Eighth Avenue Coach Corp. v. City of New York

170 Misc. 243, 10 N.Y.S.2d 170, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1562
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 170 Misc. 243 (Eighth Avenue Coach Corp. v. City of New York) 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
Eighth Avenue Coach Corp. v. City of New York, 170 Misc. 243, 10 N.Y.S.2d 170, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1562 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Cotillo, J.

These two actions, for the same relief and based on the same fundamental facts, were consolidated for trial. Both plaintiffs seek to restrain the defendants from making or enforcing a regulation proposed by the defendant police commissioner which if effective would permit only south-bound traffic on Eighth avenue from Fifty-seventh street to Bethune street, and only north-bound traffic on Ninth avenue from Fourteenth to Fifty-ninth street and on Columbus avenue from Fifty-ninth street to Sixty-fourth street.

The plaintiff coach corporation predicates its right to permanent injunctive relief upon the terms of the franchise set forth in its contract with the city dated October 18, 1935, pursuant to which it has since been and now is operating omnibuses for the traveling public northerly and southerly on Eighth and Ninth avenues. The proposed regulation would materially interfere with the operation of this plaintiff’s public transit facilities, and, it asserts, would greatly decrease its revenues and the value of its franchise.

The plaintiff McCarthy sues as a taxpayer, alleging that enforcement of the police regulation would result in waste of the city’s money, inconvenience to the traveling public and damage and loss to property owners, merchants and other business people in the affected areas. The claim of waste is predicated on the danger of recovery from the city of substantial damages by the coach corporation if the proposed one-way traffic order is enforced, as well as upon loss of revenues to the city.

Motions made in each action for temporary injunctions restraining defendants from enforcing the regulations during the pendency of this suit were denied at Special Term, the justice there presiding stating in a brief opinion that the franchise was subject to regulations made by the police department; that the regulations complained of were neither arbitrary nor so clearly unreasonable as to justify the granting at this time of the relief sought by plaintiff.” The opinion directed that a trial be had on the first Monday of June, thus affording an interim period of observation and experiment which should be productive of additional facts bearing on the practicability and efficacy of the new regulations for presentation to the trial court.”

[246]*246Both plaintiffs, however, appealed to the Appellate Division from the order denying their motions (254 App. Div. 829, 830). That court reversed the order made at Special Term in the coach corporation action, stating in a per curiam opinion: “We believe the ends of justice will be best served if the decision of the novel and important questions of law involved in this action be deferred until the essential facts are found after a trial. There is nothing in the record to show that any emergency exists requiring the immediate regulation of traffic on the avenues involved by making them one-way streets forthwith. An injunction pendente lite will be granted, and the trial of the action set down for June 13, 1938.”

The order made in the taxpayer’s action was affirmed because, as stated by the Appellate Division, an injunction having been granted by that court in the coach corporation action, no necessity existed for duplicating the relief.

By reason of the temporary injunction granted by the Appellate Division, the enforcement of the police regulation has been stayed, and there has been no opportunity for the interim period of observation and experiment from which facts could be presented to the court bearing on the practicability and efficacy of the new regulation. Upon the trial opinion evidence predicated upon such data as could be secured from all available sources has been adduced in lieu of proof of actual results of one-way traffic. This is not said in criticism of the temporary injunction, but in explanation of the wide latitude granted upon the trial in an effort to obtain all possible light upon the controverted issues.

It will be helpful in determining such issues to state as definitely as need be the routes over which the coach corporation is authorized to operate, and the nature and terms of the police regulation sought to be enjoined in so far as it affects such routes. For brevity, the coach corporation will hereinafter be referred to as the plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s franchise to operate buses on Eighth and Ninth avenues was granted by the terms of a contract entered into by it with the city on October 16, 1935, as thereafter formally modified by contract dated August 11, 1937, which merely extended its route two-tenths of a mile southerly from Vesey street to Cortlandt street. It consists of two routes, the Eighth avenue route, designated as M-41 and the Ninth avenue route, designated as M-42. Each route is wholly separate and independent of the other and one does not intersect the other at any point. They are both distinctly uptown and downtown lines, there being no crosstown operation at any point save only that at certain points buses are required to travel east or west for one or two blocks, but never between the two separate routes. Two-way operation on each route was con[247]*247templated and specifically provided for in the contract. Route M-41 runs from Cortlandt street on parts of West, Washington and Greenwich streets, West Broadway and Hudson street, to and along Eighth avenue and thence northerly along other avenues to the Polo Grounds as the northerly limit. Route M-42 runs along Ninth, Amsterdam and Columbus avenues from Gansevoort street to approximately One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street. The M-41 route requires the operation of buses over Eighth avenue from Abingdon square to Fifty-ninth street or Columbus circle, a distance of about two and one-half miles. Route M-42 calls for operation of buses over Ninth avenue between Gansevoort street and Fifty-ninth street and over Columbus avenue from Fifty-ninth to Sixty-third streets, being the southerly two and one-hálf miles of this six-mile route.

On March 16, 1938, the defendant police commissioner sent plaintiffs a letter stating: “ Official notice is hereby given that beginning at 8:00 A. m. April 4th, 1938, the following thoroughfares will be designated for one-way traffic only, as indicated: One-Way Northbound — 'Hudson Street — from Abingdon Square to 14th Street. Ninth Avenue — from 14th Street to 59th Street. Columbus Avenue — from 59th Street to 64th Street. One Way Southbound —• Eighth Avenue — from 57th Street to Hudson Street.” The letter stated that from the time these regulations became effective no vehicles would be permitted to proceed contrary to the traffic directions of the thoroughfares named and notified plaintiff that pursuant to the terms of the Contract which you obtained from the Board of Estimate it will be necessary for your corporation to apply to that Board for approval of the following routes to be taken by your buses on and after April 4th, 1938.” Then followed detailed instructions rerouting plaintiff’s bus line by discontinuing two-way traffic and substituting north-bound traffic only on Hudson street, Ninth avenue and Columbus avenue from Bank street to Sixty-fourth street and south-bound traffic only on Eighth avenue from Columbus circle to Abingdon square, with cross-overs on streets connecting Eighth and Ninth avenues at both ends of the affected area.

However, as pointed out in the opinion at Special Term on the motion for a temporary injunction, under the provisions of the city.

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Bluebook (online)
170 Misc. 243, 10 N.Y.S.2d 170, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eighth-avenue-coach-corp-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1939.