New York Electric Lines Co. v. Empire City Subway Co.

235 U.S. 179, 35 S. Ct. 72, 59 L. Ed. 184, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1012
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1914
Docket63
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 235 U.S. 179 (New York Electric Lines Co. v. Empire City Subway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Electric Lines Co. v. Empire City Subway Co., 235 U.S. 179, 35 S. Ct. 72, 59 L. Ed. 184, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1012 (1914).

Opinion

Ms. Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to review the denial by the state court of an application for a writ of peremptory mandamus directing the Empire City Subway. Company (Lim-' ited) to lease space in its conduits in the City of New York to the plaintiff in error.

In the year 1884, the legislature of the State of New York required that 'all telegraph, telephonic and electric light wires’ in certain cities — New York and Brooklyn— should be placed under the surface of the streets (Laws of 1884, chap. 534). Under the authority of a statute passed in the next year (Laws of 1885, chap. 499, amended by Laws of 1886, chap. 503), the Board of Commissioners of Electric Subways adopted a plan by which the City of New York should enter into a contract with a company to construct the necessary subways, etc., which other companies operating electrical wires should be compelled to use, paying therefor a reasonable rent. Under contracts, made accordingly and ratified by the legislature (Laws of 1887, chap. 716), subways, etc., were constructed by the Consolidated Telegraph & Electrical Subway Company. The board first-mentioned was succeeded by the Board of Eleqtrical Control (Laws of 1887, chap. 716); and, in 1890, the subways, conduits and ducts for low tension conductors, which had been thus provided, were transferred . to the Empire City Subway Company (Limited),- the de *186 fendant in error. The latter company, by contract with the Board and the City, made in 1891 under legislative authority (Laws of 1891, chap. 231), agreed to build, maintain and operate subways, etc., as specified — it being provided that spaces' therein, upon application, should be leased 'to any company or corporation having lawful power to operate telegraph or telephone conductors in any street’in the City of New York.

• The plaintiff in error, The New York Electric Lines Company, claiming to be entitled to space in these subways, made application therefor on or about June .10,1910. The request was refused and the present proceeding for a peremptory mandamus was brought. The assertion of right rested upon a permission granted by the City of New York, through its Common Council, to the plaintiff in error, on April 10, 1883, to lay electrical conductors, in the City’s streets. This permission, the City by its Board of Estimate and Apportionment, which had succeeded to the powers of the former Common Council in the matter, had formally revoked by a resolution adopted on May 11, 1906, reciting .that whatever rights the company had secured under the permission in question had long since been forfeited by non-user. The Court of Appeals of the State, holding that the Board of Estimate anjl Apportionment had this power of revocation,- and' had duly exercised it, affirmed an order refusing the writ of mandamus. Matter of New York Electric Lines Co., 201 N. Y. 321. The plaintiff in error insists that the resolution thus sustained was an unconstitutional impairment of the obligation of its contract with the City.

We think that it sufficiently appears that this question was raised in the state court, and as the state court gave effect to the repealing resolution the case is properly here. It is therefore the duty of this.court to.determine for itself whether a contract existed and whether its obligation has been impaired. Douglas v. Kentucky, 168 U. S. 488, 502; *187 St. Paul Gas Light Co. v. St. Paul, 181 U. S. 142, 148; Grand Trunk Western Ry. Co. v. South Bend, 227 U. S. 544, 551; Atlantic Coast Line v. Goldsboro, 232 U. S. 548, 556; Louisiana Railway & Navigation Co. v. New Orleans, decided this day, ante, p. 164.

The plaintiff in error was incorporated in the year 1882, under a general law of the State of New York (Laws of 1848, chap. 265, as amended by Laws of 1853, chap. 471). Its certificate of incorporation stated, among other things, that it was incorporated for the purpose of ‘ owning, constructing, using, maintaining and leasing lines of telegraph wires or other electric conductors for telegraphic and telephonic communication and for electric illumination, to be placed under the pavements of the streets ... of the Cities.of New York and Brooklyn’ and ‘for the purpose of owning franchises for laying and operating the said lines of electric conductors.’ Chapter 483 of the Laws of 1881 had authorized any company so incorporated ‘to construct and lay lines of electrical conductors underground in any city,’ provided that it ‘first obtain from the common council’of such city the ‘permission to use the streets’ for the purposes set forth. The permission in question, which as already stated, was granted by the Common Council of the City of New York, on April 10, 1883, was (omitting parts not here material) as follows:

“Resolved, that permission be and hereby is granted to the New York Electric Lines Company, to lay wires or other conductors of electricity in and through the streets, avenues and highways of New York City and to make connections of such wires or conductors underground by means of the necessary vaults, test boxes and distributing conduits, and thence above ground with points of electric illuminations or of telegraphic or telephonic signals in accordance with the provisions of an ordinance . . . approved . . . December 14, 1878.”

It was also resolved that the Company should not *188 'transfer or dispose of the franchise hereby granted without the further authority of the Common Council.’

On April 24, 1883, the plaintiff in error presented to the Common Council, and the latter spread upon its minutes, a formal acceptance of the permission, which after the recitals states:

''Now, therefore, the said New York Electric Lines Company by these presents accepts the said franchise as contained in the ordinance and resolutions'adopted by the Honorable the Board of Aldermen, April 10, 1883, and agrees to, assumes and obligates itself in the observance of all the requirements, provisions, restrictions, conditions and limitations contained in the said last mentioned ordinance as adopted April 10, 1883, as well also as to the provisions, conditions and obligations of the said general ordinance approved by the Mayor December 14, 1878.”

The ordinance of 1878, referred to, -regulated the method of laying wires under the streets, and provided that within six months after the grant of permission, grantees should file with the County Clerk 'maps, diagrams and tabular statements indicating the amount and position of the spaces proposed to be occupied by them.’ In May, 1883, the plaintiff in error, in asserted compliance with the ordinance, filed a map, diagrams and statement.

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Bluebook (online)
235 U.S. 179, 35 S. Ct. 72, 59 L. Ed. 184, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-electric-lines-co-v-empire-city-subway-co-scotus-1914.