129 N.Y.S. 295 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
This is a motion by the plaintiff for a new trial upon exceptions, ordered to be heard in the first instance at the Appellate
The action is prosecuted in' the name of The People of the State of New York, by the Public Service Commission, First District (hereafter for brevity spoken of as the Commission), to recover several hundred, thousand dollars from the defendant, the receiver of the Union Railway Company, for his failure to obey an alleged order of the Commission directing that the cars under his control be equipped with wheel guards. The com: plaint, in addition to the formal allegations, states the cause of action against the defendant as follows:' “IV. Said Public Service Commission for the First District, being óf opinion after a hearing duly had upon its own motion that said cars in respect of the conveyance of persons. or property within the County of New York were unsafe in that they were not equipped with wheel guards, determined the safe and proper equipment thereafter to be in force to be observed and to be used by the defendant in such conveyance of persons or prop-, erty within the County of New York, and fixed and prescribed the same by an order duly made on April 27, 1909, which said order, a copy whereof is hereunto annexed and made a part hereof, marked ‘A,’ was on said last-mentioned day duly served upon the defendant, and on the 28th day of April,. 1909, was and ever since has been in full force and effect. "
“V. The defendant has failed, omitted aud neglected to obey, observe and comply with said order in the following respects, to wit: The defendant did not on or before May 15, 1909, or at any other time, submit to said Public Service Commission for the First District for its approval any drawings or specifications of the type or types of wheel guards intended or desired to be used by him in compliance with said order; upon information and belief the defendant did not,' on or before August 1, 1909, equip all of said cars in service in New York County with wheel guards; and upon, information and belief the defendant has on each and every day since August 1, 1909, put in service in the County of New York cars operated by electricity, which cars were not equipped with wheel guards.”
The act which was in- force during the period within which, as it is said, the penalties sued for. accrued, was chapter 429 of
This section is punitive and very highly penal, and in order to collect a penalty or penalties under it the plaintiff must establish clearly that the defendant has committed an offense, and, in the present case, the very basis of a possible recovery depends upon showing that the Commission did, in fact, make an order which the defendant disobeyed. (Town of Greece v. Vick, 126 App. Div. 171.) It appears that on January 22, 1909, the Commission issued an order for a hearing upon the subject of proper wheel guards. This order was addressed to all the street railroad companies and to the receivers of those who were in custodia legis. Something by way of a hearing was had, following which, as if is alleged, the order was issued which defendant is charged with having disobeyed. At the trial the secretary of the Commission produced a paper which he stated was the order in question. A facsimile oí this paper is attached to- the case on appeal, and there is certainly nothing upon its face to import its verity. It consists of two typewritten sheets of paper without signature, initials or even a file mark. Its date has evidently been changed. The date when the order was to take effect, the date on which plans and specifications were to be submitted, and the date on of before which
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Miller and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Exceptions overruled and judgment ordered for defendant upon dismissal of complaint, with costs to defendant. Settle order on notice.