Mayor of New York v. Manhattan Railway Co.

37 N.E. 494, 143 N.Y. 1, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 352, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 913
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 494 (Mayor of New York v. Manhattan 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. Manhattan Railway Co., 37 N.E. 494, 143 N.Y. 1, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 352, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 913 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinions

Peckham, J.

The foundation of the plaintiff’s claim in this action rests upon section 9 of the act of 1867.

That section provides for the payment of five per cent of the net income of the railroad company into the treasury of the city “ in such manner as the legislature may hereafter direct, as a compensation to the corporation thereof, for the use of the streets thereof.” The act provided for the construction in the first instance of an experimental elevated railway to be oj>erated exclusively by means of propelling cables attached to stationary engines, for a distance of half a mile along the southern extremity of Greenwich street. The corporation was given, by the tenth section of the act, one year in which to construct the experimental section, and after its completion it was to be inspected by the commissioners provided for in the act, and if they approved it was then to be built within five years of that time along Greenwich street to Ninth avenue, and *20 along that avenue or streets west of it to the Harlem river. It is plain, therefore, that there was no idea that the railroad would be ready for business or put in operation prior to another annual session of the legislature. Indeed the probabilities for even a later period 'would seem to have been very strong. It follows that it was not important to state in the statute then passed when or in what manner the five per cent should be paid by the corporation then empowered to go on and construct within the year an experimental section of railroad. That, detail might safely be left for future legislation. But as the corporation was given by the act various powers and privileges, it was certainly appropriate, even though not necessary, to state the burdens or conditions which were to be imposed upon the corporation in return. If not stated at that time, there might be given an improper force to the argument against the imposition of any other or greater burdens in the future than were contained in the act of 1867. Hence, the statement of the condition as to the five pér cent. The burden was plainly and in terms imposed, but the time and manner of payment were just as plainly stated to be as the legislature should thereafter direct. Why the manner of payment should have been deferred for future direction by the legislature is a question not now easily answered; yet the fact that it is so deferred by the act of 1867 is as definite and clear as language can make it. The language is so plain and peremptory' that unless it is wholly rejected as meaningless, the only effect that can be-given to it is to put off the immediate obligation to pay until the legislature at some future time gave directions upon the-subject.

It is a waste of time to cite the general canons of construction which obtain in the discharge of the judicial duty to construe an act of the legislature. They are familiar to us all and they result in the question, what is the real meaning of the-enacting body? That meaning is to be first sought in the-language used, and if that be plain, unambiguous and imperative, there is nothing left for the courts other than to obey the-directions of the statute as manifested by its language. There- *21 is nothing necessarily unconstitutional or otherwise illegal even in an absurd statute, although a proper respect for the legislature will prevent any court from lightly imputing absurdity to any legislative enactment. Effect must be given to the whole of the language used, if it be plain and do not lead to anything manifestly so unjust or absurd that it cannot be assumed the legislature really intended such result. This statute, as we construe its plain language, contains nothing that is either absurd or unjust. In this case the counsel for the city claims that the language providing that the five per cent shall be paid in such manner as the legislature may thereafter direct, is unimportant and the corporation may be required to pay without such subsequent direction. It is said that the city has and always has had ample provision by general laws for the payment, receipt and disbursement of all its revenues and under proper safeguards and securities, and that this fb e per cent could, ever since the amount was imposed by the act of 1867, have been properly collected and disbursed under those laws. I have no doubt of the existence of laws of this nature as claimed by the learned counsel, and if the statute of 1867 had provided that this five per cent should be paid to the city in the same manner, at the same time and be disbursed for the same purposes that its other general revenues were, the railroad corporation would have been liable and obliged so to pay that sum. But these facts must be supposed to have been within the knowledge of the legislature when it passed this act, and it is plain that the facts did not furnish to it reasons appropriate for enacting that the payments should be made in the manner so provided by those laws. On the contrary, the legislature, by enacting another provision in regard to the manner of payment, must be held to have distinctly refused to provide for a payment in accordance with existing provisions. Instead of that, it says the payment shall be made in the manner in which the legislature may thereafter direct. If nothing further were done or directed, and the company should have organized and built and operated its road and refused to pay the five per cent, it is quite clear to mo that the company could not be *22 placed in default because of such refusal, and that no action could be maintained against it to recover such amount until the legislature had given directions upon the subject. When the corporation, in the course of operating its road, should receive a fare, the city would not thereby have a title to five per cent thereof, nor would such five per cent be the property of the city while it remained in the treasury of the railroad company. The five per cent which the railroad must pay is that proportion of the net income of the corporation, and what that sum may be is, of course, the result of an inquiry into expenses, which must result in the further inquiry as to what are expenses or other proper deductions from the main sum before the net income is arrived at. This inquiry is absolutely necessary, and the point is how often and upon what actual basis shall it be made. It is wholly unlike the case of Mayor, etc., v. Twenty-third Street Railway Compam,y (113 N. Y. 311), which provided for the payment of a percentage of the gross receipts of the company.

In any view that may be taken, I am unable to construe this act of 1861 other than according to its plain meaning, and then it appears that as to the manner and time of payment of this percentage, the legislature has said that it should be as it should thereafter direct.

In this condition of affairs the legislature, by chapter 855 of the Laws of 1868, passed an act by the second section of which it is conceded that directions were given for the manner (and time) of the payment of this five per cent on the net income of the corporation. This act has been held unconstitutional by the courts below because passed in violation of section 16 of article 3 of the Constitution, which provides that no private or local bill shall be passed which shall embrace more than one subject and that shall be expressed in its title. In the Matter of New York Elevated Railroad Company (70 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 494, 143 N.Y. 1, 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 352, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-new-york-v-manhattan-railway-co-ny-1894.