Davis v. Mayor

4 N.Y. 506
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 N.Y. 506 (Davis v. Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Mayor, 4 N.Y. 506 (N.Y. 1856).

Opinion

Denio, C. J.

The question whether the railway proposed to be constructed in Broadway would be a public nuisance, arose upon the pleadings, and it was a question of law. The width of the street and of the contemplated railway, its position relatively to the surface of the pavement, the length of the cars to be used, and the power by which they were to be moved, with the character of the street as a crowded thoroughfare extending through the heart of a populous city, were facts about which there was no material disagreement in the pleadings. The degree of inconvenience which the railway would occasion to persons owning or occupying property on the street, and the advantage and accommodation it would afford to the whole community, were, if material, open questions, to be determined by the evidence. If the admissions in the pleadings showed that the railway if constructed would be a public or private nuisance, neither the testimony or the finding of the judge would affect the legal result which would follow from these admissions. The questions to be determined are, therefore, whether the defendants had acquired a lawful right to construct the railway, and if they had not, then whether what they avowed they proposed [515]*515to do would in point of law amount to the offence of nuisance. If the transaction between the corporation on the one part and Sharp and his associates on the other, by whatever name it may be called, was a legal act, conferring upon the latter the rights and privileges which it proposed to give them, then it is impossible that the railway should have been a public nuisance, that being an offence which cannot be predicated of the lawful exercise of authority upon a subject to which it is applicable. It is therefore necessary to inquire in the first place whether the common council had power to authorize the construction and etablishment of the railway, according to the provisions of the resolution. If it shall appear that the proceeding was unauthorized and illegal, then it will become important to ascertain what the character of the act which Sharp and his associates propose to perform in Broadway, would be, if it were sought to be done by individuals of their own authority. A railroad has no necessary relation to or connection with a common highway or street. It may be laid along the surface of such a road where the grade will permit it, but it may equally well run through the country, remote from a highway, and upon a level graduated for the purpose. When a railroad and a highway coincide, the circumstance is simply accidental. They are separate and distinct agencies to facilitate passage and traffic, differing from each other in many essential particulars. The object of a highway or street is to afford to every citizen an opportunity to pass on foot or with his horses and carriages from one locality to another, and it is essential to the legal idea of such a road that it shall be common to all. Where the question on the trial of an indictment was, whether the place where an obstruction had been put was a highway, Sir Matthew Hale said that, to entitle it to that character, it must be a “way for all travelers.” (Austin's case, 1 Vent., 189.) “ The king’s highway ” is defined in English law to be a public, passage for the king and his subjects, and from [516]*516thence its name is derived; and the test whether a road is entitled to that designation is to inquire whether it be common to all the people. (Woolrych on Ways, 3.) A road does not cease to be a highway by being subjected to the control of a turnpike or plank road corporation, this being considered as a method of keeping it in repair, and of taxing the travel upon it for that purpose. (Benedict v. Goit, 3 Barb., 469; The Commonwealth v. Wilkinson, 16 Pick., 175.) Now, arailroaddoes not facilitate traveling on foot or on horseback, or with one’s own carriages. It does not generally admit of those methods of passage; although, where the railroad carriages are not moved by the power of steam but by horses, the tracks, where they do not rise above the street level, may be safely crossed, and, to a limited extent, may be used for passing lengthwise. This is, however, only incidental, and not a necessary feature of a railroad. Those' who use a railroad for its proper purposes do not travel according to their own volition, but are transported, like freight or baggage, by the proprietors of the road, in their own vehicles. But the feature which most widely distinguishes a railroad from ordinary highways and streets is, that the former is a strict monopoly, entirely excluding all idea of competition. A traveler who would go upon a railroad must take his seat in the carriage of the proprietors, and pay them the price of his transportation. The nature of the subject requires a unity of control and management, which precludes the existence of competing carriages. There may be rival, roads, but there can be no rivalry on the same road ; and no more than one road can exist in Broadway without excluding altogether every other kind of traveling with carriages. We may be allowed, without the testimony of witnesses, to know enough of the method of operating railroads to say that their carriages are quite unlike the vehicles used on other roads. They are necessarily large machines, occupying the space which would be required for several carriages of any other kind, and con[517]*517taining passengers enough to fill a great many of the carriages used on other streets or roads. I have mentioned these particulars which distinguish a railroad from every other species of way, for the purpose of explaining the reason why, in my judgment, the establishment of such a road is not within the jurisdiction conferred upon the corporation of New-York over the roads and streets in that city. The power of the corporation over this subject is necessarily very large. It may lay out, open, alter, repair and amend and regulate streets, lanes, alleys and highways, and may direct the draining, pitching and paving of them; and moreover, the common council are commissioners of highways, and they may discontinue and close up streets in the manner specified in the act. (The Montgomerie charter, Kent’s Charter, 15, 99, and note 31 at p. 235; R. L. of 1813, §§ 193-197; Laws of 1818, ch. 213; Laws of 1824, ch. 49.) But this power relates to and is confined to streets, lanes, &c., as such. Everything which is fairly within the idea of regulating, altering, repairing or amending the streets, with a view to their uses and purposes as streets, may be exercised by the corporation, but the converting of a street or a part of a street into a new piece of machinery for transporting persons with which the existence of a street has no natural or necessary connection, is not, in my judgment, at all within the purview of the charter and acts of the legislature to which I have referred. If an existing street can be converted into a railway, I see no reason why the corporation cannot authorize the laying out of a railroad where at present no street exists. They have as ample power to lay out and establish streets as to alter and amend them; and if they can consider a railway as falling within the legal notion of a street, the power extends as well to the laying out of new railroads as to changing the present streets into railroads. They can exercise the right of eminent domain in the opening of new streets, and if a railroad is only an improved species of street, the power could be rightfully [518]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-mayor-ny-1856.