Long Island Railroad v. Department of Labor

138 Misc. 612
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 Misc. 612 (Long Island Railroad v. Department of Labor) 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
Long Island Railroad v. Department of Labor, 138 Misc. 612 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Staley, J.

The above actions have been brought by various railroad companies against officers of the State of New York, to enjoin the enforcement of article 8-A of the Labor Law which relates to wages and hours of labor in connection with work on railroad grade crossing elimination, on the ground that the article is unconstitutional.

Complaints and answers have been served in all of the actions, and motions are now made by the plaintiffs for preliminary injunctions. Defendants ask for judgment on the pleadings, dismissing the complaints. Plaintiffs urge consideration of judgment on the pleadings in their favor under rule 112 of the Rules of Civil Practice.

Fortunately, many of the questions in relation to grade crossing elimination have been settled by judicial decisions of the highest ' courts, so that the motions now made involve but a single proposition of novelty.

The full force and effect of the claims of the parties, and the precise bearing of the objections made by the plaintiffs to the enforcement of article 8-A of the Labor Law may be better understood after a brief review of the history of railroad grade crossing elimination in this State.

A separation of grades of railroads and highways has become an established policy throughout the United States. The congestion of traffic, brought about by the motor vehicle, the increase [615]*615of population and its marked concentration in and near cities and villages, together with the expansion of trade, has stimulated great activity in this respect.

The State, of course, is vitally concerned in elimination of grade crossings to increase safety of travel and for economic reasons as well. It is generally admitted that highway improvement is a necessary factor in the general development of the country.

The railroads, too, are vitally concerned from a purely economic point of view. The mounting number of grade crossing accidents entails large expenditures in the payment of damages and legal expenses. Besides this, the railroads must pay out large sums for wages of gatetenders and flagmen, safety devices and equipment.

The Public Service Commission in its Report for 1923 (Yol. 1, p. 31) had this to say: “ To protect a crossing adequately costs a substantial sum per annum. If gates are adopted there is the cost of installation, which may vary from $1,000 to $2,500. To maintain attendants at these crossings for each of the 24 hours within the day will cost from $200 to $300 per month. 767 crossings are now protected by gates. To protect the remaining 3,233, assuming that the present protected ones are included within the above named 4,000, will require an initial outlay for installation alone of approximately $5,657,750, and an annual operating charge for protection of $1,000,000. Such charges as these are now wholly borne by the railroad corporations. Being a direct part of operating expenses, they must ultimately be borne by the public in the rates paid for transportation. Whether the public would prefer to bear this charge in this manner or in some other Way is an open question. As ehminations progress, the charges will decrease, assuming that the rates of wages remain substantially constant.”

Possibly, the greatest loss to the railroads arising from crossings at grade is the interference with rapid transit. Urban and interurban rapid transit is practically impossible in communities where grade crossings are numerous.

The absence, in our public and political affairs, of any effort on the part of the railroads to resist improvements along this line, indicates that the railroads are content to co-operate with the public authorities.

In 1897, sections 60-69, inclusive, were added to the Railroad Law by chapter 754 of the Laws of 1897. This chapter Was known as the Grade Crossing Law. It was intended to provide a complete scheme regulating all kinds of crossings over old or new streets. The control of the manner of constructing crossings was committed to the Railroad Commissioners. WThere a change was made [616]*616in an existing crossing, the railroad was required to pay fifty per cent, the municipality twenty-five per cent and the State twenty-five per cent of the cost.

Under this law progress was slow. The statute was adapted to the elimination of grade crossings in the country districts, but, apparently, it was not sufficiently flexible to meet the complex problems of elimination arising in cities'. Buffalo had a special act. New York city carried on the work of ehmination under special acts. Besides, appropriations for the work were small. Up to 1908 they were as follows (See Report, Public Service Commission, First District, 1909, vol. 1, p. 286):

Appropriations for succeeding years were as follows:

The total amount appropriated to 1925 was a little . over $4,000,000.

One of the early difficulties was that the money to be paid by,. the State could not be used until the work was completed, thus requiring the railroads to advance the full'cost.

Amendments to the. Railroad Law permitted the State Commission of Highways to petition for elimination of grade crossings on State or county highways to be constructed or improved. In such cases the State’s portion of the expense was payable out of highway funds.

[617]*617The general situation of grade crossing elimination in 1923 is set forth in the Report of the Public Service Commissi on for that year (Yol. 1, p. 28):

The grade crossing problem grows more serious constantly. The toll of lives taken each year on account of this condition is appalling. It is much greater than the number of accidents resulting from train operations, such as collisions, derailments, etc. For the last reporting period there were 719 accidents, which resulted in the death of 91 persons and the injury of 474. In no year in the history of the Commission has there been such a loss of life as this due either to collisions, derailments or grade crossing accidents.

The work of eliminating grade crossings has progressed as rapidly as the available funds and the necessary studies will permit, but the results are feeble when compared with the magnitude of the task of thorough ehmination. Gates, flagmen and automatic devices of various kinds have been installed voluntarily and on order or request of the Commission. Undoubtedly these expedients have helped to reduce the number of accidents. It is noticeable that a large number of accidents have resulted from a collision of a vehicle on the highway with the sides of the trains, in many cases these collisions taking place with cars rather than with the locomotive. It should also be noted that it is not the so-called blind crossing (one in which the view obtainable of approaching trains is obscured), at which accidents most frequently occur. It has been chiefly the open crossing in open country where the traveler on the highway has disregarded a safe speed in approaching the crossings notwithstanding the numerous safeguards giving adequate warning that a crossing is immediately in advance. The tables which have been prepared show clearly the types of accidents which have occurred. * * *

“ Complete ehmination seems to be the only positive remedy, but this will cost a prodigious sum. There are 8,205 grade crossings of steam railroads within the State. No definite survey has ever been made to determine the particular character of each of these crossings.

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