Cogswell v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad

16 Jones & S. 31
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 12, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Jones & S. 31 (Cogswell v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cogswell v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 16 Jones & S. 31 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Sedgwick, J.

On the evidence the value of plaintiff’s house has been much lessened by the smoke, ashes and hurtful and offensive gases, that have poured from the defendant’s engine-house, the engine-house of the Hew York Central Railroad, and from the engines generally on the tracks near the house. They have made the house uncomfortable and unhealthy for habitation. The solid parts of the smoke fall in the inside of the house, keep it dirty, mar its appearance, and substantially injure it and the furniture. They have made the air of the- house unpleasant and [33]*33unwholesome. The value of the house has. been affected also by the railroads in their general effects, and by the great fall in the prices of real estate of late years. What portion of the total diminution of value is to be assigned to the defendant’s engine-house, would be difficult to assess, if it could be assessed at all. This difficulty would not prevent the plaintiff’s having the protection in the future of an injunction, if the defendant has contributed to the acts from which she suffers, and if what it has done is a wrong to the plaintiff. Unless the defendant has been authorized by the legislature, to place the engine-house where it is, it seems clear that it is guilty of a wrong, but if the legislature has authorized it, it cannot be held responsible for the consequences of a legal act. Of course the acts on which the defendant justifies do not absolve it from the duty of using care and skill, in the construction and management of the engine-house, to prevent unnecessary damage to the dwellings near by. The burden of proving neglect in this respect, is upon the plaintiff. The testimony fails to show that any practicable change in the construction of the house or of its management, could be made so as to obviate the nuisance and lessen the damage.

In fact, the question is, does section 6 of the act of March 29, 1848, authorize the defendant to maintain the engine-house, upon the land where it now is. That section declares that “the New York and New Haven Rail Road Company,” to whose power the defendant has succeeded, “is hereby authorized to enter upon and run their cars and engines” . . . “over the road of the New York and Harlem Railroad Compan37” . . . and “to take, transport and convey persons and property upon the said Harlem Railroad, etc. ” Plaint the legislature here authorizes the run-ling to and fro of defendant’s engines. Its power to [34]*34give this right is not questioned, nor is it questioned that whatsoever is necessary to the practical enjoyment- of this right has been impliedly and competently granted by the legislature. Between the trips to and from, the engines must remain for a time upon some place off from the tracks used for running, and should be under covering. An engine-house, or something of its kind, is therefore a necessary incident in the use of the franchise. The only objection made at this point by the learned counsel for the plaintiff is, that the implied authority to use an engine-house is not general, or at any convenient place to be chosen, even carefully, by the defendant, but it is confined by the terms of the act, properly construed, to the engine-houses and equivalent provisions of the Harlem road or its successors in right. The argument is, that the right to run being confined to running over the road of the Harlem Railroad Company, and as far into the city as the Harlem road may extend, the incidents of that right are meant to be confined to the -use of such appurtenant structures or conveniences, as the Harlem road employs for the purpose of aiding its running.

I do not understand that the plaintiff’s counsel claim that the defendant’s engine-house is an unlawful structure, because, as they insist, the defendant has not legal capacity to acquire title to the land on which it stands ; but the claim is that the want of that capacity and the fact that the engine-house and its land are not owned by the Harlem Railroad, show that the defendant is not exercising the incidental right intended by the act. I do not think that the legal capacity of the defendant to take title to the land on which the engine-house stands is in question. All would agree that it has. the right to use real estate to the extent that is necessary while the engines are waiting and getting ready to return. The question [35]*35is, must the real estate on which the engines are to stand belong to the Harlem Railroad, or must the shelter or engine-house be such as the Harlem road previously used for the purpose. If it may be other real estate, then the value of the title to it is immaterial in this action.

The construction of the act must be reasonable and not strained. The literal meaning of the words is not decisive one way or the other. To run over the road of the Harlem company with engines and cars does not determine where the cars and engines are to be placed when they are not running. The nature of the subject-matter of the right granted is most important. What is the relation of such an incidental thing in the case of the Harlem road, to its running its own cars and engines ? The act was passed in light of the fact that it was the duty and right of the Harlem road to furnish for its engines, and business, houses and like structures sufficient for its own purposes. It could not have been supposed that, in looking at its own needs, it would accidentally do what would accommodate the defendants. Such an accommodation might happen, but it would not be usual, nor could it be foreseen that it would be continued. There is no indication that the act meant to make it an obligation on the part of the Harlem Railroad to furnish conveniences to the defendant, in a quantity and of an expense or economy suited to the condition of the defendant, and which should properly be regulated by its directors. On the other hand, the legislature did not mean to make the enjoyment of the right it gave to defendant conditioned upon the will and pleasure of the Harlem road, except so far as that is involved in its being necessary that there should be an agreement for the running.

When the act was passed, there was an improbability that the engine-houses of the Harlem road would be roomy enough, or fitted in other points to shelter [36]*36the defendant’s engines. With this, too, is to be taken, that neither public policy nor the interest or comfort of private land-owners would be served by obliging the defendant to use the buildings of the Harlem road. The effects would be the same if the business was done in Harlem railroad property. If the engines of both companies were under one roof there would not be less smoke or dirt or gas. I am therefore of opinion that the act does not intend to confine the defendant to the use of such structures as the Harlem road had provided or would provide for its own business, nor to such structures as the Harlem road might voluntarily build for the purposes of defendant’s business. Under these considerations the complaint should be dismissed with costs and no allowance.

Lewis Johnston, attorney, and W. M. Ivins and John Reynolds, of counsel, for appellant, among other things, urged :

I. Since the decision at special term here appealed from, the general, term of this court, in Caro v. Metropolitan Elevated Railroad Company (46 Super. Ct. 138), has pronounced an opinion which is the direct contradiction in all respects of the judgment in the case at bar. II. A case very similar in its circumstances to the case at bar is Wesson v. Washburn Iron Company (95 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Jones & S. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogswell-v-new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-nysuperctnyc-1881.