Mayor of New York v. Third Avenue Railroad

3 N.Y. St. Rep. 181
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 181 (Mayor of New York v. Third Avenue Railroad) 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
Mayor of New York v. Third Avenue Railroad, 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 181 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Lawrence, J.

It was evidently the intention of the parties that the defendants should pay an annual license fee to the plaintiffs-for each car which might be run upon the. Third avenue, under the resolution passed by the common council December 18, 1852, which resolution became bind-

ing and operative on the 31st of December, 1852. The third resolution provides:

“That in consideration of the good and faithful performance of the conditions, stipulations and agreements above prescribed, and of such other necessary requirements as may hereafter be made by the common council for the regulation of the said railroad, the said parties shall pay from the date of the opening the said railroad the annual license fee for each car now allowed by law, and shall have licenses accordingly.”

It must be assumed from the resolutions that both parties regarded the law as having at that time fixed a license fee, and under well settled principles in the construction of statutes we must, in the first instance, endeavor to find out from the language employed to what license fee the parties referred. Hudson Iron Co. v. Alger, 54 N. Y., 175; Matter of N. Y. and Brooklyn Bridge, 72 id., 528.

And if there is any doubt as to the meaning of the language employed, that doubt can be solved by resort to extrinsic circumstances. Smith v. Helmer, 7 Barb., 421; People v. Schoonmaker, 53 id., 45; McCluskey v. Cromwell, 11 N. Y., 601; Mohawk Bridge Co. v. Utica R. R., 6 Paige, 561; U. S. v. Breed, 1 Sumner, 159; Haydon’s Case, 3 Coke, 7 B.; Dovenshire v. Lodge, 7 B. & C., 39.

Evidence ivas introduced upon the trial, on the part of the defendants, for the purpose of showing that at the time the resolution in question was passed there were no license fees paid to the city for such street railroad cars as were then running.

Prior to 1851 the only street railroad cars were those of the Harlem or Fourth Avenue Railroad Company.

In 1851, on July 30th, the mayor signed the resolution, which had theretofore been passed by the common council, granting to the parties in said resolution named permission to lay railroad tracks and run cars upon the routes now known as the Sixth and Eighth Avenue lines.

In the resolution in regard to each of these routes it was provided “that each of said passenger cars to be used on said roads shall be annually licensed by the mayor, and there shall be paid annually for such license such sum as [183]*183the common council may hereafter determine. Valentine’s Railroad Grants, 253-275.

In resolutions in respect to a railroad in Broadway, which never. became operative in consequence of the decision of the court of appeals in the case of Milhau v. Sharp (14 N. Y., 506), and because the powers granted by those resolutions were not confirmed by the legislature in the act of April 4, 1854, no portion of the road having been constructed, the grantees were to pay for ten years the annual license fee for each car now allowed by law, and after that such amount of license fee for further licenses as the corporation, with the permission of the legislature, shall then prescribe. Valentine’s Railroad Grants, 246.

In the Second Avenue Railroad resolution no provision as to license fees is contained. See Valentine’s Railroad Grants, 173.

The resolutions above referred to appear to have been the only ones in force relating to street railways, which were passed prior to the adoption of the resolution relating to the Third Avenue Railroad, under which this action was brought.

It would thus appear that although both parties to the grant intended that an annual license fee should be paid by each car, and supposed that such fee had been fixed by law, there was in point of fact, at the time of the grant, no provision of law regulating specifically the license fees to be paid by the street cars.

Are we not, then, under the decisions above referred to, authorized and obliged to look at extrinsic circumstances,in order to ascertain what was the annual license fee which was in contemplation by the parties to the grant ? I think that such must be the result of a full consideration of this subject. It is well settled that any ambiguities in a grant of privileges must operate against the grantees and in favor of the public. See Gildart v. Gladstone (11 East., 685); Stourbridge Canal Co. v. Wheeley (2 B. &. Ad., 792); Fertilizing Co. v. Hyde Park (97 U. S., 659); Newtown v. The Commissioners (100 id., 561); Hartford Bridge Co. v. Union F. Co. (29 Conn., 210); Langdon v. The Mayor, etc. (93 N. Y., 129); Auburn & Cato Pl'k R. v. Douglass (9 id., 448); and other cases cited in the brief of the corporation counsel.

Now, it appears from the testimony in the case, that at the time of the passage of the resolution under consideration, there were stages or omnibuses which were engaged in the transportation of passengers for compensation, between points which corresponded very nearly with the route described in the resolutions. It also appears that those routes were definite and distinct, and that those vehicles each paid an annual license fee to the plaintiffs, under an [184]*184ordinance which had been in force since 1839. (See Revised Ordinances of 1845, p. 470.) That ordinance provided that for every accommodation coach or stage, or stage coach, which a person was authorized by the mayor to keep; there should be paid, when the same were drawn by four horses, the sum of thirty dollars, and twenty dollars when drawn by two horses, and a half of those prices respectively, when the tire of any accommodation coach or carriage authorized by the act should be the width of four inches or upward. I am of the opinion that it was the license fee provided for by this ordinance which the city and its grantees liad reference, when the one granted and the other accepted the franchises and privileges conferred by the resolutions.

Criticism was made on the trial and in the brief subsequently filed by the learned-counsel for the defendants upon the fact that street cars had never been designated, as stages or stage coaches, or accommodation coaches, or omnibuses in this city, but I do not regard that criticism as of force, for the -reason that such coaches or • stages are the only vehicles plying for hire which correspond, in the general features of their traffic and route, with the street cars; and also because, as already stated, both parties to the grant intended that the license fee should be paid, and then reference to such fee as being already established by law indicates to my mind that they meant the fee then paid by vehicles plying between fixed points and on definite routes for the transportation of passengers. Besides, we have authorities to the effect that street cars are either omnibuses or vehicles in the nature of omnibuses. The Frankfort and Phila. Pass. R’y Co. v. The City of Philadelphia (58 Pa. St. Rep., 119); see, also, Hoyt v. Sixth Avenue R. R. Co. (1 Daly, 535), in which Chief Justice Daly says that “A street railroad is a mere omnibus on rails.”

I do not regard the cases of Hegan v. Eighth Avenue R. R. Co. (15 N. Y., 380), and Whitaker v. Same (51 id., 295), as in conflict with the views above expressed.

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Related

Fertilizing Co. v. Hyde Park
97 U.S. 659 (Supreme Court, 1878)
Langdon v. . Mayor, Etc., of City of N.Y.
93 N.Y. 129 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Hegan v. . Eighth Avenue Railroad Company
15 N.Y. 380 (New York Court of Appeals, 1857)
Davis v. . the Mayor, C., of New-York
14 N.Y. 506 (New York Court of Appeals, 1856)
Mayor v. . Third Avenue Railroad Co.
33 N.Y. 42 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Mayor of New York v. Second Avenue Railroad
32 N.Y. 261 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Hudson Iron Co. v. . Alger
54 N.Y. 173 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Smith v. Helmer
7 Barb. 416 (New York Supreme Court, 1849)
American Life Insurance and Trust Company v. Van Eps
11 N.Y. 601 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Mayor of New York v. Broadway & Seventh Avenue Railroad
97 N.Y. 275 (New York Court of Appeals, 1884)
Mohawk Bridge Co. v. Utica & Schenectady Rail Road
6 Paige Ch. 554 (New York Court of Chancery, 1837)
Hoyt v. Sixth Avenue Railroad
1 Daly 528 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1848)
Hartford Bridge Co. v. Union Ferry Co.
29 Conn. 210 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1860)

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. St. Rep. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-new-york-v-third-avenue-railroad-nysupct-1886.