People on relation of New York Electrical Lines Co. v. Squires

1 N.Y. St. Rep. 633
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 10, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 633 (People on relation of New York Electrical Lines Co. v. Squires) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People on relation of New York Electrical Lines Co. v. Squires, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 633 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The relator is a domestic corporation organized under chapter 265 of the Laws of 1848, as amended, 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, avenues and public highways of the cities of New York and Brooklyn, in the state of New York.

In the month of April, 1883, the relator obtained from the common council of the city of New York, permission to lay its wires or other conductors of electricity in and through the streets, avenues and highways of said city, and to make connections with such wires or conductors underground by means of the necessary vaults, test boxes and distributing conduits. This permission was granted pursuant to chapter 397 of the Laws of 1879, as amended by the Laws of 1881, chapter 483, which provides that a company or companies organized or incorporated under the laws of this state for the purpose of owning, constructing, using and maintaining a line or lines of electric telegraph within this state, or partly within or partly beyond the Emits of this state, are authorized from time to time to construct and lay Enes of electrical conductors under ground in any city, viEage or town within the Emits of this state, subject to all the provisions of law in reference to such companies not inconsistent with this act, provided that such company shaU, before laying any such Ene in any city, viEage or town of this state, first obtain from the common council of cities, the trustees of viUages or the commissioners of highways of towns, permission to use the streets within such city, viEage or town, for the purposes therein set forth. The said relator accepted such privEeges upon the conditions and terms imposed by the common council in writing the same.

In June, 1884 (Laws of 1884, chapter 534), an act in relation to telegraph and electric Eght companies in the cities of this state was passed, which directed that all telegraph, telephonic and electric light wires and cables used in any incorporated city of this state having a population of five ' hundred thousand or over, should thereafter be placed under the surface of the streets, lanes and avenues of said city, and requiring the same to be removed from the sur[635]*635face of the streets or avenues before the first day of ¡November, 1885, and in case of failure, to comply with the provisions ol the act within the time specified, the local governments of said cities were directed to remove, without delay, ah telegraph, electric light and such other wires, cables and poles, wherever found above ground, within the Corporate hmits of their respective cities.

In June, 1885, an act, providing for placing electrical conductors under ground in cities of this state, and for commissioners of electrical subways, was passed by the legislature, which required that within twenty days after the passage of this act, in any city of the state having a population exceeding five hundred thousand and less than one million, the mayor of such city is authorized and directed to appoint, and in cities having a population exceeding one million, the mayor, comptroher and commissioner of pubhc works, are authorized and directed to appoint three disinterested persons to be a board of commissioners of electrical subways. Said board is charged with the responsibihty of enforcing the provisions of the act of June 14, 1884, above mentioned, as amended; and said act was thereby amended and made to conform in ah respects to the provisions of this act. It was made the duty of said board to cause to be removed from the surface and put, maintain and operate under ground whenever practical, ah electrical wires or cables used or to be used in the business of any such company, in any street or avenue, in any such city, so as to enable and require ah duly authorized companies operating or intending to operate electrical conductors in the streets or avenues of any such city as is or shah be affected by the provisions of said act, to transact their business with underground conductors whenever practicable.

Section 3 of said act provides that when any; company operating or intending to operate electrical conductors in any such city, shall desire or be required to place its conductors or any of them under ground in any of the streets, avenues or highways of such city; it shall be obligatory upon such company to file with the said board of commissioners a map or maps made to scale, showing the streets or avenues or other highways which are desired to be used for such purpose, and a general location, dimensions and costs of the underground conduits desired to be constructed. Before any such conduits shall be constructed, it shall be necessary to obtain the approval by said board of such plans of construction so proposed by such company; and said board has and shall have power to require that the work of removal or constructing every such system of underground conductors shall be done according to such so approved.

Section 4 provides that it shall be the duty of the said board to carefully investigate any and all methods proposed by any such company for electric lighting or electrical communication by the use of conductors along or across any street, avenue or any other highway in said city; and, before approving of any such method, the board of commissioners shall require that so far as practicable, all such conductors when constructed shall be under ground. The section further provides that in case no suitable plan is proposed or in use, within sixty days after the passage of the act, it shall be the duty of such board to cause to [636]*636le devised and made ready for use such a general plan as will meet the requirements of said act, and of this act, and that the board shall have full authority to compel all companies operating electric wires to use such subway so prepared in accordance with the provisions of this act.

The relator has made application to the commissioner of public works for leave to make excavations in the streets of this city, so as to construct its line of subterranean electrical wires. The commissioner of public works has refused such permission on the ground that the plan of the relator has not been approved by the board of subway commissioners in accordance with section 3 of the act" of June, 1885. The relator claims the right to such permit under the franchise granted to it by the common council in 1883, and contends:

First. That chapter 499 of the Laws of 1885 does not, apply to it, because it has never operated or never intends, to operate electric wires; that the purpose of the relator is to lease its wires and not to operate them.

Second. That chapter 499 of the Laws of 1885, if applicacable to the relator, would be unconstitutional, as impairing-the obligation of contracts.

Third. That said chapter is unconstitutional, because it is a local bill embracing more than one subject.

Fourth. That it is unconstitutional, because it enacts that an existing law shall be applicable, and is not inserted in it.

Fifth. That said act is unconstitutional, because it compels the telegraph companies to pay the expenses of the subway commission and the expense of constructing the subways the said commission may build.

It is my opinion that chapter 499 of the Laws of 1885 applies to the relator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. St. Rep. 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-on-relation-of-new-york-electrical-lines-co-v-squires-nyctcompl-1886.