People v. The Hudson River Connecting Railroad

104 Misc. 19
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 104 Misc. 19 (People v. The Hudson River Connecting 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. The Hudson River Connecting Railroad, 104 Misc. 19 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Chester, J.

This action is brought to restrain the defendant from constructing a bridge across the Hudson river, other than a bridge with a single span with no piers or abutments between the dykes and with a clearance of not less than 135 feet above the mean level of the river, the claim on the part of the plaintiff being that the erection by the defendant of a bridge across such river with piers in the bed of the river resting upon lands under water belonging to the state will be a trespass upon such lands, and a public nuisance. The defendant has interposed an answer to the complaint containing denials of many of the allegations therein contained and also alleging two separate defenses. These defenses have each been demurred to by the plaintiff as being insufficient in law upon the face thereof. The sufficiency of these defenses may be considered together for substantially the same questions are presented with respect to each of them. For the purposes of the demurrer the allegations contained in each must be taken as true. Douglas v. Coonley, 156 N. Y. 521.

[22]*22From these allegations the facts hereinafter stated appear. The defendant was duly organized as a railroad corporation in the year 1913 under the laws of New York for the construction of a railroad about twenty-two miles in length, extending from a point of connection with the West Shore railroad near Feúra Bush, on the west side of the Pludson river in Albany county easterly and southerly to two points of connection on the east side of the Hudson river, one of which is on the Hudson division of the New York Central railroad near Stuyvesant, in Columbia county, and the other is on the Boston and Albany railroad near Post road, in Rensselaer county. The New York Central Railroad Company owns all of the outstanding capital stock of the defendant and is the lessee and operates both the Boston and Albany railroad and the West Shore railroad. The proposed new railroad of the defendant includes as an indispensable part thereof a bridge to be constructed across the Hudson river between a point, southerly of Castleton, in Columbia county on the east side of the river, and a point southerly of Selkirk in Albany county, on the westerly side of the river, together with the approaches thereto, and the object of such construction is the operation over such bridge and approaches of trains for transportation of persons and property between points in the states of New York and Massachusetts and points in other states of the United States and Canada and to effect the connection of said railroads in such manner as to avoid the long and steep grades which otherwise are encountered and traversed by trains in and around the city of Albany, and to relieve congestion which now is and otherwise will continue to be burdensome in the operation of trains through and in the vicinity of Albany by reason of the physical condi[23]*23tions prevailing in that locality. The operation of trains over such bridge will greatly reduce the cost of operation of trains and also the running time thereof.

The waters of the Hudson river are navigable from the city of New York to and above the city of Troy, including the waters at and in the vicinity of the proposed site of defendant’s bridge, and along a considerable portion of its course the said river constitutes and is the boundary between the states of New York and New Jersey. The waters of said river at and in the vicinity of the proposed site of such bridge and northerly and southerly therefrom are navigable waters under the paramount jurisdiction of the United States and whatever title to the bed of such river at and in the vicinity of the site of the said bridge in the state of New York, the defendant alleges, is subordinate and subject to the paramount right and authority of the United States conferred by the Federal Constitution, in the power to regulate commerce between the states and with foreign countries, to authorize, regulate and provide for the erection of structures both for the regulation and improvement of navigation of said river and as instrumentalities of interstate commerce as the congress of the United States may see fit to authorize and require.

By chapter 388 of the Laws of New York of 1913, which became a law with the approval of the governor, on April twenty-eighth of that year, the defendant was authorized to construct upon the line of its railroad a bridge for railroad purposes only across the Hudson river between Castleton and Schodaclc Landing together with the necessary viaducts and approaches and to maintain and operate the same. Said law prescribed that such bridge shall have a [24]*24clearance of not less than 135 feet above the mean level of the Hudson river and between upper Schodaek island and Shad island, that the span of said bridge shall be not less than 300 feet in length in the clear from pier to pier; that the plans for said bridge shall be subject to the approval of the secretary of war and that the construction of said bridge shall be commenced on or before the 1st day of May, 1914, and be completed within five years thereafter.

In reliance upon such law of New York the defendant alleges that it has expended upwards of $380,000 in providing plans for such bridge, in securing necessary rights of way, and in erecting such bridge according to plans approved by the secretary of war prior to June 1, 1917.

There was enacted by congress an act which was approved by the president on March 13, 1914, under which authority was granted to the defendant to construct, maintain and operate a bridge together with the necessary approaches thereto across the Hudson river, at a point suitable to the interests of navigation, between Castleton and Schodaek Landing, in accordance with the provisions of the act entitled ‘ an act to regulate the construction of bridges over navigable waters ’ approved March 23, 1906. ” The last named act prescribed that the construction of a bridge authorized by congress over navigable waters shall be commenced within one year and completed within three years from the date of the passage of the act authorizing such construction. Subsequently by an act of congress approved August 9, 1916, the time for the commencement and completion of defendant’s proposed bridge was extended to March 30, 1918, as to commencement and to March 30, 1920, as to the completion thereof. Pursuant to the acts of congress, the [25]*25defendant filed with the war department of the United States plans for the said bridge and thereupon made application to the secretary of war for the approval thereof and the defendant subsequently in lieu of the plans previously filed for the construction of such bridge and after public hearings before the engineering officer of the war department filed revised plans providing for a span of 600 feet from the center of the most westerly pier to the center of the middle pier and a span of 405 "feet from the center of the middle pier to the center of the easterly pier of said bridge, the present excavated channel being wholly -within the limits of the longer span. Thereafter said revised plans, with a recommendation for the approval thereof, were submitted to the secretary of war by the engineering officer, and by the chief of engineers of the department of war, whereupon the secretary of war held a public hearing on the question of his approval thereof.

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Related

People v. Hudson River Connecting Railroad
186 A.D. 602 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 Misc. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-the-hudson-river-connecting-railroad-nysupct-1918.