People v. Ulster & Delaware Railroad

128 N.Y. 240
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 128 N.Y. 240 (People v. Ulster & Delaware Railroad) 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. Ulster & Delaware Railroad, 128 N.Y. 240 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

This action was brought in the name of the people by the attorney-general to determine the corporate existence of the defendant, upon the alleged ground that it had forfeited its charter through a failure to build a portion of the railroad track which its predecessor was authorized to construct. The Rondout and Oswego Railroad Company was organized in 1866, under the General Railroad Act, to build, operate and maintain a railroad from Rondout, in Ulster county, to the village of Oneonta, in the county of Otsego ; and, during the period of its existence, actually built a road from Rondout to Stamford, but failed to build that portion extending from Stamford to Oneonta. The defendant, the Ulster and Delaware Railroad Company, through a plan of reorganization adopted by the bondholders under chapter 430 [248]*248of the Laws of 1874, on the sale of the property of the railroad under a mortgage foreclosure in 1875, succeeded to the rights, property and franchises of the original company. It was for the failure of the defendant to complete the railroad originally projected by the Bondout and Oswego Company that this action was brought. The action is claimed to have been authorized by the provisions of section 1798 of the Code of Civil Procedure, providing that an action may, by leave of court, be brought by the attorney-general to procure a judgment annulling the existence of a corporation created .under the laws of this state when, among other things, it has violated :any provision of law whereby it has forfeited its charter, or become liable to be dissolved by the abuse of its powers, or forfeited its privileges or franchises by a failure to exercise its powers.”

A violation of the provisions of this section apparently creates a cause of forfeiture and contemplates a punishment to be inflicted upon the offender, and nota benefit to be recovered by the prosecutor. LTo absolute right to enforce a forfeiture' for the causes specified is conferred upon any party, but it is made to depend upon certain conditions. The statute does not execute itself, but requires the action of the attorney-general to make it effective. Even the willful neglect of a railroad corporation to exercise all its franchises does not, of itself, terminate its corporate existence; but, to effect that result, the istate, through its attorney-general, must not only elect to enforce the forfeitures, but also procure leave from the court to bring an action for that purpose. (Code of Civil Procedure, § 1798; People v. A. & V. R. R. Co., 24 N. Y. 261; People v. N. R. Sugar Refining Co., 121 id. 582.)

Such actions are not even then maintainable, except some public interest is involved which requires the exercise of the franchise by the corporation. (People v. N. R. Sugar Refining Co., supra.)

It was, therefore, incumbent upon the state to show upon the trial of the action that a cause of forfeiture had not only been incurred by the defendant, but that it continued to exist, [249]*249and that its existence involved some public interest, and also that the court had authorized the bringing of the action. An action thus commenced is, even then, necessarily always within the control of the state, as the sole party interested, to prosecute or abandon at its mere will and pleasure. (People v. Phœnix Bank, 24 Wend. 431.)

It is responsible to no one for the exercise of its discretion in this respect, and can, through the action of its legislature, not only discontinue an action brought by it, but can also repeal or confirm charters; waive or abolish causes of forfeiture ; release rights of action, and limit the operation of its statutes upon individuals and corporations at its own will. By enforcing the forfeiture of corporate existence, the state receives no benefit and acquires no property, and by waiving such forfeiture it loses no privilege and interferes with no vested right. Having the absolute power at will to take the corporate life, it does not hamper its freedom of action by forbidding its servants in specified cases from prosecuting actions for forfeiture. It requires no exercise of judicial power to enable it to waive a forfeiture, but it may be effectuated by the mere expression of its will, and its will may be based upon cause or utterly without'one. Having absolute power as the supreme representative of the people in respect to the question, it may do so with or without cause, or upon whatever terms or conditions it may see fit to impose.

It is claimed by the defendant that the state, by the enactment of chapter 236 of the Laws of 1889, amending chapter 430 of the Laws of 1874, has so changed the original statute that a reorganized railroad corporation no longer incurs the risk of forfeiting its charter, when the railroad commissioners certify that no public interest is involved in the completion of a road as originally projected.

The act is as follows: “ Ho thing herein contained shall be construed to compel a corporation organized under this act to extend its road beyond the portion thereof constructed at the time said corporation acquired title to such railroad property and franchise, provided the- board of railroad commissioners [250]*250shall certify that, in their opinion, the public interests, under all the circumstances, do not require such extension. If said board shall so certify and shall file in their office such certificate, * * * said corporation shall not be deemed to have incurred any obligation so to extend its road, and such certificate shall be a bar to any proceedings to compel it to make such extension, or to annul its existence for failure so to do, and shall be final and conclusive in all courts and proceedings whatever.”

By this enactment the state has indicated in the most imperative form its will in respect to such actions. It thereby declared that the certificate of the railroad commissioners to the effect that no public interests were involved should thereafter be a conclusive answer to any attempt to annul the existence of a reorganized railroad corporation tor a failure to make an extension of its road. By this act the state devolved upon the railroad commissioners the duty, previously performed by its attorney-general, of inquiring whether the public interests required it to enforce an alleged forfeiture against a reorganized railroad corporation, and necessarily thereby deprived other departments of the government of the power of determining the preliminary question upon which the action of the state in instituting and prosecuting such actions must be founded.

By leaving to another department of the state the determination of a question upon which its own action was thereafter to be controlled, it neither delegated legislative power to, or conferred judicial functions upon, such department. It simply instituted an ex fa,He inquiry to determine its own future action as had been the uniform practice of the state government for many previous years. The question whether the public interests are involved is always a condition precedent to the right of maintaining any action by the attorney-general for the forfeiture of corporate rights, and the state by this act says that it will hereafter leave this question- in certain cases to the railroad commissioners to determine, instead of to the attorney-general by whom it had theretofore been decided. [251]*251In other words, it has made the railroad commissioners’ certificate conclusive evidence of the non-existence of any sufficient ground of forfeiture.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.Y. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ulster-delaware-railroad-ny-1891.