Kittinger v. . Buffalo Traction Co.

54 N.E. 1081, 160 N.Y. 377, 14 E.H. Smith 377, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1168
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 1081 (Kittinger v. . Buffalo Traction 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
Kittinger v. . Buffalo Traction Co., 54 N.E. 1081, 160 N.Y. 377, 14 E.H. Smith 377, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1168 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinions

Parker, Ch. J.

This defendant was organized in the year 1895 for the purpose of building in the city of Buffalo a street surface railroad exceeding sixty-four miles in length, at which time another corporation had in operation a street surface railroad that occupied nearly eighty miles of streets. On the 19th day of 27ovember, 1895, this defendant made application to the board of railroad commissioners for a certificate under section 59 of the Railroad Law, to the effect that public convenience and necessity required the .construction of the railroad as proposed, and that board, a little over two months later, refused to grant the certificate. A few days before the application made to the railroad commissioners the defendant applied to the common council of the city of Buffalo for leave to construct its railroad in pursuance of section 91 of the Railroad Law, which provides, in effect, that a street surface railroad “ shall not be built, extended or operated, unless the consent * * * of the owners,” in cities and villages, “ of one-half in value of the property bounded on ” the street along “.which it is proposed to build or operate such railroad,” be obtained in the manner provided by that section, and also the consent of the local authorities having control of such streets. The charter of the city of Buffalo provides that “ the legislative'power of the city-shall be vested in a common council, which shall consist of a board of councilmen and a board of aldermen ” (Revised Charter of the city of Buffalo, Laws 1891, chapter 105, title 2, chapter 1, section 4), and that “ no action *381 of the common council shall be of force unless it shall have originated in the board of aldermen and shall have been approved by the board of councilmen; but the board of' councilmen may amend any measure transmitted to it and return the same to the board of aldermen for further consideration; if the board of aldermen agree to such amendment, its action as amended shall be the action of the common council; if it shall not agree thereto, and shall further amend, it may return the measure as finally passed by it to the board of councilmen for its further consideration.” (Id., section 5.) The section last quoted further provides: Whenever by law, the giving of notice, reference to any committee or any officer or person, or other act is made a prerequisite to action by the common council, it shall be necessary for such notice to be given, reference to be made or other act to be done, by the board of-aider-men only, unless herein otherwise specifically provided.”

On the second day of December, 1895, the board of aider-men, having before it the application which the defendant had filed in the previous month, adopted a resolution to the effect that such application should be first considered by the common council on the twenty-first day of December, 1896, and directed the publication of such resolution in two daily newspapers of the city, to be designated by the mayor. Thereafter such resolution was approved by the board of councilmen, signed by the mayor and published in the manner directed. Down to this point it is conceded that the proceedings were regular. On the twenty-first day of December, in pursuance of the notice given, the board of aldermen met and considered the petitioner’s application, and that body thereafter and on the twenty-third day of December, adopted a resolution granting permission to the petitioner to construct and operate its railroad in the various streets of the city, and the same was duly transmitted to the board of councilmen, which body on the day following approved and adopted such resolution without amendment. Ho argument is required to show that this procedure was in accordance witli the provisions of the charter quoted above, for it appears from its mere reading not only *382 that the practice adopted agrees with its provisions, but that none other would. Unless then there are other provisions of the charter having special application to the procedure to be adopted where the consent of the common council is requisite in order to obtain a franchise for the use of the streets in the city, this question need not be further considered.

The claim of the appellant is that the board of councilmen and the board of aldermen, which together constituted the common council of the city, should have met in joint session for the purpose of considering the application, and that their failure to do so rendered the entire proceeding invalid. The provisions of the charter relied upon to sustain this position are sections 33 and 374. Section 33 provides that “ On the first Monday of January, of each year, or as soon thereafter as practicable, the common council shall by joint ballot, in joint session of both boards, a quorum of each board being present, elect a city clerk, who shall be .the clerk of the city and the clerk of the common council.” Section 374 provides among other things that “If a vacancy occurs in any elective office in the city or in any ward, except of that of alderman or councilman, it shall be filled by the Common Council at a joint session of the boards composing the same, by a viva voce vote. Such joint session shall be called by the mayor.” These provisions, for the joint session of the two bodies composing the common council, constitute exceptions to the general rule and are applicable to the situations therein described, and to none other. It necessarily follows that the proceedings before the common council were on their face entirely regular, a result reached hv the Appellate Division in Matter of The Buffalo Traction Company (25 Appellate Division, 447), its order being subsequently affirmed in this court without an opinion. (155 N. Y. 700.) After the resolution had passed both bodies of the common council, and, together with the application, was pending before the mayor, he sent a communication to the common council suggesting certain amendments. The charter contained no authority for this action on the part of *383 the mayor, which in effect amounted to a request to the common council to withdraw the consent then pending before him for further action on their part, a practice frequently adopted by the executive of this state, and the executive heads of municipal governments. " In subsequently approving of the consent, the mayor acted within his legal right, for it is not alleged in the complaint, nor is it claimed, that the mayor returned to the city clerk, with his objections, the resolutions then pending before him for his consideration, as required by section 18, chapter 1, title 2 of the charter, which provides that Every ordinance and resolution of the common council * * * shall be presented to the mayor before it shall be of force. If he approves it he shall sign it; but if not, he shall return it with his objections, to the city clerk, who shall lay the same before the board of aldermen at its next regular meeting thereafter.” The mayor did not return the consent with his objections to the city clerk. What he did do was to make suggestions in a letter to the common council, as he might have done orally to individual members thereof. That act, whether wise or not, did not relieve him from the duty of either signing the resolution or returning it, with his objections, to the city clerk within the time provided by the charter, and he performed his duty by signing the resolution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 1081, 160 N.Y. 377, 14 E.H. Smith 377, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kittinger-v-buffalo-traction-co-ny-1899.