Drake v. Hudson River Railroad

7 Barb. 508
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 7 Barb. 508 (Drake v. Hudson River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake v. Hudson River Railroad, 7 Barb. 508 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

Jones, P. J.

The acts of the legislature referred to by the plaintiffs in their complaint, authorized and empowered the stockholders of the Hudson River Railroad Company to construct a single, double, or treble railroad, or way, between the cities of New-York and Albany, commencing in the city of New-York, with the consent of the corporation of that city, and passing through the counties therein mentioned, and ending at some point on the Hudson river, in the county of Rensselaer, opposite the city of Albany, to be laid with an iron rail of the weight therein mentioned, and to transport, take, or carry any property and persons upon the same, by the power and force of steam, of animals, or of any mechanical or other power, or of any combination of them, for the term of fifty years from the passage of the act of incorporation. The 4th section of the act authorized them, after one half of the capital stock should have been subscribed, and five per cent thereof paid in, to exercise the powers and privileges conferred upon them by the act; and that thereupon the directors might appoint an engineer or engineers, and cause to be made such examinations, surveys and maps for the said railroad as might be necessary to the selection by them, of the most eligible line or lines for the location of the road, but requiring that the same be located within the limits, and in the manner therein prescribed; and providing that the directors, after such examinations and surveys were made, should select, and by certificates drawn on suitable maps, under their hands [525]*525and seals, designate the line, course, or way they might deem most advantageous for the said railroad, which certificates should be filed in the offices for that purpose, described in the said act; and that the line, course or way so selected and certified, should be the line, course or way on which the said corporation should construct or make the said railroad. The same section of the act provides and directs that the said directors may locate their said railroad on any of the streets or avenues of the city of New-York, westerly of and including the Eighth avenue, and on or westerly of Hudson-stieet, provided the assent of the corporation of said city be first obtained for such location, and said railroad company should not infringe upon the rights or privileges of the Harlem Railroad Company theretofore incorporated.

By the 7th section of the act, the said railroad company or corporation was empowered to purchase, receive, and hold in fee simple such real estate and other property as might be necessary in accomplishing the objects of the incorporation; and also to receive, take and hold such voluntary grants and donations of real estate and other property as might be given them to aid in the construction, maintenance and accommodation of said railroad, but which real estate should be held and used for those purposes only.

By the 10th section of the act, the corporation was empowered by their engineer or agent to enter upon any lands or water for the purpose of making surveys, and by their engineers or agents to enter upon, take possession of, and use all such lands and real estate as might be necessary for the construction and maintenance of the said railroad, and the accommodations required appertaining thereto, but that all real estate thus entered upon not voluntarily granted or given should be purchased by the corporation of the owners at the price to be mutually agreed upon between them. And in case an agreement could not be made between said corporation and the owners of any property which might be required for said purposes, or which might be affected by any operation connected therewith, the compensation to be made therefor should be ascertained, assessed and paid in the manner prescribed by the act.

[526]*526By the act of February 10th, 1838, further to amend the original act, compensation is to be made for the lands, real estate, and property thus taken possession of and used for these purposes, and not voluntarily given to or purchased by them, in the manner following: The corporation may present a petition to the proper court, setting forth the same, and praying for the appointment of commissioners to ascertain the compensation to be made therefor; and the court, on such application and due notice of presenting the same, are to appoint five competent and disinterested persons commissioners to ascertain such compensation, who after hearing the parties and viewing the premises, shall ascertain and certify the compensation proper to be made to the owners and parties interested, for the land, real estate, and property so to be taken or injuriously affected, as aforesaid, without any deduction or allowance on account of any real or supposed benefit or advantage which such owners and parties interested may derive from the construction of said road. The commissioners are to make, subscribe, and file in the office indicated by the act, a certificate of their said ascertainment and assessment, containing a description of the premises for which such compensation is to be made; and the court, upon such certificate and proof that such compensation in the sums certified has been paid to the parties entitled thereto, or deposited in bank as authorized by the act, shall make and cause to be entered in its minutes a rule describing the lands, &c. such ascertainment of compensation, with the mode of making it, and such payment or deposit of the compensation as aforesaid, a certified copy of which is to be recorded in the offices indicated by the act, in the like manner and with the like effect as if it were a deed of conveyance from the said owners and parties interested, to the said corporation; and upon the entry of such rule the said corporation shall become seised in fee of the lands, real estate and property described in it, or required to be’taken as aforesaid during the continuance of the corporation, and may take possession of, hold and use the same for the purposes of said road, and thereupon shall be discharged from all claims for damages by reason of any matter specified in the said petition, certificate or rule of court.

[527]*527Under these powers, privileges and provisions, the stockholders proceeded to organize their corporation, and to locate the line of their road, and in some sections of it acquired the lands and real estate required for the construction of the road and their track thereon. In the month of May, 1847, availing themselves of the power and provision in the act in that behalf contained, the company, with the assent of the corporation of the city, located their said railroad on the Eleventh avenue of the city of New-York to Thirty-second-street, and thence through other streets and avenues to a,nd through West-street to Canal-street ; and afterwards, on the 14th May, 1849, applied to the common council for the assent of the corporation of the city to lay a double track railroad, and run their trains of cars from the Tenth avenue through Fourteenth-street and Hudson-street to Chambers-street. The board of aldermen, on the 1st day of August, 1849, by a vote of eight members in the affirmative, against five members in the negative, passed a resolution to the effect that the defendants, the Hudson River Railroad Company, be authorized to lay down a double track of rails, with suitable curves and turn-outs, from the northerly line of Canal-street, at West-street, through Canal and Hudson streets to Chambers-street, under the direction of the street commissioner, and subject to all the restrictions, obligations and provisions of the ordinance authorizing said company to lay down rails to Canal-street.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Barb. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-hudson-river-railroad-nysupct-1849.