Gordon v. Strong

16 Misc. 420, 38 N.Y.S. 449, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 72
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Misc. 420 (Gordon v. Strong) 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
Gordon v. Strong, 16 Misc. 420, 38 N.Y.S. 449, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 72 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

By act chapter 101 of the Laws of 1892 the legislature made Frederick Uhlman and other individuals a body corporate, and gave away to» such corporation a franchise (viz., a permission or right) to build two bridges across the East river from Brooklyn to New York. Instead of precisely locating the line of the bridges, the act provided that the first bridge might be built anywhere “ between a point at or near Broadway in the city of Brooklyn across the East river to a paint or place between Delancey and Rivington streets in the city of New York; ” and the second one from anywhere between Bridge and Little streets in Brooklyn to anywhere between Jackson and Scannell streets in New York. Each of these two spaces is wide enough for several bridges. The act required that the construction of the first bridge should be begun within one year after the assent of the federal government thereto, and of the second bridge within one year after the opening of the first to public use. The first one may be called the Williamsburgh bridge, and the second the Hudson avenue bridge, for óonvenienee of reference. The line of the Williams-burgh bridge was actually selected and established, and the assent of the federal authorities to the plan of the said bridge was obtained in February, 1893. Nothing was done within the prescribed year thereafter, or has been done since, in the actual work of construction of the first bridge, unless the purchase of a small lot of ground in the line of the -Brooklyn approach, and the setting therein of a cement foundation five feet deep and four and ,one-half feet square in February, 1894, was a commencement of such construction in good faith, and not a mere pretense upon which to make a claim that the company complied with the requirement of the statute, and saved its charter from forfeiture. But inquiry into that subject is not necessary, as the charter could be declared forfeited only in an action brought by the attorney-general of - the state for that purpose. ,

Such was the status of the company when the legislature by act, chapter. 789 of the Laws of 1895, provid d for the appointment of a commission to build a bridge over the East river by the two cities jointly. The act required that the bridge should run “ from at or near the foot of Broadway ” in Brooklyn “ to at or near the foot of Grand street ” in the city of New York. By section 5 of this act the commissioners were empowered to acquire by pur- [422]*422' chase the “ charter, and all the powers and rights granted . thereby,” of any corporation having a valid charter to construct such a bridge as the .said act authorized the commissioners to construct, provided the mayors' of the two- cities assented to such purchase.. That the commissioners could have selected a line for their bridge which would not encroach .upon either of the said spaces within which the said company was authorized to build its two bridges is not disputed, but for alleged reasons of expense and public accommodation they so located it that the Brooklyn end of it is against the approach to the company’s Williamsburgh bridge, and the New York end goes to a small extent over the north line of the said wide space within which the company was authorized to build its Hudson avenue bridge. They thereupon with the assent of the two mayors entered into an agreement with the company to purchase its entire franchise for its Williams-burgh bridge, but not its franchise to build the Hudson avenue bridge, but only the right to encroach as aforesaid upon the space within the limits of which. ,it was given the right to locate, but ' never did locate it. - Thus is left with the company its franchise for the -Hudson avenue bridge; nor is its said lot of real estate and foundation, or any other property included in .the purchase. The money consideration is $200,000. In addition to this large sum, however; the agreement contains a provision the value of which, if it be valid and means what it was obviously intended to accomplish, must be worth many millions of dollars. It is as follows:.

It is also expressly understood and agreed between the parties aforesaid that the bridge to be constructed by the parties of the second part (the commissioners of the two cities) across the East, river, under and in pursuance of chapter 789 of the Laws of 1895, shall, among other features, contain the following: space for two separate and independent railroad tracks for the use exclusively of elevated railroads, with gradients to be determined by the parties of the second part or their successors to be practicable and con-, sistent with the motive power which shall be in use by such rail-." roads at the .time said bridge shall be completed, and that said bridge shall have suitable and ample terminal facilities for such; .railroads, which facilities need not, however, extend beyond the approaches of the. bridge as the same shall be laid out and established 'by the parties óf the second part.”

The plaintiff, a taxpayer of the city of Brooklyn, complains that the making of this agreement was an illegal, and also a [423]*423fraudulent official act, and that the carrying out of it would be a fraudulent waste of the public funds and estate, and prays that the commissioners be enjoined from carrying it out, and that it be annulled.

This case presents one of those instances, grown so common in this country, of the aggrandizement by law of a few at the expense of all. Public franchises, the property of the people, instead of being used and controlled for the public welfare and economy, are allowed to be bonded and stocked and exploited for the amassing of vast unearned fortunes out of the people. The holders of such franchises are permitted to use and abuse them as though the public had -no rights in them. 1 To meet the case of dividends or gains upon actual investments under them growing larger, owing to the value of the franchises themselves, than the public should in justice and. good conscience pay, fictitious and fraudulent paper shares are. issued upon them, in order to continue the unjust exactions. Surface and elevated street railroads which would easily pay the liberal dividends which no one would begrudge upon their actual cost, not to say twice their cost,, at a fare of two or three cents, are permitted to thus increase their paper shares and their bonds also, indefinitely, instead of reducing the fares; thereby actually levying a tribute upon the public by means of and through public franchises given away to them and held by them for public purposes, instead of paying the public for the use of them, either in a fixed rent, or in reduced fares. The present case exhibits only another way of getting unearned money out of the public by means of public franchises. It presents the all toe common instance of government giving away a valuable franchise, the property of all the people, with one hand, and buying it back out of the people’s money with the other hand. Such an order of things is not government for the weal of all, but a form of socialism for the benefit of a few at the expense of the many, from which far more is to be feáred to the permanency of government than from the perverse few who profess, or are said to profess, opposition to all government. The just discontent and demoralization of honest effort and industry, and the danger to the permanency of social order caused by such a state of things, is a legitimate subject of argument before a court, and is entitled to have its legitimate influence; though a court is not permitted to be controlled by such considerations, however strongly urged, against what is the law, but must decide according to law. It is a [424]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Misc. 420, 38 N.Y.S. 449, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-strong-nysupct-1896.