People v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co.

22 N.E. 1026, 117 N.Y. 150, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 153, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1419
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 1026 (People v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 22 N.E. 1026, 117 N.Y. 150, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 153, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1419 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The judgment of the court below directs the defendant in this action to remove a shed or structure, which it had erected upon a pier in the East river in the city of New York ; and further restrains the defendant from continuing to use the shed, or from placing upon that pier any structure which would be calculated to interfere with the free use of it by the public.

*154 The defendant is a foreign railroad corporation, having a terminus at the port of New York, and through its own and connecting lines of railroad, as we are informed by the record, carries on the business of transporting freight and passengers between the city of New York and the principal commercial centres of the United States. For the needs, as well as in furtherance, possibly, of its business, it acquired, in August, 1886, by lease from the owners thereof, the Bast river pier in question, and immediately thereafter applied to and obtained from the Department of Docks of the City of New York the permission to construct a shed upon it. Under that license the railroad company commenced and had nearly completed the erection of a shed suitable for its purposes of receiving and discharging merchandise which was brought there, or was carried to and from its railroad by means of steamers, or other vessels. This action was then brought, in the name of the people, by the attorney general, upon the solicitation of private persons engaged in business in the vicinity of the pier, and who conceived themselves to be aggrieved., or their interests to be damaged by the defendant’s enclosure of the pier. The action proceeded upon the theory that the company could not lawfully erect the shed in question and thereby secure the exclusive possession and use of the pier for its corporate purposes, and the judgment which the people obtained sustained and was founded upon that theory.

The action in effect treated the license of the dock department as without authority in law, and hence conferring no right upon the company to avail itself of its terms. The point was made that the case was brought within the inhibition of § 773 of the consolidation act. The provisions of that section were enacted in chapter 435 of the laws of 1888, and that was an act in amendment of the third section of chapter 249 of the laws of 1875, poprdarly known as the “ Shed act.” It was entitled “An act to regulate the use of slips, wharves and piers in the city of New York,” and it provided that “ whenever any person, company or corporation engaged in the business of steam transportation shall be the owner or lessee of any pier or bulkhead in the. city of New York, and shall use and employ the same for the purpose of regularly receiving and discharging cargo thereat, it shall be lawful for such owner or lessee to erect and maintain upon such pier or bulkhead sheds for the protection of property so received and discharged; provided they shall have obtained from the department of docks, in said city, a license or authority to erect or maintain the same, and subject to the conditions and restrictions contained in such license or authority.” The act further legalized existing structures which may have been put up under such a license from the department. The inhibition referred to as contained within the provisions of the act of 1888 was found in its amendment of the third section of the act of 1875. The following is the provision, or so much of it as becomes material to our consideration, viz.: “It shall not be lawful to interfere with the free public use as now enjoyed * * * of any wharf or pier * * * in the navigable waters of the East river, in the city of New York, which has here *155 tofore been used for the loading and discharging of sailing vessels regularly employed in foreign commerce, and having a draft of more than eighteen feet of water, and the provisions of this act shall not apply to any such wharf or pier * * *

The passage of chapter 249 of the Laws of 1875 was due to the alarm occasioned in the minds of the occupants of wharves, bulkheads, piers, etc., by the knowledge that the sheds with which they covered these properties were unlawful structures. This knowledge was generally brought home to the community by a decision of the supreme court, at general term, in the first judicial department in 1873.

In the case of People v. Mallory, 46 How. Pr., 281, that court had pronounced a permit issued by the commissioners of the dock department to the defendant to erect a shed on an East river pier to have been without lawful authority in those officers to grant. Such structures were held to be in violation of the existing laws, and in the case of Kingsland v. Mayor, etc., 110 N. Y., 569; 18 N. Y. State Rep., 701, we have recently approved of the conclusion which the court reached in People v. Mallory. But through the enactment of chapter 249 of the Laws of 1875 the dock department became possessed of the authority which it previously lacked, and the many instances of its exercise of a supposed authority were ratified and legalized. Its permission to shed the piers had not been a protection to parties as against the public, for the reason that the power to withdraw from the public use what was, in legal contemplation, a public highway, had not been delegated to it. Such a power could only reside in, and proceed from, the people of the state, who, in their right of sovereignty, possess the original and ultimate property in and to all lands and to the navigable waters within the jurisdiction of the state.

The right to exercise the sovereign power of the people was vested in the legislative body, whose acts are supreme when confined within the limits fixed by the constitution of the state. An eminent domain over all property in the state is an incident of the sovereign power. Where its exercise affects the property of the private citizen, it is restricted by the constitution only in the feature that compensation must be made for its taking. The right of the state to take the property, however, is an absolute and inherent one. It is an attribute of political sovereignty, and the constitutional provision only operates upon the mode of exercise of the right. If an exercise of this power, as, for instance, as in this case, by permitting a use and an appropriation of a public pier to some other, or quasi private use, in the way proposed by this defendant, affects some existing or natural right of the public to the use of a highway, I cannot find in the organic law of the state, nor can I find upon principle any restriction upon the legislative act, other than that its action shall be in the direction of public utility.

It seems to me self-evident as a proposition that the sovereign power, subject to the restrictions interposed by the fundamental law, may be exercised with respect to the puÚic, as well as the *156 private rights of citizens. That seems to follow logically as the necessary understanding of the governed, of the scope and design of the political dominion of the state, and it finds reason and support in the principle underlying all forms of government, that for ends of the public utility and good all other ends should yield.

It is said, in this case, that the use of the pier, being a public or natural highway, was in the people as jus

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 1026, 117 N.Y. 150, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 153, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-baltimore-ohio-r-r-co-ny-1889.