People v. Long Island Railroad

113 Misc. 700
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 Misc. 700 (People v. Long Island Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Long Island Railroad, 113 Misc. 700 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

This is an application for the granting of a temporary injunction restraining the defend[702]*702ants from increasing the rates of fare charged by them for the carriage of passengers, excess baggage and a certain class of freight. It comes here upon an order to show cause issued on the application of the attorney-general on behalf of the people of this state.

The ground for the relief asked is that the defendants propose to put in force rates higher than those allowed and approved by the laws of the state and the orders of the public service commission. The defendants set up an order of the interstate commerce commission as a defense and a ground for denying the relief asked.

The briefs and motion papers in this cause were submitted to the court on December eleventh, and, as the matter is of some importance to the public, as well as to the litigants, I have deemed that a prompt statement of my reasons for the conclusions which I have reached may not be without interest to them. I do not indulge myself in any illusions that certain views which will be expressed in this memorandum will have any weight in the ultimate determination of this litigation. I am compelled, however, to call attention to them because they seem of late to be forgotten or overlooked too frequently by law makers, and at times also by high judicial tribunals. Before taking up the matters referred to, I wish to speak of two objections which are made by the respondents and upon which they oppose this application.

First. The respondents urge that, unless the right be clear and certain, the injunction should not issue. While this is always true in respect of permanent injunctions, the rule is not the same in regard to interlocutory relief. It is an established rule of equity jurisprudence that when an application is made to the court for an injunction, pendente lite, if there appears to the court reason for believing from the papers suib[703]*703mitted, including sufficient averments in the complaint, that the plaintiff will be successful in the suit upon grounds which are cognizable in a court of equity, that court may, in its discretion, use the power of injunction to maintain the status quo until it can be determined, after a complete hearing of the cause, whether the plaintiff is, upon the facts to be ascertained, entitled to the relief sought, since, otherwise, the plaintiff, although he should ultimately prevail, might lose, pending the suit, rights or property to which he was found to be entitled but which could not later be restored by the decree. In other words, the object of a preliminary or interlocutory injunction is to prevent irreparable injury pending the final ascertainment of the right, but not to determine the right itself.

Secondly. The respondents urge, further, that this action is improperly begun by the attorney-general on behalf of the people. This suggestion may be said to embrace two inquiries:

(a) Can the people of the state maintain such an action?

(b) Can it be instituted on their behalf by the attorney-general ?

As to the first, I think it cannot be doubted that if the act of any person, artificial or natural, involves or may involve an unlawful invasion of the rights, privileges or immunities of all the inhabitants of the state, then the state, itself, may come into a court of equity for the purpose of preventing or restraining the wrong. I believe this to be true notwithstanding similar action may be taken by specific individuals, political subdivisions of the state, or boards of legislative creation claiming that special or peculiar injury will result to them if the unlawful acts be not prevented. The reason for this is plain. All power of government in the state is derived from the people them[704]*704selves. They have, from time to time, established written constitutions. These constitutions, unlike the federal Constitution, are not grants of power, but, on the contrary, are limitations “ of the powers, of the people themselves, self-imposed, by the constitutional compact. See People ex rel. Wood v. Draper, 15 N. Y. 528, a case which was applied in Oregon R., etc., Co. v. Campbell, 173 Fed. Repr. 957, 979, where it was held that a state was not precluded from regulating carriers and rates between points within the state. Judge Denio said in the text case, referring to the creation of police powers by an act claimed to be unconstitutional: “As a political society, the State has an interest in the repression of disorder, and the maintenance of peace and security in every locality in its limits.”

So here, the same principle applies to the regulation of rates of fare affecting the interests of all the people of the state, in so far as the state has power to control and has undertaken to fix those rates. Similar principles not infrequently have been applied in our state jurisprudence, as, for example, the right of the people to the use of the foreshore upon navigable waters (People v. Steeplechase Park Co., 218 N. Y. 459); the right of the people to the forest preserve (People v. Adirondack Bailway Co., 160 id. 225, 234) ; the right to secure the removal of a public officer (People v. Ahearn, 196 id. 221); the right to determine the amount of franchise tax to be paid by a corporation (People v. Albany Insurance Co., 92 id. 458); the right to enforce an alleged forfeiture of a railroad company’s charter (People v. Albany & Vermont R. R. Co., 77 id. 232; also People v. Atlantic Ave. R. R. Co., 125 id. 513); the right to determine whether a foreign corporation is “ doing business within this state ” (People v. American Bell Telephone Co., 117 id. 241) ; the right to restrain the completion of a pier and to [705]*705compel the removal of so much as had been erected (People v. New York & S.I. Ferry Co., 68 id. 71). In these and many other similar cases the courts have taken cognizance of the right of the people of the state, acting through their attorney-general, to sue directly to enforce rights belonging to all the people, as distinguished from that class of proceedings instituted by what are called “ state writs” sued out by individuals to enforce private rights or by public officers in actions or special proceedings to which the people are a party. As to the second inquiry as to the right of the attorney-general to institute the proceeding, I think there is no doubt of his power in the premises.

The attorney-general of this state was, under the first and second 'Constitutions of the state, an appointed officer, as he had been during the colonial period. Under the third Constitution (1846) and subsequently, the attorney-general has been an elected state officer. The office of attorney-general is of ancient origin and has always existed in the colony and state of New York. In People v. Kramer, 33 Misc. Rep. 213, it was said by Recorder Goff: It is unnecessary, with regard to the Attorney-General, to go back further than the organization of the State government in 1777. The office was then in existence as the Attorney-General of the colony, and was clothed with certain rights and powers derived from the common law. In People v. Miner, 2 Lans.

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Bluebook (online)
113 Misc. 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-long-island-railroad-nysupct-1920.