In the Matter, Etc., of Kings Co. Elev. Ry. Co.

82 N.Y. 95, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 330
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 N.Y. 95 (In the Matter, Etc., of Kings Co. Elev. Ry. 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 the Matter, Etc., of Kings Co. Elev. Ry. Co., 82 N.Y. 95, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 330 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Folger, Ch. J.

The order appealed from is silent as to the ground upon which it was made, whether of law or fact. In such case, we are bound to suppose that the General Term examined the case before it upon the matters of fact involved, as well as upon the questions of law presented, and based the order made upon conclusions drawn from the former, as- well as the latter. If it were not so, the party feeling aggrieved should have seen to it that it was expressed in the order that' it was grounded upon conclusions of law only. In the case in hand the use of this rule will not harm the appellants, for it is palpable from the whole case, and -especially from the prevailing opinion at General Term (to which we would not resort to contradict the order, or to explain it even unless it were ambiguous), that the refusal to confirm the report of the commissioners was because the General Term deemed it, as a matter of fact, improper, inexpedient and impolitic to do otherwise. How this was the exercise of discretion by the General Term. With the appropriate exercise of discretion by that tribunal, this tribunal may not interfere. (The People ex rel Vanderbilt v. Stilwell, 19 N. Y. 531.) That the court below had a discretion to exercise in making or withholding confirmation of the report of the commissioners we cannot doubt. It was considered worthy of a constitutional provision (Canst., art. 3, § *99 18), that no street railroad, should be authorized by law without the consent of a fixed proportion of adjacent property owners; or if that consent could not be obtained, without the determination of commissioners appointed by the General Term of the Supreme Court of the district that such railroad ought, to be constructed, and a confirmation of that determination by the court; which two acts might be taken in lieu of the consent of the owners. It is manifest that in this provision of fundamental law a grave mattér was dealt with. It is not reasonable to hold that in fixing what should be a safe and sufficient substitute for the consent of private owners of property, the Supreme Court at General Term should be brought in to act only a clerical or formal part, and to confirm, without exercise of judgment upon the facts and circumstances of the case, the determination of the commissioners appointed by it. It is plain that a great evil was seen to exist, and a crying need of permanent and effective repression of it. That evil was the heedless and unneeded making of street railroads, to the harm of owners of adjacent property. The means of repression was the prohibition of the construction of them without consent of one-half of those owners, or a sober inquiry whether they ought to be constructed or operated, to be made by commissioners appointed by the court, with their determination inoperative until confirmed by the court. When we consider what it is that is to be confirmed by the court, we see that it is putting too small a duty upon it, to be equal to the gravity of the matter upon which it is acting, to hold that it is to confirm without adjudging upon the reasons for and against the determination reported to it. What is submitted to the commissioners is whether, notwithstanding the dissent of more than one-half of the owners, the public need is so overweening, that there ought to be a railroad laid along by then- property. The Supreme Court at General Term is to confirm thé determination of the commissioners that it ought, before the refusal of the owners is to go for naught. It would be absurd, in such case, that the General Term must confirm as a matter of course, without inquiry and without consideration of the.facts and circumstances bearing *100 upon the vital inquiry, viz.: ought the private right and resistance to give way to the public necessity; or with only such power of review as would show whether the commissioners had made no legal errors. That vital inquiry is one of fact, and of expediency and public policy. Whether a proper determination of it has been made may be known only by a review of the facts and considerations on which it has been based. Ho confirmation of it as an act of judicial power, in the proper exercise of such power, can be conceived of without such a review. Such seems to us to be a proper idea of the function conferred upon the General Term by the constitutional provision, in view of the evil sought to be quieted by it, and the solemnity and gravity of the means used therefor.

And that interpretation is sustained by the adjudications in analogous cases. Thus it was held that the opposition to a motion to confirm a report of commissioners of estimate and' assessment, in a street opening case, is in the nature of an appeal. (In re Mt. Morris Square, 2 Hill, 14, 27.) If an appeal, or in the nature of one, then the Supreme Court is called upon to do more than a formal act; it must exercise its discretion or judgment on the case before it in all its features of fact and law. So In re N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (64 N. Y. 60), it is held, that where cause is shown for setting aside an order theretofore made, confirming report of commissioners of the appraisal of lands taken for a railroad, there is power to entertain a motion therefor; and that if there be not an entire lack of merit in the motion, whether it shall be granted is a question of discretion, the exercise of which may not be reviewed in the Court of Appeals. (See, also, N. Y. C. R. R. Co. v. Marvin, 11 N. Y. 276 ; In re Canal Street, 12 id. 406-413 ; Striker v. Kelly, 7 Hill, 9,19-20.) Many of the opinions given, in adjudicating upon this topic, dwell upon the protection found for private rights in the power of supervision and review lodged in the Supreme Court; and the fact that that power is there lodged, and the consideration that it is ample for the purpose have helped to the conclusion that it was meant that the power of that court should cover the whole *101 case, and its decision should be the last one. So it is In re Dodd (27 N. Y. 629). The language of this court In re N. Y. El. R. R. Co. (70 N. Y. 327, 359), to the effect that the determination of the commissioners cannot, or at least ought not, to be interfered with upon that appeal, should be understood, as indeed it reads, that we (i. e., the .Court of Appeals) cannot or ought not so to do. And here it may be said that the determination of one or both boards of commissioners of the necessity of a street railroad is not equivalent to a determination to that end made by the legislature itself. It has been sometimes said that it is. A determination of the legislature itself would be effectual without a confirmation of it by the General Term. But a determination of commissioners has no effect until it is passed upon and confirmed by the General Term. Manifestly the legislature did not mean that it should be final or self-operative.

It is objected that the interpretation that we make gives too much force to the word confirm, and confers more power upon the General Term than the Constitution meant to do by the requirement that the determination of the commissioners to be operative should be confirmed by that tribunal.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.Y. 95, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-etc-of-kings-co-elev-ry-co-ny-1880.