Public Service Co-Ordinated Transport v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners

33 A.2d 579, 130 N.J.L. 409, 1943 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 13, 1943
StatusPublished

This text of 33 A.2d 579 (Public Service Co-Ordinated Transport v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Public Service Co-Ordinated Transport v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners, 33 A.2d 579, 130 N.J.L. 409, 1943 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 79 (N.J. 1943).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This writ of certiorari brings up for review an order of the Board of Public Utility Commissioners. It is agreed between the parties hereto, Public Service Co-ordinated Transport, prosecutor, and Erie Bailroad Company, defendant, that:

“The only question in controversy is whether the decisions dated June 29th, 1939, and March 27th, 1941, respectively, of the Board of Public Utility Commissioners are valid under Chapter 57 of the laws of New Jersey, approved March 13th, *410 1913; that is to say, did the Board err in and by said order of June 5th, 1941, in refusing to add to Erie’s cost of the project, expenses incurred by Public Service in altering its property and structures in compliance with the order of April 20th, 1915, for the purpose of ascertaining the total cost to which Public Service’s 10% was to be applied, and deducting from the amount of the 10% so ascertained the amount of Public Service’s expenses, in determining the amount of money payable by Public Service under the statute and said order of April 20th, 1915.”

The order of the Board of April 20th, 1915, was made in pursuance of the Eielder Act, chapter 57 of the laws of 1913. That order.directed the elimination of certain grade crossings in the City of Paterson and provided, among other things:

“And it appearing to the Board that the street railway operated by Public Service Railway Company rises the said crossings at (1) Park Avenue and Market Street, (2) Broadway, and (3) River Street, the Board in accordance with the power and authority vested in it by said act further orders the Public Service Railway Company to pay ten per centum of the alterations, changes, relocation and opening, required by this order, including damages to adjacent property, directly chargeable to the crossings, and each of them so used by the said street railway operated by it.

“And the said Erie Railroad Company and said Public Service Railway Company are ordered to keep specific and complete records of the expenses directly chargeable to the crossings and each of them, so used by said street railway of said Public Service Railway Company and leave is hereby given to said companies, or either of them, to make application to the Board for further order in the event that they cannot agree upon the amount of such expenses so directly chargeable to said crossings used by the street railway operated by said Public Service Railway, or any of them.”

It is observed that this order of 1915 does not specifically determine the question posed in the above quotation from the stipulation in the present case.

The pertinent portions of the Eielder Act, Pamph. L. 1913, p. 91, are as follows:

*411 “2. The entire expense of such alterations, changes, relocation or opening, including damages to adjacent property, shall be paid by such railroad, unless a street railway uses such crossing, in which event the board may order not exceeding ten per centum of such expense directly chargeable to the crossing used by the street railway company, to be paid by the company operating such street railway and the balance to be paid by the company operating such railroad.”
“4. Where the order of said board shall require changes in, or the removal of the property or constructions of any telegraph, telephone, gas, electric, lighting, power, water, oil, pipe lines or other company or corporation, co-partnership or individual, they shall, at their own expense, move or change the grade or location of their property or constructions in conformity with the order of said board. They shall be deemed parties in interest and shall be given notice of hearing and an opportunity to be heard.”

The Board of Public Utility Commissioners has determined $470,604.16 as the total cost to the Erie Railroad Company of the elimination of the crossings in question. The Public Service expended the sum of $22,261.60. The question is, is the “entire expense,” and the “such expense,” mentioned in section 2 of the Fielder Act of which the street railway may be required to pay ten per cent., $470,604.16 plus $22,261.70, which amounts to $492,865.76 of which the Public Service must pay $49,286.58 and has already paid $22,261.60; or is the “entire expense” the $470,604.16 expended by the Erie of which Public Service must pay $47,060.42 phrs all its own expense. The Board has determined that the latter of these propositions is the true construction, of the statute and Public Service challenges that holding.

It is to be noted that in section 4 of the act, where the entire cost of moving their facilities is imposed upon certain utility companies, street railway companies are not specifically mentioned. They are mentioned in section 2 and only in section 2, and we are of the opinion, therefore, that they are affected only by section 2 and not by the provisions of section 4. This view is supported by the fact that when the statute *412 was amended in 1930, chapter 101, R. S. 48:12-63, by which amendment the railroad companies were required to pay only 50% of the cost of eliminating crossings and the requirement that the street railway pay 10% was abolished, section 4 was also amended to include street railways in the class of utilities required to pay all their own costs.

The original order of the Board of April 20th, 1915, was challenged in the courts in several proceedings. While the point now raised was not involved in those cases the language used in the several opinions is not without pertinence. Mr. Justice Garrison, speaking for this court in Public Service Railway Co. v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners, 89 N. J. L. 24, said (at p. 27) :

“The fact that by such a collision as we have suggested the lives of the passengers on the steam railroad are also imperiled, so far from demonstrating that the entire expense of eliminating the dangerous condition should be borne by such railroad, merely emphasizes the participation of each carrier in the production of a common source of danger, and hence points to their joint contribution to the expenses of its elimination.”

In the opinion of this court in Erie Railroad Co. v. Board of Public Utility Commissioners, 89 N. J. L. 57 (affirmed on the opinion of the Supreme Court, 90 Id. 672), we find the following language (at p. 79).:

“The contention that the order is invalid, in that it requires the prosecutor to do the physical work of removing and changing the property of the Public Service Railway Company, is not well founded in fact. The order does not require the prosecutor to do that. It requires the Public Service Railway Company to change and remove such of its property and construction as is necessary to carry into effect the order, and further directs that both the prosecutor and the Public Service Railway Company keep specific and complete records of the expenses directly chargeable to the crossings, and each of them, so used by such street railway company.

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33 A.2d 579, 130 N.J.L. 409, 1943 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/public-service-co-ordinated-transport-v-board-of-public-utility-nj-1943.