Manton v. South Shore Traction Co.

121 A.D. 410, 106 N.Y.S. 82, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1783
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 A.D. 410 (Manton v. South Shore Traction Co.) 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
Manton v. South Shore Traction Co., 121 A.D. 410, 106 N.Y.S. 82, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1783 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The plaintiff' is an abutting property owner and taxpayer upon the line of the defendant’s street surface railroad, now in' process of construction, and he brings this action to perpetually enjoin and restrain the respondent from constructing and operating its railway in the town of Islip, Suffolk county. The respondent is a duly organized company for the purpose of constructing and operating a street surface railroad from a point on the';Connecticut river in the county of Suffolk, through the town of. Islip to the Few York city line. On the 15th day of June, 1903, the highway commissioners of Islip, being the local authorities haying charge of such highways, granted to the respondent the' permission required by the statutes and Constitution of this State, for the usé of a portion of the South Country road and other highways, including Wheeler’s road and Railroad avenue. Among the conditions imposed, upon the granting of this permission, was one that the grant should be "accepted by [412]*412the company within sixty days, which was done, and that' “ at least one track of the railrqad. line of the South Shore Traction Company shall be constructed and in operation across the town of lslip within .two years from the date of the granting of this franchise, otherwise all rights and privileges under this franchise shall cease, and determine, but in case of delay by injunction, legal proceedings or any cause beyond the control of the said South Shore Traction'Company, the period of such delay shall be added to the time named' within which the said track is to be constructed.”

Obviously the purpose of the-last clause of this provision was to. provide, not for conditions of delay then known to the parties, such as the fact of certain of the highways being under the provisions of special acts of the Legislature, etc., but for the interference of •the courts or other acts of interference over which the company had no control, and which were not then known. This is a place for the application of the rule of ejusdem, generis, that words of a general nature, following those of a particular character, are not to be deemed to enlarge the grant beyond the fair scope of the particular words. (See Johnson v. Goss, 128 Mass. 433; Matter of Reynolds, 124 N. Y. 388, 397, and authorities there cited; Morton v. Woodbury, 153 id. 243, 253.) To say that the defendant is entitled to any extension of its time, because ’t failed to secure consents of property owners, or because it did not succeed in getting rights of way through private property, where it had the full, legal right to force a right of way, is to read into the franchise at this time a condition which could not have been contemplated by the-parties at the,time of-making the grant, for both parties must be deemed to. have entered into the arrangement with reference to the law as it then stood. They both, in legal presumption and in fact, knew that there was a special act of the Legislature requiring different conditions than those, which prevailed in general for. the granting of consents by abutting property owners, and they knew that it might be necessary to overcome this by taking private property for a right of way, and to say that this franchise was extended in time on this account, where no such provision is expressed in the franchise, is to enlarge the scope of the grant' beyond the point fairly within the contemplation of the parties, and beyond the moral right of the commissioners of< highways to grant, for it is not [413]*413to be presumed that highway commissioners, with a term of three years, are to be permitted to give consents for the use of highways to become operative- long after their terms of office have expired. The local consent ■ contemplated by the Constitution and the statutes is a consent to do something presently, within a reasonable time from the making of the grant, and when the highway commissioners in 1903 granted permission-to construct a street surface railroad and to have it in operation within two years, provided, the corporation was not interfered with by some action of the courts or other power 'of a like nature beyond its control, they had exhausted their powers in the matter. Tlie corporation accepted the grant linder the conditions • named; it was to construct its road and have at least one track in- operation across, the town within two years, under the penalty of- losing its rights under the- grant. Two years was ample time for the performance of these conditions, if the company was not interfered with by. a superior power, and-it was not, and it is difficult to understand' by what process of reasoning it can be held that the franchise, under which the defendant took no action until December, 19Q6, did not cease and determine ”, two years from its date. The franchise provided for the giving, of a bond for the performance of. the conditions, but it appears from thé record before us that, with the exception of accepting the terms of the franchise within- sixty days of. its adoption, which .was an acceptance of its terms as to forfeiture, or abandonment as well as its privileges, the defendant company took no action whatever toward the. construction of its lines through the town of Islip, and it-was not until the 19th day of December,1906, that it made an application to the highway commissioners asking for a waiver of the time required for the filing of the bond. On the 10th day of April, 1907, without having taken any of the steps required by section 92 of the Railroad Law,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 A.D. 410, 106 N.Y.S. 82, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manton-v-south-shore-traction-co-nyappdiv-1907.