Manhattan Bridge Three-Cent Line v. City of New York

204 A.D. 89, 198 N.Y.S. 49, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9423
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 204 A.D. 89 (Manhattan Bridge Three-Cent Line v. City of New York) 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
Manhattan Bridge Three-Cent Line v. City of New York, 204 A.D. 89, 198 N.Y.S. 49, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9423 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Young, J.:

The action was instituted under section 473 of the Civil Practice Act. The evidence in the case is entirely documentary, and only questions of law are involved. The admitted facts are substantially as follows:

By contract dated July 10,1912, the board of estimate and apportionment of the city of New York granted a franchise to the plaintiff company to construct, maintain and operate a street railroad in and through certain streets of the city and over the Manhattan bridge. This contract is made part of the answer. The franchise was later amended by two contracts, neither of which affect the questions at issue. The term of the franchise was limited and fixed by section 4, subdivision 1, of the contract of July 10, 1912, to ten years with a privilege of renewal for an additional fifteen years upon the application of the company, upon a fair revaluation of the franchise.

It is provided that if the company should determine to exercise its privilege of renewal, it should apply to the board not earlier than two years nor later than one year before expiration of the original term; that revaluation should be sufficient if agreed to in writing by the company and the board; that if not agreed to. one year before such expiration, the annual rate of compensation for the succeeding fifteen years should be reasonable, and that either the city or the company should be bound upon request of the other to enter into a written agreement fixing such reasonable compensation, and that if parties should not forthwith agree thereupon, they should enter into a written agreement fixing such compensation as shall be determined by appraisers to be appointed and to proceed as therein provided. It is,, however, provided that the annual rate of compensation to be fixed either by agreement or by the appraisers should in no case be less than the sum required to be paid during the last year of the original term.

[91]*91The original term of the plaintiff’s franchise being due to expire on July 10, 1922, the plaintiff made application for a renewal on or about December 18, 1920.

Its amended petition of December 18, 1920, was presented to the board of estimate and apportionment at its meeting of January 7, 1921, and was referred to the franchise committee of the board for the purpose of inquiry and investigation into the matter of compensation to be paid by the plaintiff. After some investigation by the franchise committee and some negotiations between it and the plaintiff, a report was prepared by the committee, and also a form of proposed agreement, fixing the compensation for the renewal period. This report and form of agreement were presented to the board at its meeting of June 10, 1921. Upon the presentation of the report and form of agreement, the board adopted a resolution fixing a preliminary hearing on the petition for July 1, 1921, and directing the publication of the petition in the City Record and in two daily newspapers, to be designated by the mayor, following the procedure fixed by sections 72, 73 and 74 of the city charter, which the defendant contends applies to all grants of franchises and renewals thereof. Pursuant to this resolution, a prehminary hearing on the petition was held on July 1, 1921, and the report of the franchise committee, together with the form of agreement, taken up for preliminary consideration. The defendant claims that no resolution approving this form of agreement, or authorizing its execution by the mayor, was adopted at the meeting of July 1, 1921.

The secretary of the board submitted the corporation counsel’s approval of the form of the proposed contract; the board then adopted a resolution fixing Friday, September 30, 1921, as the date for a final hearing, and directing the publication of the form of contract and resolution consenting thereto, and also of notice of the hearing in the City Record, and also directing the publication in the two daily newspapers previously used, of notice of the hearing and notice of the place where copies of the proposed contract and consenting resolution could be obtained.

On September 30, 1921, the hearing fixed by the resolution of July 1, 1921, was held and closed, after which the board laid the matter over without action until November 11, 1921. Consideration of this matter was subsequently adjourned on various dates, to February 10, 1922.

[92]*92Under date of December 31, 1921, the plaintiff presented to the board a communication with two forms of agreement, executed by the plaintiff. One of these was the agreement in regard to which hearings had been held by the board on July 1, 1921, and September 30, 1921. In this communication the plaintiff expressed the view that the board had already approved that contract, but that if the board did not concur in that view and determined that no revaluation had been agreed upon, plaintiff submitted duplicate copies of an agreement executed by the company fixing the annual compensation at such amount as should be reasonable and also appointed an appraiser.

On or about February 7, 1922, the plaintiff instituted this action. Meanwhile, the consideration of the matter by the board of estimate and apportionment was adjourned from February 10, 1922, to March 10,1922, on which date the board of estimate laid the matter over for an additional two weeks, until March twenty-fourth, and requested the corporation counsel to advise the board before such adjourned date as to the procedure to be taken in case of arbitration and what instruments, if any, it was necessary for the board to have executed. On March 24, 1922, the opinion of the corporation counsel was presented, setting forth the procedure to be followed by the board in connection with the appointment of appraisers, and presenting also to the board a form of agreement to be submitted by it to the plaintiff as a necessary preliminary to the appointment of such appraisers. The matter was then referred by the board to its committee of the whole.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff has performed all the terms and conditions of the contract on its part to be performed, but that the defendant has failed to authorize the signing of either the proposed contract or to appoint an appraiser, by reason of which “ it has become advisable to request this court to make a declaration of the rights of the parties and the nature of the relief to which plaintiff may be entitled.”

Plaintiff then demands judgment that the court construe the legal rights and relations of the parties arising out of the contract with respect to the following matters:

(1) Whether the determination of the revaluation of the grant, or franchise, for the renewal period, as embodied in the proposed contract first mentioned, has been agreed upon within the meaning of the subsisting contract between the parties.
(2) Whether the plaintiff has not become obligated to enter into such contract.
(3) Whether the defendant has not forfeited its right to enter into the contract subsequently proposed by plaintiff.
[93]*93(4) Whether, under the provisions of the subsisting contract between the parties, the right of the defendant to appoint a disinterested freeholder as an appraiser to act on its behalf has not been forfeited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 A.D. 89, 198 N.Y.S. 49, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manhattan-bridge-three-cent-line-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1923.