Mayor of New York v. Harlem Bridge, Morrisania & Fordham Railway Co.

78 N.E. 1072, 186 N.Y. 304, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1113
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 1072 (Mayor of New York v. Harlem Bridge, Morrisania & Fordham Railway 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
Mayor of New York v. Harlem Bridge, Morrisania & Fordham Railway Co., 78 N.E. 1072, 186 N.Y. 304, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1113 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

This action was brought to recover the value of granite block pavement laid between and for one foot out-side the rails of defendant’s tracks in 138th street, Hew York, at the same time that the rest of said street was being paved with said material, the defendant having failed to so pave its tracks in accordance with the demand of the plaintiff.

The learned Appellate Division, in reversing the determination of the trial court, held that the defendant was under obligation to lay a trap rock pavement in the place specified by virtue of a condition contained in the permit granted by the municipal authorities to lay its tracks in said street, and that by virtue of such liability the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon the entire cost of laying the granite block pavement what it would have cost the defendant to lay a trap rock pavement.

We agree with the Appellate Division that it was error to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant and that a new trial was properly granted, but upon somewhat different grounds than were adopted by that learned court.

The defendant was incorporated under chapter 361 of the Laws of 1863. Chapter 553 of the Laws of 1874, by amendment to section 8 of the original act of incorporation, authorized the defendant to lay its tracks in the street in question.

Chapter 658 of the Laws of 1871 amended section 3 of the original statute of incorporation so as to read as follows:

“ § 3. * * * the said grantees or their successors shall keep the surface of the street inside the rails and for one foot outside thereof, in good and proper order and repair, and conform the tracks to the grades of the streets or avenues as they now are or may hereafter be changed by the authorities of the aforesaid towns.”

*307 The amendatory statute permitting it to construct its tracks in the street in question contained no provision upon the subject of repairs or repaving, from which it is argued that the defendant is exempt as to such extension from the obligations contained in the provisions of the original act, as amended, upon that subject. > We do not, however, agree with this contention, but think it very clear that when defendant was authorized to construct the extension in question by an amendment of a section of the original act such extension was subject to the obligations contained in such original act as amended.

In 1888-9 the municipal authorities' of New York took proper proceedings and entered into a contract for paving the street where defendant’s tracks lay with granite block pavement. Prior to that time there had been no complete or actual pavement of the street in any manner, but the same was substantially a dirt road. In some places a species of incomplete macadam had been laid, but only to the extent of filling up uneven spots in the road, and at the time in question the evidence shows quite conclusively that the street, and especially between the tracks of defendant’s road, was soft and uneven and not in good repair or in good order.

The municipality served upon defendant a proper notice requiring it to pave, basing such notice and its complaint herein upon the obligations contained in section 3 of the statute incorporating it, as amended by the act of 1871, heretofore referred to, and the specific question, therefore, presented is whether the obligation resting upon the defendant to keep the space inside and outside its rails “in good and proper order and repair,” etc., compelled it, under the circumstances, upon the requirement of the city, to lay a granite block pavement, and this question we ' have concluded to answer in the affirmative.

While it may be admitted that the decisions and authorities are not uniform, either within this state, or outside of it, upon the question whether such an obligation requires a railroad company to lay a new pavement, as distinguished from merely *308 repairing an old one, we think that the controlling, ones in this state decide such proposition in the affirmative.

In Conway v. City of Rochester (157 N. Y. 33) the question ivas directly involved whether the Rochester Railway Company could he compelled to repave its tracks with asphalt in connection with the repaving of the rejnainder of the street with that matei’ial under the direction of the municipal authorities, there previously having been there a macadam or entirely different kind of pavement. The obligation so to do in that case rested, if at all, upon the provisions of section 98 of the Railroad Law (Laws 1890, chap. 565, as amended) imposing upon every street surface railroad company operating its tracks in a city or village street to have and keep in permanent repair that portion of such street, avenue or public place between its tracks, the rails of its tracks, and two feet in width outside of its' tracks, under the supervision of the proper local authorities, and whenever required by them to do so, and in such manner as they may prescribe.” It was held that this obligation, under the circumstances stated, did rSquire the railroad company to repave with an entirely new material. The court say (page 39): “ The local authorities may determine when and how the street shall be repaired, but when that is done the statute steps in and says the railroad company is to do the work. * * * Our examination of the statute then leads to the conclusion that under section 98 of the Railroad Act it became and was the duty of the Rochester Railway Company to keep in permanent repair such portion of the street through which it passed as was within its tracks, and two feet in width outside, and that the local authorities of that city were vested with the authority of determining when the repairs should be made, and thus empowered, the local authorities did determine that repaii’s should be made and the character of them. They decided that the entire street should be repaved and that the material' to be used should be asphalt. This they had the right - to do, and when this determination was made the statute intervened and commanded that the Rochester Railway Company should make *309 the repairs thus ordered under the supervision of the local authorities.”

We regard the obligations imposed upon the defendant in this case quite as broad as those which were outlined in the statute last referred to. In the place of a requirement “ to have and keep in permanent repair * * * under the supervision of the proper local authorities, and whenever required by them to do so,” we have the provision compelling the defendant here to keep in good and proper order and repair and conform the tracks,” etc. While this statute does not itself specify, as in the case of the Bailroad Law, that this shall be done under the supervision of the municipal authorities and in accordance with their specifications, that necessarily follows from the general duties and powers conferred upon such authorities by law. Therefore, when the proper authorities, in view of the condition of the street as shown to exist, decided that a granite block pavement should be laid, we think that the requirement for repairing and keeping in good order compelled the defendant to co-operate with the city and put the space between its rails in the same condition as the rest of the street, even though that necessitated the laying of a new pavement.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 1072, 186 N.Y. 304, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-new-york-v-harlem-bridge-morrisania-fordham-railway-co-ny-1906.