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Degrauw v. Long Island Electric Railway Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
Oct 1, 1899
43 App. Div. 502 (N.Y. App. Div. 1899)

Summary

In De Grauw v. Long Island Elec. R. Co. (43 App. Div. 502) it was said: "But the law is, and the courts may be relied upon to enforce the law, that the right of use of the street by the public is first and primary; the right of use by the street surface railroad is secondary and subordinate.

Summary of this case from Dolan v. New York Harlem R.R. Co.

Opinion

October Term, 1899.

Roger A. Pryor and F.H. Van Vechten, for the appellant.

Charles A. Collin, for the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company and the Brooklyn, Queens County and Suburban Railroad Company, respondents.

Edward M. Grout, for the National Express Company, respondent.

Alfred W. Kiddle, for the Long Island Electric Railway Company, respondent.


The parties to this action have narrowed the issues to a single question. The plaintiff has formulated this question in plain terms: Can street surface railway companies, incorporated under the General Railroad Law of the State (Laws of 1890, chap. 565), operate cars designed and intended exclusively for carrying express matter, freight or property, and used exclusively for such purpose? If this question be answered in the affirmative, the judgment must be affirmed; if in the negative, it must be reversed. The court below returned an affirmative answer, and we have no doubt of the correctness of such answer. It must be conceded at the outset, in terms as broad as the plaintiff claims, that the defendants must justify the right which they assume to exercise by the terms of some grant of power as broad as the acts which they do and the contract which has been made. In construing the grant of power, nothing is to be taken as given unless found in the grant or shown to be necessarily incidental thereto, and if not so found, it will be deemed to be withheld. ( Mayor v. Broadway, etc., R.R. Co., 97 N.Y. 275; Mayor v. Dry Dock, E.B. B.R.R. Co., 47 Hun, 199; Mayor v. Manhattan R. Co., 143 N.Y. 1.) It is not doubted that the Legislature has authority to charter a street surface railroad company and grant the power to carry freight exclusively, or passengers exclusively, or unite the authority to carry both. The Legislature has assumed, in special acts, to limit the right of street railroad companies to the carriage of passengers only (Laws of 1873, chap. 128), where, in chartering the Long Island City and Maspeth Railway Company, the grant was "to carry passengers thereon for compensation." Similar restrictions will be found in the charters of other surface railroads. (Laws of 1873, chaps. 301, 483, 705, 825; Laws of 1874, chap. 508.) The act chartering the Johnstown, Gloversville and Kingsboro Horse Railroad Company (Laws of 1874, chap. 255) both prohibited and restricted, its language being: "The said railroad company is hereby prohibited from using steam as a motive power on said railroad, or from transporting or conveying freight thereon, and is hereby restricted to the business of taking and conveying persons or passengers over the said railroad in street railroad cars, by the power or force of animals." (§ 3.)

The Legislature has also assumed to grant authority to carry both passengers and freight. The language which accomplished this purpose has varied slightly, but is in substance the same grant of power. The act creating the Mount Prospect and Carroll Street Railroad Company in the city of Binghamton granted the right "to convey passengers or freight thereon, for compensation." (Laws of 1873, chap. 276.) In authorizing an incorporation of a surface street railroad in the city of Schenectady the grant was "to carry passengers and freight thereon for compensation." (Laws of 1873, chap. 546.) In the city of Rome and the village of Catskill the language of the acts was, respectively, "and convey passengers or freight for a compensation," "and to convey passengers and freight for a compensation." (Laws of 1874, chaps. 441, 181.) In the city of Brooklyn the language was, "for conveying persons and property by horse power." (Laws of 1874, chap. 479.) It is, therefore, plain that so far as resort is had to special legislation chartering street surface railroad companies the grant of power has varied, but such legislation has assumed to confer the same right in most of the cases to carry freight as to carry passengers. The defendant, The Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company, was created by the act of 1884 (Chap. 252), which was the first general act relating exclusively to street surface railroads. The grant of power therein was for "the conveyance of persons and property in cars for compensation." The other two defendant railroad companies were organized under the General Railroad Law, the terms of which will be later considered. The acts authorizing the construction of railroads passed by the Legislature in 1848 (Chap. 140) and 1850 (Chap. 140), while not in terms mentioning street surface railroads, were assumed to apply thereto and such companies were extensively incorporated thereunder. The language of these acts provided for the carriage of passengers and freight, and necessarily so for they applied in terms to commercial railroads. But it was never doubted but that the grant to street surface railroads incorporated thereunder carried the right to convey both passengers and freight upon the constructed line. Such is the express decision of the Court of Appeals, where Judge PECKHAM, in speaking for the court upon this subject, said of the act of 1850: "We have no hesitation in saying that corporations might be legally formed under the act in question for the transportation of passengers or freight, or both, over railroads in the streets of cities where horses were to be the motive power, excepting the city of New York." ( Matter of Washington Street Asylum P.R.R. Co., 115 N.Y. 442.) The same doctrine was again asserted by the court, through the same learned judge, in People's Rapid Transit Co. v. Dash ( 125 N.Y. 93). The grant of power in the acts of 1848 and 1850 was to convey persons and property for compensation. There was some modification of this language in the act of 1854, chapter 140, and therein it may be assumed that the act contemplated only the carriage of passengers upon such roads. The language, however, was general and nothing contained therein indicated a fixed purpose to create a general limitation. It was rather descriptive of what it was supposed would be the business transacted by such roads, which in practical operation still remains true. If a more limited construction could be placed upon the terms of this act it would not be controlling, for subsequent legislative declaration has placed the subject in clear language, removing any ambiguity which might have existed by the terms of this act. The language used in the first general street surface railroad law (Laws of 1884, chap. 252) is as broad in terms and more specific in character than was that in the former acts of 1848 and 1850. It is said in the act of 1884, section 1, that a company might be formed thereunder "for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating a street surface railroad for public use in the conveyance of persons and property in cars for compensation." The general act of 1886, chapter 65, made the grant in this respect still plainer, as it provided "for the transportation of passengers, mails or freight." This language was retained in the amendment passed in the same year (Chap. 642), and in the subsequent amendment in 1889 (Chap. 564), and so remained until the revision of the Railroad Law in 1890.

We are always to look at surrounding conditions when they will aid in the interpretation of a statute, and so we may consider the fact that the revision commission had before it all of the railroad legislation of the State, both special and general; and it must also be presumed to have known of the decisions of the courts interpreting these laws. That interpretation, made by the highest court of the State, had construed the words giving authority to carry passengers and freight or property as imputing a grant to transport passengers or freight, or both. This being the condition of legislation and interpretation, the revisers must be considered as having intentionally made use of the same terms in granting authority to convey "persons and property in cars for compensation" (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, § 90), as such words had been interpreted to mean by the courts. In addition to this there was a statute applicable to the county of Kings alone which provided that no railroad company, organized under the laws of the State, should stop its cars, horses or locomotives upon any railroad crossing of any other railroad company crossing the same on the surface for the purpose of delivering passengers or freight. This act clearly contemplated that surface railroads might carry freight as well as passengers. The provision was in terms re-enacted in section 36 of the General Railroad Law and now applies to all railroads. The General Railroad Law has been several times amended, but no amendment has assumed to change or modify the grant of power as stated in the laws to which we have called attention. It is a well-settled canon of construction that the revision of a law does not ipso facto work a change in its construction. ( Davis v. Davis, 75 N.Y. 221.) To work a change of interpretation there must not only be a change in phraseology, but such a departure from the language of the former law as indicates an intent to establish a different rule. ( May v. Bermel, 20 App. Div. 53, 56.) In the present case the language used in the act of 1850 was construed as conferring a grant of power upon street surface railroads to transport passengers or freight, or both, in cars upon their roads constructed in virtue of their authority. With the one exception, if it be an exception, contained in the act of 1854, this grant of power has been continued since; it existed and now exists in more specific terms than under the act of 1850.

By familiar rules, therefore, we must hold that the authority existed when this contract was made to convey both passengers and freight over the defendant's lines and to contract for cars to run thereon for the exclusive carriage of passengers and for the exclusive carriage of freight. Such is the language of the statute. It is said that this language must be cut down and the right to convey property must be read in connection with the passenger, as though it said "passengers with property." It is not reasonably conceivable that the Legislature had such intention. In the ordinary carriage of passengers upon street railroads it has never been thought that passengers carrying small articles or such baggage as may be carried by hand was the occasion for the use of the word "property" as used in the statute. The regulation for the carriage of such property, that which accompanies the passenger, even upon commercial roads, is usually by rule of the company and not by statute; it stands upon a different footing from the carriage of other property, and by common acceptation is usually denominated baggage, or, to adopt the English expression, luggage, meaning in popular phrase that which is carried by the person. No such limited meaning is to be ascribed to language deliberately used in a statute, where the interpretation placed upon it was as discriminating freight quite independent of passage by its owner. Certainly no one would have supposed that the Johnstown and Gloversville Railroad Company was violating its charter by the carriage of a handbag accompanied by its owner, and yet it was prohibited from carrying anything except persons or passengers. If there had been added to that statute authority to carry property, we think that no one would have thought it limited to such articles as the passenger could carry with him. On the contrary, we should think the legislative intent was to authorize the carriage of both persons and property, each independent of the other. The use of the word fare in section 101 of the General Railroad Law is thought by the appellant to indicate that the carriage of passengers alone is within the contemplation of the act. But section 101 deals exclusively with the passenger and the rate of fare he shall be required to pay, and it assumes to deal with nothing else. When the act deals with the grant of power for the transportation of passengers and property, it uses the word "compensation" (§ 90), and such is the phraseology of all the legislation upon the subject. The fact that there should be this discrimination in the use of these words indicates an intent upon the part of the Legislature to embrace the subject of the transportation of passengers and property, as compensation for the transportation of property was descriptive of it. While "fare," in common acceptation, relates to the passenger, "compensation" as a general term embraces both and so was correctly and, evidently, advisedly used in the grant of power.

It is undoubtedly true that the defendants, as to whatever right they have acquired to transport passengers or freight or property, have a vested right which may not be defeated or impaired by legislation. Such is the effect of the decisions. ( Ingersoll v. Nassau Electric R.R. Co., 157 N.Y. 453; Roddy v. Brooklyn City Newtown R.R. Co., 32 App. Div. 311.) But we do not apprehend that such fact, nor our present construction of the statute, will entail all of the evils which the appellant insists must follow in the train of such result. It can never happen that the right of use conferred by the franchise granted street surface railroads will result in the operation of long trains for the transportation of either passengers or property. Commercial railroads do not furnish a parallel of use. The latter are constructed upon the property of the corporation over which, except for purposes of crossing and otherwise in a very limited way, the general public do not travel, and have thereon, except for purpose of transportation, no right. This condition is created for the express purpose of furnishing facilities for the hauling of long consolidated trains, which may be operated for the reason that all else is excluded except such operation. The grant of power to these corporations was conditioned upon the creation of such surroundings as would enable them to so operate without detriment to the public, and without interfering or trespassing upon its rights. No such conditions surround a street surface railroad; the use of the street by the railroad is subordinate to the right of the public therein. In the struggle which is going on for the transportation of persons and property, it must be confessed that street surface railroads are not backward in the assertion of all the rights which the grant of power confers. But the law is, and the courts may be relied upon to enforce the law, that the right of use of the street by the public is first and primary; the right of use by the street surface railroad is secondary and subordinate. It has the paramount right of use of its tracks, but not the exclusive use, and when the right of the public or an individual member of it requires the use of the street for a proper purpose, the right of the railroad company must yield thereto, even though the effect be, for the time, to stop the operation of its cars thereon. ( Black v. Staten Island E.R.R. Co., 40 App. Div. 238.) We have, at all times, been mindful of these conditions, and when upholding the rights of the railroad in a given case, we have been careful to place a limitation thereon, and have uniformly asserted that whatever be the character of operation by the railroad, and whatever use it sought to make of the street, such use is subject to the authority of the public therein, and the public authority may, whenever necessary for the preservation of the street for street purposes, regulate and restrain the use thereof by the railroad. ( Roddy v. B.C. N.R.R. Co., supra.) We are not at all sure that the transportation in single cars of such property as is the subject of the present contract increases, or will increase, the burden of use of the street. Such property must be transported throughout the city in cars or upon wagons. Whether the use of the former is more burdensome than would be the latter is, to say the least, an open question. Time will demonstrate. It is sufficient for us now to say that the present use is not shown to be without authority or unlawful, and we must, therefore, uphold it.

The judgment should be affirmed.

All concurred.

Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs.


Summaries of

Degrauw v. Long Island Electric Railway Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
Oct 1, 1899
43 App. Div. 502 (N.Y. App. Div. 1899)

In De Grauw v. Long Island Elec. R. Co. (43 App. Div. 502) it was said: "But the law is, and the courts may be relied upon to enforce the law, that the right of use of the street by the public is first and primary; the right of use by the street surface railroad is secondary and subordinate.

Summary of this case from Dolan v. New York Harlem R.R. Co.
Case details for

Degrauw v. Long Island Electric Railway Co.

Case Details

Full title:MARY E.S. DE GRAUW, as Sole Executrix and Sole Devisee under the Last Will…

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department

Date published: Oct 1, 1899

Citations

43 App. Div. 502 (N.Y. App. Div. 1899)
60 N.Y.S. 163

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