Kent v. Common Council

94 A.D. 522, 88 N.Y.S. 34
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 A.D. 522 (Kent v. Common Council) 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
Kent v. Common Council, 94 A.D. 522, 88 N.Y.S. 34 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Chase, J,:

After the reversal of the first judgment the defendants materially changed their contention, and after the reversal of the second judgment they materially amended their answers, and any .apparent confusion in the opinions of this court is attributable thereto.

This court on the second appeal, referring to the first appeal, said : “ When this case was before us on the former appeal, the question presented was whether this defendant was relieved by the provisions of the contract of April 26, 1892, from paving between the rails, etc., as is required by the provision's of the General Railroad Law. (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, § 98, as amd. by Laws of 1892, chap. 676.) The argument of the defendant the Binghamton Railroad Company, then was that it was a company with which the parties of the first part to that contract had become merged and consolidated, and that, therefore, by its express terms, the contract inured to its benefit; and further, that the tracks over which this controversy arises, viz., those then operated by the ‘ Court Street and East End Railroad Company,’ were an 1 addition or extension ’ of the tracks of such contracting companies, and that, therefore, the terms and conditions of such contract, by its express provisions, applied to them. We then held that the benefits which were to inure to the successors and assigns of the contracting companies, or to one with which they [525]*525might thereafter consolidate, were no broader than were thereby given to such companies themselves, and that, very clearly, the exemption or modification of the statutory liability so given did not extend beyond the track then being operated by them, or 'to such additions or extensions of those tracks as might thereafter be made; and that, conceding that such exemption would inure to the benefit of this defendant railroad company, as a company with which those contracting companies had consolidated, nevertheless, inasmuch as the tracks in question had subsequently to the contract been acquired from a separate and independent company by such defendant, and were, therefore, tracks not then used by such contracting companies nor ones as to which either of them had any interest or owed any duties, that they could not be deemed extensions or additions to the tracks referred to in the contract, and hence none of the provisions of such contract should be deemed applicable thereto. That conclusion resulted in depriving the defendant railroad company of any advantage under such contract as to the tracks in question, and required a new trial. No suggestion was then made that either of the contracting companies had any interest in the tracks then operated by the 1 Court Street and East End Railroad Company ’ or in its line, or any rights under its own charter to extend its tracks over any part of that line; and all of the rights which this defendant company then claimed over the tracks in question were claimed in its answer to" have been derived by consolidation with the Court Street and East End Railroad Company.’ ”

The Binghamton and Port Dickinson Railroad Company was incorporated by chapter 501 of the Laws of 1868, and by such act it was “ authorized and empowered to lay, construct, operate and use a railroad with a double or single track at their option or as the public convenience may require and to convey passengers or freight thereon for compensation through, upon and along” certain streets of the city and town of Binghamton, which included Court street. Said act provides that said road shall be commenced within one year from the passage of the act and shall be completed within five years from the time of the commencement of the building of the same. The time for the commencement of said road was expressly extended to May 1, 1872, by subsequent acts of the Legislature. (Laws of 1869, chap. 447; Laws of 1871, chap. 379.)

[526]*526Said Binghamton and Port Dickinson Railroad Company built and operated a railroad upon certain of the streets named in said act of incorporation, but did not build a road through that part of Court street in question prior to its consolidation in August, 1892, with the Binghamton Street Railroad Company, by which a new corporation, the Binghamton Railroad Company, was formed, nor prior to the consolidation in April, 1894, of such consolidated company with the Court Street and East End Bailroad Company under the name of the Binghamton Railroad Company, which is the defendant of that name in this action.

In 1886 the Court Street and East End Railroad Company organized under the General Street Surface Railroad Law (Laws of 1884, chap. 252). In the certificate of incorporation of said Court Street and East End Railroad Company the streets and highways in which the road is to be constructed are enumerated, and included in the streets and highways so enumerated is said Court street. Said certificate of incorporation does not state whether a single or double-track road is to be built upon said street.

After the incorporation of the Court Street and East End Bail-road Company it built in the center of said Court street a single-track street railroad for use with animal power. It was so continued and used with horse power until after its consolidation with the defendant railroad company,, and it was so in use at the time of the execution of the contract of April 26, 1892.

Subsequent to 1894 and the consolidation of said Court Street and East End Railroad Company with said other railroad companies a large number of the property owners on said Court street petitioned said common council to authorize the defendant company to construct and maintain a double-track road on said Court street and said common council passed a resolution as follows:

“ Whereas, The abutting property owners of Court street, east of its intersection with Exchange street, almost unanimously petition this body to grant the Binghamton Railroad Company permission to lay double track from the point above mentioned through Court street east to the city limits; believing as the petition states, that public interest demands increased street car facilities for the eastern portion of the city, and that a double track system from the extreme western limit to the extreme eastern limit .of the city through the [527]*527principal thoroughfare is a necessity and improvement benefiting the city at large,’ therefore, be it

Resolved, That the Binghamton Railroad Company are hereby granted the right and privilege to ‘construct and maintain a double track from the eastern terminus of the present double track near the intersection of Exchange street along and through Court street in an easterly direction to the city limits; except underneath the railroad bridges over said street.”

Thereafter the track formerly owned and used by the Court Street and East End Railroad Company was removed and two tracks, one on either side of the center of said street, were laid by the defendant company with girder rails and they have since been maintained as a part of the defendant company’s electric railway system.

On the hearing of the second appeal the defendants claimed that the defendant Company maintained said road on Court street under the original charter of the Binghamton and Port Dickinson Railroad Company and that as the Binghamton and Port Dickinson Railroad Company was one of the parties to the contract of April 26, 1892, it was by the express terms of said contract exempt from paying for any part of said paving except as provided for by said contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A.D. 522, 88 N.Y.S. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-common-council-nyappdiv-1904.