People ex rel. Delaware & Hudson Co v. Stevens

134 A.D. 99, 118 N.Y.S. 969, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2787
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 134 A.D. 99 (People ex rel. Delaware & Hudson Co v. Stevens) 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
People ex rel. Delaware & Hudson Co v. Stevens, 134 A.D. 99, 118 N.Y.S. 969, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2787 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Kellogg, J.:

We are safe in saying, from the opinions of the Commissioners and the brief of their counsel, that the principal reason for the refusal of the consent and authority of the Commission was the fact that the mortgage in question covers only the railroad property and not the coal lands and the trolley properties or the securities representing them.

By section 40 of the Stock Corporation Law, which was in full force when the original indebtedness now sought to be refunded was incurred, a stock corporation may purchase, hold and dispose of stocks, bonds and other evidence of indebtedness of another corporation engaged in a business similar to its own. In a litigation between the relator and one of the subsidiary companies of the Hudson Valley Kail way Company it was determined that the relator must join in a connection of its tracks with those of the electric road for the interchange of business. (Matter of Stillwater & M. St. R. Co., 171 N. Y. 589.) By the decision of this court in Hudson Valley R. Co. v. Boston & Maine Railroad (106 App. Div. 375). it was held that the steam road must interchange cars and freight with the electric road. It cannot, therefore, well be denied that the relator, the Hudson Valley Company and the United Traction Company were engaged in similar businesses. Whether we consider the notes in question as given for the Hudson Valley securities or for the United Traction Company stock, it must be deemed that the notes represented a valid debt incurred [102]*102for a lawful purpose of the relator. The relator in borrowing money upon its notes to lend its subsidiary companies to buy coal lands, and receiving therefor the certificate of indebtedness of such companies, was, in effect, purchasing evidences of indebtedness of corporations engaged in a business similar to its own, the relator being a coal company as well as a railroad company. These notes, assuming the transactions honest and the purchases bóna fide, were obligations incurred for the lawful purposes of the relator. To issue bonds in good faith to refund a Iona fide debt is a right the relator has, and the Legislature, if it has the power so to do, never has attempted to prevent the exercise of that right. We cannot assume that the coal lands are to be used in such a manner as to meet the condemnation of the commodities clause of the Hepburn Act, as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Delaware & Hudson Co. (213 U. S. 360). The presumption is that the coal lands will be used in a legal way. The coal may be sold in good faith before shipment.

The relator and the Commission join issue as to the power of the Commission. The relator contends that the Commission is of quite limited jurisdiction in the premises; that the statute itself has defined in what cases and for what purposes a railroad corporation may issue its bonds and securities; that the Commission is a statutory board whose duty in this case is solely to determine whether the proposed issues are to be made. and marketed in good faith for necessary corporate purposes as defined by the statute; that it appears conclusively that the bonds desired are for the refunding, on au equitable basis, of obligations which existed against the company before the Public Service Commissions Law was passed, and for a purpose directly permitted by the statute, and that, therefore, the consent of the Commission must follow. The Commission feels that although the indebtedness was honestly incurred before the Public Service Commissions Law went into effect, and for a purpose mentioned in the statute as one for which bonds and mortgages may issue, nevertheless that it has a discretionary power to say whether such issue shall be permitted, and if permitted, upon what part of the property of the corporation the security shall rest.

If we adopt the construction contended for by the relator, the validity of the statute is plain beyond question; for when there is [103]*103a statutory or common-law duty resting upon a corporation, the Legislature may vest in a commission the power to see that the corporation acts within such duty. (Village of Saratoga Springs v. Saratoga Gas, etc., Co., 191 N. Y. 123.) In such cases the statute gives the measure by which the conduct of the corporation is to be gouged and within the bounds of which it is to be kept. The powers of the Commission are merely executive or administrative. If, however, the judgment and discretión of the Commission is the measure of the duties of the corporation, a more serious question arises. Then the Commission is not to determine whether the corporation is keeping within the law, and to make proper regulations to compel it to observe the law, but is in itself laying down new laws by which the corporation must be governed. It is enforcing its will, its law, and not the law of the State.

A Minnesota statute which required the consent of its Commission for an increase of capital stock, but gave no measure by which it could be determined when a corporation might or might not increase its stock, was held invalid as leaving it to the discretion and will of the Commission to determine what issues of stock were proper and what issues were improper. (State of Minnesota v. Great Northern Railway Co., 100 Minn, 455.) As said by Mr. Justice Brewer, for a unanimous court, in Interstate Commerce Comm. v. Chicago G. W. Ry. (209 U. S. 108, 118): “It must be remembered that railroads are the private property of their owners; that while from the public character of the work in which they are engaged the public has the power to prescribe rules for securing faithful and efficient service and equality between shippers and communities, yet in no proper sense is the public a general manager.”

The Commission stands in the place neither of the owner of the property nor of the Legislature, but is a board of public officers whose powers are to be found in the statute and are not to be implied or assumed. Section 3 of the charter of the relator, intrusting the management of its concerns to thirteen managers, repels rather than invites the construction that the officers of the State and not the officers of the corporation are to manage its business. At common law the duty devolves upon a common carrier, and those engaging in a similar public service, to furnish to the public a reasonable service at a reasonable price ; under the police power, legislation enacted for [104]*104the public health, the public welfare and the public safety, may impose additional duties upon persons and corporations, and may restrict rights which they otherwise might enjoy. Otherwise every person—and a corporation is- a person within the constitutional guaranty of protection to property and liberty — has the right to carry on his own business and manage his own property in his own way. Under its police power the Legislature may appoint a commission charged with the duty of seeing tiiat persons engaged in a public service shall observe the obligations to the public which have been imposed upon them either by the common law or by the statutes, and may adopt reasonable regulations tending to enforce upon such persons the observance of such laws.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A.D. 99, 118 N.Y.S. 969, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-delaware-hudson-co-v-stevens-nyappdiv-1909.