with the other clauses of the charter having-reference to the relation of the- municipal assembly to the affairs of the Hew York and Brooklyn bridge. Taking them all together,, they manifest an intent to confer upon the municipal assembly a power to legislate i-n regard to- those .affairs, if it sees fit to do so^, .but -not to authorize it to act in an administrative capacity. Thus it. would seem that any regulation of the rates of fare on the bridge; railroad and upon the roadways thereof by the municipal assembly would have to be made by means of a city ordinance proposed -by. the board of public improvements (Laws of 1897, chap. 378, § 416,,
I think that this case was rightly decided below, and that the ■ order appealed from should he affirmed.
All concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.