Kent v. Common Council

40 Misc. 1, 81 N.Y.S. 198
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 Misc. 1 (Kent v. Common Council) 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
Kent v. Common Council, 40 Misc. 1, 81 N.Y.S. 198 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Forbes, J.

This action has now been tried three times. Two former decisions and judgments have been reversed by the Appellate Division. This is the third trial.

This is an action brought by a taxpayer of the city of Binghamton, to restrain the enforcement of a tax levied by said city for paving a portion of Court street, known as the “East End,” upon which the Binghamton Kailroad Company now operates a double track, surface trolley road.

In 1868 what was then known as the Port Dickinson & Binghamton Kailroad Company obtained a charter, under chapter 501 of the Laws of 1868, to construct and operate a surface street railroad between Port Dickinson and the city of Binghamton. This railroad was constructed and operated under said franchise and charter along and-upon certain streets in said city, including that portion of Court street running westerly from Chenango street. That charter and the franchise given under it by the city provided for the construction and operation of said road upon and along other portions of the streets in said city, including the eastern portion of Court street, covering the locus in quo. That charter provided that said company might exercise the option to commence to build and extend said road, at any time within five years from the granting of said charter. Laws of 1871, chap. 379, § 2. This legislative enactment extended to and covered the year 1872. Said company did not thereafter construct or operate any surface road upon Court street, east of Chenango street. Nor was the time for the construction of said railroad'further extended by the Legislature. The company continued tó‘ operate" its cars upon the surface line, so built by it, down to the year 1894, without in any manner acting upon or accepting' the original option given to it to lay its tracks upon East Couft‘street, along and upon the locus in quo '. It is claimed, on the part-of the plaintiff, that the building of said company’s line, upon that portion of Court street was abandoned.

[3]*3In the year 1S8G, what is known as the Court Street & East End Railroad Company applied for a charter and it was granted a franchise by the city to run and operate a street railway upon the surface of East Court street to the city limit. The operation of this road continued without interference, on the part of the defendant company, until 1894, when the defendant company purchased the stock of the Court Street & East End Railroad Company, and consolidated that road with other previously acquired roads into what, since that time, has been known as “ The Binghamton Street Railroad Company”; tearing up the old tracks of the East End Company and constructing a double track, surface line, to be operated under the trolley system. This was done upon and under the petition of said consolidated company, with the consent of the common council of said city, whose engineer, to some extent at least, superintended the construction of said consolidated surface railroad, directing the manner in which said construction should be made; the kind of rails and ties to be used thereon; and the same was built as a trolley system, and said road was in operation at the time this action was commenced. The defendant city reserved to itself certain privileges which were provided for in a certain contract made for the construction of said road and the erection of the trolley poles upon and along said street.

The question in this action arises over the paving of said street, covering the locus in quo. The defendant company now claims that, under its original charter, the franchise granted to it and the contract so made with it, by the other defendant, the city of Binghamton, defendant company is exempt from paving between its tracks and two feet each side thereof.

The defendant company admits that under its contract, charter, and franchise, it is liable to pay one-fifth of the value of said pavement on Court street, at the locus in quo. It now claims to be operating said trolley line under its original charter and franchise, under the contract with," and the consent of, the defendant, the city of Binghamton. The defendant company also claims that its purchase of and the consolidation with the Court Street & East End Company were merely consummated for the purpose of taking to itself the operation of said railroad, upon and over the locus in quo, under the defendant company’s original charter. There is no question that, if said defendant company is so operat[4]*4ing and running said road, it is then exempt from the expense of said additional paving.

In 1884, prior to the construction of the Court Street & East End ¡Railroad, the Legislature passed a general act (ch. 252) relating to surface railroads in all villages and cities in this State. The Court Street & East End ¡Railroad Company was incorporated and took its franchise under that act, with the consent of the common council of said city. That act’ provides that the railroad company shall pave, or pay the expenses of paving, between its tracks and two feet each side thereof.

, Both of the defendants now join in the contention that the defendant company is exempt from the burden of any additional expense for paving said street.

This question has been passed upon twice by the Appellate Division of this department, unfavorably to these defendants’, contention; although by a divided court. On the last appeal two of the learned justices of the Appellate Division dissented, holding that, by the peculiar wording of the charter and franchise, the defendant company constructed and is now running and operating said road, under its original charter.

If I felt at liberty to differ from the prevailing opinion, I am inclined not to do so, since it seems to me that the distinction^ drawn by the dissenting opinion are obviously too technical to be absolutely just to the plaintiff and the other taxpayers upon and along said street. I cannot see the force of the distinction sought to be made between the words “ consolidated with ” and “ consolidated into ” the defendant company, as applied to the almost undisputed facts in this case. I do not see, as a matter of construction, how the phrase “ consolidated with” does not mean essentially “ consolidated into,” since it cannot be possible that it was the intention'of either of these companies, so consolidated, to be consolidated with, except that the companies were to be merged into, each other. Merger means something more than mere consolidation. See Merger, 2 Bouv. L. Diet. 175; Webster’s Inter. Diet. 914. Can it be possible that the term “consolidated with ” means that the company did not enter into the merger and that each franchise still stands separate, simply because the word “ with” was used instead of the word “ into? ”

What distinctive thing or power is left of the Court Street and East End Company, so consolidated with the defendant com[5]*5pany ? What right is reserved to the Court Street & East End Company? What right has it in this road now being operated? Are not the charter and franchise-of that company incorporated into the defendant company?

It may be true that the phrase “ incorporated into ” is a better phrase than “consolidated with,” but in the construction of statutes words are sometimes to be given a special signification, for the purpose of carrying out the intention of the parties, as well as the obvious intention of the legislators.

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Related

Kent v. Common Council of City of Binghamton
84 N.Y.S. 1131 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 1, 81 N.Y.S. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-common-council-nysupct-1903.