In Re the Brooklyn, Winfield & Newtown Railway Co.

81 N.Y. 69, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 199
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 69 (In Re the Brooklyn, Winfield & Newtown Railway Co.) 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
In Re the Brooklyn, Winfield & Newtown Railway Co., 81 N.Y. 69, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 199 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

In the cases of the Applications of the Petitioner against the Broadway Railroad Co. (72 N. Y. 245, and 75 id. 335), it appeared that the petitioner had failed to begin the construction of its road, and to expend thereon ten per cent on the amount of its capital stock, within- five years after filing its articles of incorporation, and it was adjudged that under the terms of the statute (Laws of 1867, ch. 775, § 1) the consequence of that default was that, at the expiration of those five years, its corporate power to exercise the right of eminent domain ceased, and any party proceeded against by it might raise that objection. The same point was adjudged in the later case of The Brooklyn Steam Transit Co. v. The City of Brooklyn (78 N. Y. 524). In the present case the petitioner claims to have shown that it was not guilty of the default which was established in the former cases, but did, within the five years, begin the construction of its road, and expend thereon the amount required by the statute.

The grounds of this claim, which were for the first time presented in the present application, are as follows :

The petition alleges that the petitioner did, within five years after its organization, commence the construction of its railroad on Metropolitan avenue, in the city of Brooklyn, from a point on said avenue near Bushwick avenue, to the city line of the city of Brooklyn, and also for some distance on said avenue in the town of Newtown, Queens county; and also on Grand street, between First and Second streets, in the city of Brooklyn ; but it does not allege that it has expended the required amount. The answer to the petition denies the allegation therein as to the commencement of the construction of the petitioner’s road, and avers that the petitioner has not com *72 menced the construction of its road over any portion of the route described in the petition, and that it has not expended thereon ten per cent on the amount of its capital, and sets up the former adjudications in the applications against the Broadway ¡Railroad Company, that the corporate existence and powers of the petitioners had ceased and terminated.

A referee having been appointed to take proofs, it was shown on the part of the petitioner that its certificate of incorporation was filed in the office of the Secretary pf State on the 3d of ¡February, 1869. That on the 28th of January, 1870, it pntered into'an agreement with Elwell & Green as trustees for the purchasers of the Metropolitan ¡Railroad Company, whereby it consented that such trustees might construct and lay railroad tracks through a portion of the route of the petitioners, viz.: on First street from Broadway to Grand street, upon Grand street from First street to Fifth street, upon Fifth street from Grand street to North Second street, and upon North Second street and Metropolitan avenue to Middle Village. . That said trustees might use, operate and maintain said tracks for their own use. exclusively for ninety-five years, and to that extent possess the rights and franchises of the petitioner, except that the petitioner reserved the right to run its cars over part of said route, viz.: on First street from Broadway to Grand street, on Grand street from First street to Fifth street, and on Fifth street to North Second street, paying to the trustees $100 per annum for such use.

The trustees agreed forthwith to construct said tracks at . their own expense by the first of October, 1870, and to organize, under the General ¡Railroad Law, a corporation to be called The North Second Street and Middle Village ¡Railroad Company, with a capital of $150,000, and to pay to the petitioner, for the rights and privileges granted by the agreement, $30,000 of the stock of said corporation, and the petitioner agreed to execute and deliver to said trustees, as soon as said track should be completed and ready for operation, a lease for ninety-five years of said 'brack so laid with the. franchise of. operating a railroad thereon, reserving to the petitioner the *73 right to run its ears on the streets as before specified during the term of the lease.

It was further proved that on the 26th of October, 1870, the petitioner executed a lease in which it was described as party of the first part, to the North Second Street and Middle Village Railroad Company, described as. party of the second part, demising to the party of the second part for the term of ninety-five years the right to maintain and operate a railroad upon the tracks then -laid down, or that might thereafter be laid down, by the party of the first part, through the streets named in the contract before mentioned, together with all the rights and franchises granted by the Legislature to the party of the first part to operate a railroad upon the streets before named, with the same reservation to the petitioner which was contained in the contract, of the right to run its cars on First, Grand and Fifth streets, on payment of $100 per annum. This lease contained a covenant that the lessee would maintain the tracks in good order during the term, and the further provision that-at the expiration of the term -the lessee would surrender the streets named in the lease to the party of the first part, and that all tracks laid down in said streets “ by the party of the second part ” should belong to and be taken away by it.

The petitioner further proved that Elwell & Green, under the contract before set forth, in the year 1870, and before the execution of the lease to the Middle Village Railroad Company, built about one mile of track on Metropolitan avenue, on the line covered by the franchise of the petitioner, and extending into Queens county, and also laid down tracks on Grand street, between First and Second streets, and that, in 1870,1871 and 1872, after the execution of the lease, the North Second Street and Middle Village Railroad Company built additional tracks on Metropolitan avenue, extending to the Lutheran cemetery, also on the line covered by the franchise of the petitioner, and by the lease before set forth.

The petitioner now contends that the construction of these tracks by Elwell & Green, and by the N orth Second Street and Middle Village Railroad Company, upon part of the route cov *74 ered by the franchise of the petitioner, was a beginning by the petitioner of the construction of its road, and a compliance with the provisions of the statute (Laws of 1867, eh. 775, § 1), and preserved the corporate existence of the petitioner.

This point was not taken, nor were the facts upon which it is based set up by the petitioner, in any of the former litigations in which the question of its corporate existence was involved and determined. Without considering the effect of the adjudications in those cases, we have, however, carefully examined this new position upon its own merits.

The prominent and controlling feature of the arrangement of which the petitioner claims the benefit, is, that it did not have for its object the construction of the road of the petitioner, but of that of another company which desired to occupy a part of the petitioner’s route.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 69, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-brooklyn-winfield-newtown-railway-co-ny-1880.