52 N.Y.S. 1025 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff is a property owner, owning land which abuts upon Washington street in the borough of Brooklyn. The Brooklyn City and Newtown Railroad Company is á street surface railroad. company, having a franchise for and operating its railroad through Washington street. The Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company is also a street surface railroad company, having a franchise for and operating its cars upon Montague street in said borough. It is also the lessee of the Brooklyn City Railroad Company, a street surface railroad company having a franchise for the operation of its cars upon Fulton and other streets in said borough. The first of these corporations was organized pursuant to chapter 140 of the Laws of 1850, and by chapter 165 of the Laws of 1872 it was authorized to construct and operate its road upon Washington street. The second corporation was organized pursuant to chapter 252 of the Laws of 1884. Its lessor, the Brooklyn City Railroad Company, was organized pursuant to chapter 140 of the Laws of 1850. The lease of its property franchises and rights is for .the term of 999 years. The first and second named of these corporations have entered into a traffic agreement with each other, whereby the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company has accpiired the right to run and operate its cars over the tracks of the first-named company, through Washington street to the New York and Brooklyn Bridge, over which structure both companies operate their cars. It.is asserted by the plaintiff, and such is the conceded fact, that neither the Brooklyn Heights Company nor its lessor has ever acquired any franchise from
At the time when the Brooklyn City and Newtown Railroad Company and the Brooklyn City Railroad Company were organized chapter 218 of the Laws of 1889 was in force, and whatever property right accrued to or vested in these corporations at that time, by virtue of their charters or other law, to all of which the lessee company became entitled by reason of its lease, could not be thereafter taken away or- impaired, either by legislative enactment or constitutional change, except in the proper exercise of the right of eminent domain and of the police power. (People v. O'Brien, 111 N. Y. 1; Mayor v. Twenty-third St. R. Co., 113 id. 316.) The reserved right in the Legislature to alter or repeal the charters of such corporations may, and often does, raise grave questions respecting the limit of its exercise and in determining the quality of the legal right reserved. But so far as property right-is concerned there can be no question. The Constitution of the State has always protected such right against the action of the Legislature, under whatever guise it has been attempted, while the Federal Constitution operates as a restraint upon eonstitutional legislation if resort be had to such action. The act of 1839 is without limit in its language as to the character of railroad to which it should apply. It was quite as necessary a provision for street surface roads as for railroads operated by steam, and we believe its provisions to have been generally regarded as applicable to both classes of roads, and think that no sound reason can be advanced why it should not be so considered.
The claim that the act was permissive only, and that, therefore, no vested right could be obtained, cannot be sustained. If it was permissive only, it was still permissive in granting the authority to obtain a property right, and it would be a singular doctrine which permits the acquirement of property by permission and then destroys it by withdrawing the permission through which it was obtained* This view of the law must dispose of this case in favor of the defendants. For if it be conceded that the act of 1839 is not now .operative, and that the Constitution and statutes have changed the law, it is a sufficient answer to say that it cannot operate to divest the defendants of the right which they obtained prior thereto. We have, however, examined all of the questions presented, and reach the conclusion that while the act of 1839 is now repealed, yet its provisions are essentially embodied in section 78 of the Railroad Law (Chap. 565, Laws of 1890), and that as to corporations which were organized prior to the adoption of the amendment to the Constitution in 1875 and of the statutes since, they are not affected thereby, so far as any question here arising is concerned. The rights were expressly preserved by the saving clauses in the repealing statutes, if such were needed. If not saved, the construction which must be given to section 78 {supra) must be the same as would have applied had there been no-repeal, as the re-enactment must be treated as a continuation of the provisions of the former law. As to the constitutional amendment of 1875 and the Constitution of 1894, their provisions did not act retroactively, but prospectively, and consequently they do not affect the present question. (People v. Brooklyn, Flatbush & C. I. R. Co., 89 N. Y. 75.) Upon this branch of the case we agree with the opinion of the learned court below and with the opinion in Kunz v. The Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (not reported).
We are not to be understood as deciding that the Legislature has no right, in the exercise of the police power, to regulate the number of cars which may be operated upon the street, but the exercise of’
The order should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs ana disbursements.