Norris v. Wurster

23 A.D. 124, 48 N.Y.S. 656
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 23 A.D. 124 (Norris v. Wurster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norris v. Wurster, 23 A.D. 124, 48 N.Y.S. 656 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

This is a taxpayer’s action instituted to restrain the defendant Wurster, as mayor of the city of .Brooklyn, from approving, and twenty-eight other defendants, constituting the board of aldermen of the said city, from passing over the mayor’s veto, if he should exercise that power, two certain resolutions already passed by such board, granting to the other defendants, the East River and Atlantic Ocean Railroad Company and the Nassau Electric Railroad Company, the consent of the common council to the construction, use and operation of a railroad in certain streets of the city for a period exceeding twenty-five years.

The complaint alleges that on February 3, 1896, an application was made to the board of aldermen by the East River road praying that the common council would grant consent to said company to the building and operation of a double-track street surface road upon an unusually large number of streets, and for fourteen different routes, many miles in extent, and that another application of the Nassau road -was presented on the same day, of a somewhat more modest character and relating to one route only. Both applications were referred to the standing committee on railroads, which was appointed at the organization of the board in January, 1896, and consisted of .Aldermen Francisco, Ilaubert, Wassmuth, Thompson, Myers, Hennessy and Guilfoyle. This committee had hearings on the subject on February 27, March 13 and 30,'and on April 10, 1896, and at no subsequent time. But at the time of the. customary organizátion of the board in January, 1897, the membership of this committee was changed. Francisco and Haubert ceased to be members, and their places were.filled by Aldermen Taylor and Dunne, so that the personality of the committee was materially altered. For some unexplained reason the matter slumbered in the-committee room during the remainder, of the year 1896, and until November 29, 189-7, when the new committee, without any public notice of its intention, made a report in favor of granting the application. There is nothing in the record to show that any public hearing was held before this new railroad committee, or any deliberation had thereon by the committee, public or otherwise, except such as may be derived from the fact that the new committee recommended the giving of the consent.

[126]*126It becomes necessary to refer to the changes which had taken place meanwhile in the condition of the city as affected by new legislation. The act consolidating the territory of the so-called Greater New York (Laws, of 1896, chap. 488) became a law on May 11, 1896; the charter of the new municipality (Laws of 1897, chap. 378) was passed by the Legislature in May, 1897, and later the act providing for the election of the officers of the new city, under which the new officers were elected in November. The official term of the aldermen was near its end, and they had but a single month within which to exercise their functions, when suddenly, and on November 29, 1897, nearly twenty-two months after the original application, and after the passage of the new charter, after the election of the officers for the new municipality, and in the dying hours of the board of aldermen, the sleeping project was aroused from its slumbers.' On that day the new committee made a report to the board, recommending the granting of a consent to the defendant, .the East River and Atlantic Ocean Railroad Company, and submitting resolutions giving such consent, and the board, on the same day, passed a resolution granting such consent by a vote of seventeen' to five.

It is needless to say that the public and any taxpayer might well be startled by the gigantic proportions of the franchise thus suddenly consented to, and, so far as the record discloses, without immediate previous notice to the public, or any other notice except that,, as the resolutions state, early in the year 1896 a notice was published 'in' two Brooklyn newspapers of the time when a hearing would take place before the committee. It is clear that no public action was taken by the committee from April, 1896, till November, 1897.

• The answer of the mayor alleges his intention to veto the resolution, and it was stated on the argument that lie had done so. The corporation counsel of the city appearing for the mayor; in his brief and in his oral argument, expressed his conviction that the injunction, should be continued pendente lite.

The consent was, on its face, in perpetuity and not for twenty-five years. The only benefit- derived by the city and its citizens was that the consent required the company to sell six tickets for .twenty-five cents and pay the city three per cent of the gross receipts. The complaint alleges that the value of the franchise is [127]*127$1,000,000, and while some of the answers deny that this is a true estimate it is conservative to say that the conditions of payment attached to the consent to such a valuable franchise were not exorbitant. It is unnecessary to say that the consent of the board to a franchise of such generous proportions required the most careful deliberation and consideration by a body to' which the public had confided the protection of its interests, and should have been open to public attention, and that the court is called upon to review this action with scrutiny and a careful regard for the public interests.

Some of the questions involved in this appeal have already been passed upon by the learned Appellate Division of the first department in the case of Gusthal v. Strong (post, p. 315); and even if we did not agree with its conclusions we should hesitate very long before differing therefrom. But we see no reason for any difference. We agree with its conclusion that it was the intention of the new charter that after its passage “ the granting of any franchises, except such as are mentioned in that section (§ 73), within the territory of the greater city of New York, is forbidden.” Section 73 forbids the granting of any franchise to any person or corporation for a longer period than twenty-five years, with certain provisions for renewal, to which it is unnecessary to refer. The consent before us is unlimited in its term, and consequently for a period in excess Of twenty-five years; and, adopting the conclusion of the court in the Gusthal case, we hold that such a consent is unauthorized and illegal.. A similar result has been reached by Judge Lacombe of the United States Circuit Court, in the case of Seccomb v. Wurster & Others, based ujion similar allegations, in a very learned and elaborate opinion, in which he holds that an injunction should issue' to restrain the grant of a franchise for more than twenty-five years.

If it were necessary further to refer to the new charter we might say that it is hardly to be expected that an instrument of such great extent and importance would be perfect and beyond criticism. The days of miracles and inspiration seem to have passed from the pages of history, and we may look only for reasonable accuracy in the expression of legislative intent in legislative acts. We think the intent of the charter referred to is sufficiently apparent from the scheme of the entire instrument.

[128]*128But the learned counsel for the defendants, other than the defendant Wurster, insists that in granting the consent the board was performing a legislative act; and is in that respect a branch of the government co-ordinate with the court, and that, consequently, this court has no power to arrest the execution of these acts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.D. 124, 48 N.Y.S. 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-wurster-nyappdiv-1897.