McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission

88 Misc. 148, 150 N.Y.S. 850
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 148 (McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission) 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
McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission, 88 Misc. 148, 150 N.Y.S. 850 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

This is a suit in equity brought by the plaintiff, as a taxpayer of the city of Buffalo, to have declared illegal and invalid a contract for certain terminal improvements entered into on the 6th day of September, 1913, between the commissioners of the terminal station commission of Buffalo and the railroad companies named above as parties defendant.

There are no allegations in the complaint of fraud, collusion or bad faith, but the plaintiff predicates his case upon allegations that the commissioners exceeded the authority and powers vested in them, in executing the contract in question, and were, therefore, engaged in doing unlawful official acts within the meaning of the statute authorizing the maintenance of a taxpayer’s action.

The terminal station commission of Buffalo was created by an act of the legislature passed July 28, 1911, and known as chapter 842 of the Laws of 1911.

The constitutionality of the act was directly attacked in the case of People ex rel. Simon v. Bradley, which was carried to the Court of Appeals. The constitutionality of the act was there sustained. The opinion of the court rendered on the decision of the case is found under the title of People ex rel. Simon v. Bradley, 207 N. Y. 592. Judge Chase, on rendering the prevailing opinion of the court, very accurately described the general situation which led to the passage of this act in the following language (pages 608-9): “In considering that question we may take judicial notice of the location, size and commercial importance of the city of Buffalo. It is conceded that a large num[151]*151ber of important trunk-line railroads terminate in or pass through the city, and each has passenger and freight depots and accompanying terminal tracks, sidings and switches within its boundaries. There are several hundred miles of railroad tracks in its streets at grade. The enormous amount of passenger and freight business within the city arises not alone from its large population, but from its being a central point in railroad transportation and the eastern terminal of navigation on the Great Lakes. The extent of the transportation business centered in the city makes the questions relating to grade crossings and terminal and depot facilities therein of great municipal and public importance. In determining such questions the conflicts that arise among public officers or bodies required to act thereon; groups of owners of real property situated in different sections of the city and the several railroad and navigation corporations having independent and special interests involved, make it important that adequate authority and control shall rest in some one body of men to determine and enforce plans by which the use of the city streets by railroads at grade shall be avoided and the handling of passengers and freight in the municipal and public interest shall be promoted.”

The Lackawanna railroad has, for many years past, • crossed Michigan street between Elk and Ohio streets, with two tracks overhead. These tracks are continued westerly and reach Ohio street, which runs in an easterly and westerly direction, between Mississippi and Liberty streets. The tracks continue westerly through Ohio street, first on an embankment and then at grade along Ohio street across Illinois street, Love alley, Indiana, Washington and Main streets, to a small and incommodious passenger station on the westerly side of Main street. A retaining wall built in Ohio street [152]*152on the southerly side of the main tracks of the Lackawanna, for a distance of about four hundred feet from the westerly line of Liberty street to a point about seventy-five feet east of Illinois street, narrows the usable part of Ohio street between Illinois and Mississippi streets to about thirty feet.

In addition to the two tracks in Ohio street which we have mentioned, there is also a siding on the soutli side of the main tracks from the center of Washington to the westerly side of Liberty street. In the block between Main and Washington streets, switches or sidings are given off from the main tracks, which cross Main street at grade, so there are five tracks at grade across Main street at this point. Along the Buffalo river, between Main street and Commercial slip, the Lackawanna has a large and busy freight house, with tracks at grade through Prime street, and across West Perry, Hanover and Lloyd streets, and one track across Commercial street on an embankment in the street, and a little farther to the west at the entrance to the Buffalo river, where the railroad has an important coal trestle and where the coal handled each season amounts to about a million and a half tons. All the business to and from the passenger station, the lake freight house and to the coal trestle now crosses Main street at grade.

This being the general situation, the state public service commission made the matter the subject of official investigation,' and conducted a proceeding instituted by itself with a view of removing the dangers at the foot of Main street. Public hearings were had. In December, 1910, the president of the Lackawanna railroad submitted to the mayor of the city of Buffalo a plan for treatment of the entire situation. This plan was introduced .in evidence on the trial of this case, and is practically the plan subsequently adopted by [153]*153the terminal commission, saving certain concessions to the city by the railroad. The public service commission passed upon the plan submitted to the mayor, and on the 14th of December, 1910, in a communication dated that day, signed by all the commissioners, stated that no site was available for the Lackawanna, except near the foot of Main street or on the outskirts of the city; that the land west of Main street was inadequate for the construction of a proper and adequate station building, and of adequate tracks, and that it was necessary, therefore, that the construction of the station be east of Main street; that the area east of Main street was inadequate without the closing or alteration of streets; that the plan of the station building proposed was approved as according with the dignity and importance of the traffic carried on, and the community served; that necessity seemed to require that one track remain at grade across Main street.

On the 28th of July, 1911, the Terminal Station Act became a law. Litigation followed to test the constitutionality of the act, as above stated. After its constitutionality had been established, the terminal station commission, after careful consideration, and on December 16, 1911, gave notice that it proposed to adopt a plan relating to the Lackawanna situation, and gave notice of a public hearing as provided by section 3 of the act. On that hearing, the plaintiff appeared by counsel, proposed a plan or plans in the place of those suggested by the commission, and gave testimony touching their advisability and feasibility.

After such hearing, and after consideration of the matter, and on September 6, 1913, the terminal commission adopted the plan and entered into the contract now attacked.

By the plan and contract adequate terminal facilities [154]*154are provided for the railroad company, and at the same time substantially all the tracks at grade are abolished by carrying the railroad of the defendant corporation over the streets at an elevation. There are certain exceptions to this which will be noted later in the opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 148, 150 N.Y.S. 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccutcheon-v-terminal-station-commission-nysupct-1914.