Eighth Avenue Coach Corp. v. City of New York

35 N.E.2d 907, 286 N.Y. 84, 1941 N.Y. LEXIS 1415
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 35 N.E.2d 907 (Eighth Avenue Coach Corp. v. City of New York) 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
Eighth Avenue Coach Corp. v. City of New York, 35 N.E.2d 907, 286 N.Y. 84, 1941 N.Y. LEXIS 1415 (N.Y. 1941).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The single question presented for decision is whether the Police Commissioner of the city of New York, by means of a traffic regulation providing for one-way traffic on a portion of Eighth and Ninth avenues, may abrogate and cancel a substantial part of two out of the four omnibus routes granted under a ten-year franchise following competitive bidding upon payment of a cash consideration of $475,000 and three per cent of the gross receipts.

After a trial at Special Term, a decree was entered enjoining the Police Commissioner of the city of New York from enforcing one way traffic regulations permitting only southbound traffic, which includes the omnibus line operated by plaintiff on Eighth avenue from Fifty-seventh street to Bethune street, and only north-bound traffic on Ninth and Columbus avenues from Fourteenth street to Sixty-fourth street.

The franchise of plaintiff provides for a route on Eighth avenue starting with the Cortlandt Street Ferry and running along Hudson street, West Broadway, Eighth avenue, Central Park West, to the Polo Grounds. A second route, independent of the first and intersecting it at no point, runs along Ninth and Amsterdam avenues, starting at Gansevoort street and running along Ninth avenue, Columbus avenue, Broadway, Amsterdam avenue to LaSalle street near One Hundred Twenty-fifth street.

Following an announcement in the newspapers, the Police Commissioner sent to the Coach Corporation a letter to the effect that the existing two-way operation on each of these *88 avenues for the distances above-noted must be discontinued and in place thereof a one-way loop operation would be substituted in the affected area together with operation over three connecting cross-town links. Plaintiff had no franchise over these cross-town streets from the Board of Estimate, nor a certificate of convenience and necessity from the State Transit Commission. Ten days later the Commissioner published a notice simply designating part of these two avenues as one-way streets, and containing nothing concerning cross-town connecting links.

Special Term placed its decision upon two grounds, first, that no express provisions nor anything in the franchise contract amounted to a consent in advance to the one-way traffic regulation now assailed by plaintiff, and second, that apart from consent, the traffic regulation, though an alleged reasonable exercise of the police power, could not abrogate and cancel without compensation a substantial portion of the valuable property rights owned by plaintiff under the franchise.

Plaintiff urged also that this regulation invaded the exclusive jurisdiction of the Board of Estimate and the Transit Commission. Special Term, however, expressly refrained, as do we, because it is unnecessary in view of our decision, from passing upon this issue.

The Appellate Division affirmed the decree of Special Term, without opinion. °

We take up first the contention of the city that we should consider certain clauses of the franchise contract as creating reservations which permit a mere police regulation to abrogate and cancel a large part of two of the four routes over a substantial portion of the franchise route contract.

In answer to this contention we need only cite the fundamental canon of construction, that the franchise contract must be read as a whole in order to determine its purpose and intent, and that single clauses cannot be construed by taking them out of their context and giving them an interpretation apart from the contract of which they are a part. (Atwater & Co. v. Panama R. R. Co., 246 N. Y. 519; *89 Becker v. Frasse & Co., 255 N. Y. 10.) Words considered in isolation may have many and diverse meanings. In a written document the word obtains its meaning from the sentence, the sentence from the paragraph, and the latter from the whole document, all based upon the situation and circumstances existing at its creation. A consideration of this franchise contract shows that its primary purpose was to establish two separate longitudinal omnibus routes, each operating in both directions. The contract describes in specific detail these two routes which do not connect or touch at any point throughout their length, and no cross-town or connecting links were provided between the two routes. It is conceded that a two-way operation over these longitudinal thoroughfares was intended by both parties to the contract. This view of the contract is confirmed by the situation and circumstances existing at the time of the execution of the franchise contract. Following a fifty year two-way operation of street cars on Eighth and Ninth avenues, the street car company became hopelessly insolvent and the Federal receiver surrendered the franchise to the city. Thereupon the Board of Estimate called for competitive bids for two omnibus routes on each avenue to take the place of the street car routes. The routes have been described above. The Eighth avenue route as increased by a modification of the franchise comprises 9.8 miles in length, and the Ninth avenue route, six miles. The total of the two routes was 15.6, all of which was to be a two-way operation save at either end where provision was made to run around the block in order to obviate the necessity of U ” turns in the avenues. The proposed traffic regulation would reduce the fifteen miles of two-way operation by eliminating five miles out of a total of 31.6 miles in the best paying portion and substituting therefor one-way operation. The Board of Estimate fixed the money payment to be made on the basis of a two-way operation. By unanimous vote the Board of Estimate decided to award the franchise to plaintiff after determining that its offer to pay $475,000 in cash, $30,000 *90 deposited as security under the twenty-fourth paragraph of section 2 of the franchise contract, and three per cent of the gross annual revenue was the most advantageous to the city. A brief outline of the steps necessary in the award of a franchise may not be amiss, as showing the elaborate proceedings which even the Board of Estimate and the State Transit Commission, which are endowed with the franchise making power, must scrupulously observe whenever a franchise is to be granted or modified in the slightest degree. First, there is a written petition from the successful bidder and a public hearing thereon held after ten days from a published notice of hearing containing the petition in full. The Board of Estimate then must make an investigation into the money value of the franchise and the adequacy of the compensation offered and embody the results of such investigation and inquiry in a written cqntract containing all the terms and conditions. The proposed contract with the form of resolution to adopt the same must then be entered on the minutes of the Board of- Estimate. Thereupon the proposed contract and proposed resolution must be published in full for at least fifteen days together with a notice of the second public hearing which must be held not later than twenty-seven days after the entry of the form of contract on the minutes. The resolution awarding the contract must be voted by at least a three-fourths vote. There must be then added the separate and additional approval of the Mayor.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.E.2d 907, 286 N.Y. 84, 1941 N.Y. LEXIS 1415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eighth-avenue-coach-corp-v-city-of-new-york-ny-1941.