In re the Application of the Directors of the Rochester, Corning, Elmira Traction Co.

118 A.D. 521, 102 N.Y.S. 1112, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 708
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 A.D. 521 (In re the Application of the Directors of the Rochester, Corning, Elmira Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Application of the Directors of the Rochester, Corning, Elmira Traction Co., 118 A.D. 521, 102 N.Y.S. 1112, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 708 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

McLennan, P. J.:

■ The Rochester, Corning, Elmira Traction Company was incorporated in July, 1906, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining and operating by electricity a street surface railroad from the city of Rochester in the county of Monroe to the city of Elmira in the county of Chemung, a distance of about 120 miles, passing through a portion of the county of Monroe, also through Livingston and Steuben counties and a portion of Chemung county. Thereafter applicar tionwas made to the Board of Railroad Commissioners for a certifi-. cate of public convenience and a necessity, and- after numerous hearings, at which a large amount' of testimony was taken, and" on December 5, 1906, the Board by a majority vote, two members dissenting, refused to grant such certificate. Thereafter all papers (including a copy of all evidence taken), maps and findings of the Board were duly certified. Thereafter and on the 9th day of January, 1907, by order to show cause returnable on the 28th day of January, 1907, the matter was brought into this court to determine upon the record thus made whether or not a certificate of public convenience and a necessity should, issue to the applicant pursuant to section 59 of the Railroad Law. We think the practice adopted to bring the matter to this court was correct. The coun\sel who appear for the several corporations in opposition to the application insist that this court should regard the application as in ¿lié nature, of a review of ■ the ■ decision of a subordinate tribunal and not as an original application and,.therefore, that the burden rests upon the petitioners to show affirmatively that the Commissioners erred in their determination. We are inclined to follow the rule laid down in Matter of Wood (99 App. Div. 334; affd., 181 M". Y. 93), and to hold that the matter comes before this court as [523]*523an original application to be determined' upon the record made before the Board of Railroad Commissioners if the parties so elect, or upon such further evidence and facts as the court might deem essential in order to enable it to make a proper determination in the premises. However, we deem that question of but little importance in this case, because the entire evidence taken before the Board is before us without objection, and no request was made by either party to submit further proof for our consideration. So that the matter should be decided solely upon the merits as disclosed by all the proceedings had before the Commissioners, including the' evidence taken, the decision rendered by them, and the reasons given therefor.

The application for a certificate was denied by the Board of Railroad Commissioners upon the ground, as appears by the opinion of the majority of the Board, that the people residing in the territory through which it is proposed to construct and operate the applicant’s railroad are now reasonably well supplied with transportation facilities by means of the operation of the steam railroads and other electric roads which traverse practically the same territory, each of which is represented by counsel in opposition to. this application; and especially because such railroad companies have already, undertaken or are about to undertake to furnish additional facilities by electrifying some of such lines and otherwise. It would not be useful to describe in detail the precise location of the proposed railroad, or just the relation it would sustain as to location to the other roads mentioned. Suffice it to say that it practically parallels the Erie railroad or some of its branches for substantially its entire length and the roads of the other companies appearing in opposition, to a considerable extent, and it is established beyond contradiction that such proposed new road if constructed and operated would injuriously affect such opposing companies. That being so, if the people residing in the territory in question are now reasonably well accommodated as to transportation facilities, and if such is the fact established by a fair interpretation of the evidence, the Board properly refused a certificate.

In determining what conclusion this court should reach in the premises we are of the opinion that great weight should be given to the decision reached by the Board. (People ex rel. JYew YorTs [524]*524Gity c& Westchester li. Go. v Oomrs., 81 App. Div. 211.) It, however, becomes the duty of this court to examine the evidence and to determine whether public convenience and necessity require the construction and operation of the proposed road. While the fact that the territory is now occupied by other railroads should properly be considered, it should in no sense be regarded as controlling. Practically every suburban electric railroad authorized in this State paralleled an existing steam railroad. The larger percentage of the population settled upon the lines of such railroads, and at almost every station a hamlet, village or city had grown up, and yet that has not been regarded as a valid objection to the construction of a street surface railroad along such route through such hamlets, villages and cities.. Probably no section of our country is better supplied with steam railroad facilities than is central New York by.the New York Central railroad from Albany to Buffalo. Yet trolley lines have been authorized and are nearly completed which will furnish a continuous line between said points. So, practically, all the. branches of the New York Centra) system have been paralleled by trolley lines

In such cases the question was not whether the through transportation facilities between termini or even between the larger cities were adequate, but whether the people living along the line of such steam railroad and between its stations required additional facilities. • Indeed, between points a long distance apart the trolley roads do not compete with the steam roads. The passengers and freight which the former carry are as a rule carried to the stations of the latter. In all essential respects the two serve separate purposes, each equally necessary to the convenience of the public. This policy lias been adopted-by the Board of Railroad Commissioners so uniformly that it may be regarded as the settled policy of the State, to wit, to permit steam railroads to be paralleled by trolley roads, however ample the facilities■ furnished for travel by such steam roads between terminal points or between principal stations, and so notwithstanding such trolley road may reduce the earnings of the steam road. The primary purpose of a trolley road is to convey people directly from their homes to the nearby villages or cities or vice versa.

Ill the case at bar the situation is essentially no different than as [525]*525above indicated. The facilities for through passenger and freight transportation between Rochester and Elmira and between Elmira and Corning are reasonably adequate, and it would not be claimed that another through line is necessary; but the'evidence demonstrates that the facilities for local traffic are wholly inadequate upon the entire route, except between Corning and Elmira; that trains are run infrequently; that the stations are comparatively long distances apart and that a considerable portion of the territory is not accommodated by the existing railroads, which will be no more closely paralleled by the proposed railroad than such railroads usually have been by such construction in other parts of the State. It is said that aLng a considerable part of the.route the country is sparsely settled and that a sufficient patronage cannot reasonably be expected to justify the expenditure necessary to construct and operate the proposed road.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A.D. 521, 102 N.Y.S. 1112, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-of-the-directors-of-the-rochester-corning-elmira-nyappdiv-1907.