International Railway Co. v. Wotherspoon

90 Misc. 56, 152 N.Y.S. 971
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 90 Misc. 56 (International Railway Co. v. Wotherspoon) 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
International Railway Co. v. Wotherspoon, 90 Misc. 56, 152 N.Y.S. 971 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Woodward, J.

The plaintiff brings this action to secure an injunction restraining the defendants from making the changes in the bridge structure at Delaware avenue in the city of Tonawanda provided for in chapter 624 of the Laws of 1913, except upon the condition that the defendants shall provide for taking care of the traffic during the progress of such work of the plaintiff’s street surface railroad. The provisions of chapter 624 of the Laws of 1913, in so far as they relate to the matter here in controversy, make an appropriation of $80,000, and the ‘ ‘ superintendent of public works is hereby authorized to improve that portion of the Ellicott creek between the Erie canal and the city line of the city of Tonawanda by deepening the channel of said creek to such a depth that the bottom of said channel will be on a level with the bottom of the channel of the Erie canal, as prescribed . by chapter seven hundred and ten of the laws of nineteen hundred and seven, and to make all necessary repairs to the bridge crossing said creek which will be required by reason of the deepening of said channel.” This provision is supplemental to the development of the Erie canal, and it requires the deepening of Ellicott creek to a minimum of twelve feet. For this purpose the “ superintendent may enter upon, take and appropriate any and all lands, real estate and property necessary for the work authorized to be done by this act, upon compensation to the owners thereof for injuries thereto, in the same manner that lands are authorized by law to be acquired or damages fixed for canal purposes.”

The plaintiff owns and operates a street surface railroad, constituting a connecting link in its interurban line between the city of Buffalo and Niagara Falls, over one of the bridges crossing Ellicott creek, such bridge being located on Delaware avenue, and [58]*58it is the contention of the plaintiff that it is the duty of the defendants, the superintendent of public works, the state engineer and surveyor, and the contractor, to provide for taking care of the traffic of this street surface railroad during the time that the bridge is undergoing the necessary repairs. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that they have a right to remove this bridge temporarily and to reconstruct the same without any reference to the traffic of the plaintiff’s railroad. It is conceded that the work will cost-considerably more if the defendants are obliged to ' take care of the traffic, though the defendants admit that the work may be done in such a manner as to provide for the traffic by the expenditure of a sum sufficient to place more piles for the purpose of supporting the weight of the bridge and the cars of the .plaintiff. While it does not appear in the case, it is well understood in railroad work, that the cost of maintaining traffic during the work of bridge construction adds from twenty-five to fifty per cent to the cost of placing a modern steel bridge, and no doubt something like these figures would prevail in the case now under consideration, and the question presented seems to us to be whether the state, in authorizing this work, has provided for sustaining this additional charge. It cannot be presumed that the state has intended to impose any undue burden upon the plaintiff, or that it has intended to needlessly interfere with the continued operation of the plaintiff’s railroad, serving a public purpose justifying its public franchise. We assume,, therefore, that in authorizing this work, the legislature has not intended to authorize the defendants to consult the convenience and economy of the contractor entirely; that it was contemplated that the work would he undertaken and performed with proper regard to the public [59]*59convenience, and that the use of the highway would not be obstructed more th'an was necessary to the proper performance of the public work under construction. This would involve consideration of the convenience of the plaintiff in its relation to the obligations of a carrier of passengers and would involve such an adjustment as would interfere as little as reasonably possible with the operation of the plaintiff’s cars, but we find in this no foundation for the contention that it is the duty of the state to pay the additional cost of this adjustment as a condition of its right to enter upon a public improvement designed for the development of the state’s transportation facilities.

It is true, of course, that the plaintiff has been granted this valuable public franchise; that the state, pursuant to its policy of development and the promotion of the comfort and convenience of the public, has granted a perpetual right to 'operate the plaintiff’s cars over the public highways, including the bridge in question, and that this franchise is property in the highest sense, inextricably involved and merged in the tangible property of the railroad (People v. O’Brien, 111 N. Y. 1, 47), but we apprehend that this privilege properly came to the plaintiff subject to the implied obligation to make use of it in subordination to the higher right of the state to improve its own waterways. In other words, we assume that the state, in granting the franchises now owned and controlled by the plaintiff, did not undertake to perpetually maintain the highways and bridges over which the franchises extended in a condition adapted to the uses of the plaintiff; that it did not undertake to guarantee that the streets and bridges would never be closed for the purposes of repairs or that the plaintiff should not be subjected to expense and inconvenience in respect to the operation of its cars. The state undoubtedly took on the [60]*60obligation of acting in good faith with the plaintiff in respect to the franchises granted; it impliedly said to the plaintiff that it would not wantonly interfere with the operation of its cars along this and other highways; that it would not needlessly add to its burdens, but it would not have contracted that it would not, in the discharge of its higher obligations to the state, undertake public works which might involve it in additional expenditures. A street surface railroad is given rights in the public highways and is afforded a right of way which would in many instances cost large sums of money if purchased of private owners, and it must be deemed to have taken its rights in such highways subject to the limitations to which highways generally are made subservient, and if the state interferes with the operation of its cars only to the extent necessary, it is not to be heard to complain if the state refuses to assume the additional expense which the necessities of the railroad involve. Because the street railroad has been given a higher privilege than that which extends to the individual using his own vehicle, does not impose upon the state the duty of affording an opportunity of using this privilege different from the obligation which the state owes to each individual. The franchise of citizenship or of subjection to the sovereign authority gives the right to the individual to make use of the highway; the very definition of a highway is that it shall “be common to all the king’s subjects ” (3 Kent’s Com. 342), but no one has ever seriously suggested that the state was legally bound to afford highway privileges to all its subjects during the time necessarily employed in repairing such highways, and, if it does not owe this obligation to the individual citizen, it does not owe it to the 10,000 individual subjects who are alleged to make use of the plaintiff’s cars daily, and, not owing to these [61]*61individuals, it can hardly be contended that it owes this duty to the plaintiff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. . O'Brien
18 N.E. 692 (New York Court of Appeals, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Misc. 56, 152 N.Y.S. 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-railway-co-v-wotherspoon-nysupct-1915.