South Shore Traction Co. v. Town of Brookhaven

53 Misc. 392, 102 N.Y.S. 1074
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Misc. 392 (South Shore Traction Co. v. Town of Brookhaven) 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
South Shore Traction Co. v. Town of Brookhaven, 53 Misc. 392, 102 N.Y.S. 1074 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Scuddee, J.

On April 1, 1903, the South Shore Traction Company, the plaintiff, obtained consents or franchises from the village of Patchogue and the town of Brookhaven respectively to build a street railway on certain highways. These consents were substantially the same in terms. The consent of the highway commissioners of the town of Brookhaven contained the following provisions:

2. This franchise and consent not to be operative until the Traction Company shall give or cause to be given a bond of sufficient sureties to be approved by said highway commissioners in the penal sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) to indemnify and save harmless the said town of Brookhaven, and the highway commissioners thereof, from any, and all, damages, costs, actions, claims and demands arising from the construction, maintenance and operation of said railroad up to a period of thirty days after completion of said railway, and for the faithful execution and performance of the terms and conditions upon which this franchise is granted and the provisions of law applicable thereto, and upon the faithful performance of all the provisions and conditions herein contained, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.

3. Such railroad shall be completed and in operation, -x- * x- within two years from the date of the granting of this franchise. Otherwise all rights and privileges under' this franchise and consent shall cease and determine.”

The wording of these provisions in the consent of the village of Patchogue is precisely the same except that in section 2 the words “ trustees ” and “ the village of Pat[395]*395chogue ” are inserted in place of the words highway commissioners ” and “ the town of Brookhaven.”

Under these provisions of the franchise the time within which plaintiff was required to build its road expired April 1, 1905. The time provided in the town franchise was, however, subsequently extended by a resolution of the highway commissioners to October 25, 1906.

In July, 1906, the plaintiff commenced its actions against the -village of Patchogue and the town of Brookhaven respectively in which actions the Suffolk Traction Company was impleaded as a defendant.

On August 30, 1906, the plaintiff obtained an order continuing, during the pendency of each action, an injunction restraining the respective municipal authorities from granting their consent to the construction, maintenance and operation of a street railway by the defendant, the Suffolk Traction Company. Each of these orders contained a condition that, if the plaintiff should fail within twenty days from the entry of the order to file with the clerk of the village in the one case and with the clerk of the town in the other a bond in the penal sum of $7,500 such as was required by the terms of the franchise to plaintiff, the order should he void; but, if the plaintiff should tender to the board of trustees of the village and to the board of highway commissioners, respectively, such a bond, and the respective boards should refuse to approve the same, the injunction order should not be deemed vacated unless an order to that effect should be thereafter entered. An appeal having been taken from each of these orders, both orders were reversed by the Appellate Division. In the opinion of the appellate court rendered upon said reversal (South Shore Traction Company v. Town of Brookhaven, not yet reported) it is stated that the court reached the conclusion that the consent to the plaintiff never became operative because of the failure of the plaintiff to give the bond as provided in that portion of the consent quoted supra (section 2 of the consent).”

On September 19, 1906, the plaintiff filed bonds in the sum of $7,500 with the respective municipalities in compliance, inferentially at least, with the injunction orders above [396]*396referred to which were afterward reversed on appeal. On the motions now under consideration the plaintiff claims that such filing of the bonds was a compliance with section 2 of the franchise and seeks to set up the fact of such filing by supplemental complaint in the two actions in which the Suffolk County Traction Company is a defendant. The question whether leave should be granted plaintiff to serve such supplemental complaints will first be considered.

On the appeal from the injunction order previously granted in these actions, it was held that, at the time of their commencement, the consents to the plaintiff had not become operative because of the failure of the plaintiff to give the required bond, and that, therefore, at that time, the village trustees and the highway commissioners respectively had a perfect right to grant a consent to another corporation with which the court could not interfere by injunction. South Shore Traction Company v. Town of Brookhaven, supra. The plaintiff, in order to supply the deficiency in the facts upon which its right of action for an injunction depended, has attempted to file the required bond after the commencement of the actions, and now asks leave of the court to be allowed to plead such subsequent filing of the bond for the purpose of showing that, at the time of the commencement of the action, it had a cause of action. A plaintiff has no right by supplemental complaint to establish a cause of action when none existed at the time when suit was brought. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. United Lines Telegraph Co., 47 Hun, 315; Holly v. Graf, 29 id. 443; Banigan v. Nyack Village, 25 App. Div. 150; Smith v. Bach, 82 id. 608. It follows that leave to plead the subsequent filing of the bond by supplemental complaint cannot be granted.

The continuation of the injunctions in these actions must also be refused. The right to the injunctions depends on the nature of the actions and must be granted, if at all, under section 603 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The injunctions which were granted on the facts presented by the original complaints have been reversed. A second application for an injunction on the original complaint is not [397]*397allowable. There is no supplemental complaint before the court and leave to serve the proposed supplemental complaint, as we have already seen, cannot be granted. There is consequently no complaint before the court upon which the injunctions sought can be granted. A motion for a temporary injunction can be based only apon a complaint and cannot be granted upon affidavits. Huntington v. Cortland Home Telephone Co., 62 App. Div. 517; Woodburn v. Hyatt, 34 id. 246; Sanders v. Ader, 26 id. 176; Hudson Valley R. Co. v. O’Connor, 95 id. 6.

The two actions in which- the Cross Island Traction Company is impleaded as a defendant were commenced subsequently to the filing of the bond above referred to. In reference to the filing of these bonds, the complaints in these actions allege “ that on September 19, 1906, the plaintiff filed with the board of trustees of the village of Patchogue the bond as required by section 2 of the franchise and consent, dated April 1, 1903, of the board of trustees of the village of Patchogue” and “that on the 19th day of September, 1906, the plaintiff filed with the board of highway commissioners of the town of Brookhaven, the bond as required by section 2 of the franchise and consent, dated April 1, 1903, of the board of highway commisEioners of the town of Brookhaven.” Copies of the bonds are attached to the complaint as exhibits, also copies of the consents of the village and of the highway commissioners.

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Related

Banigan v. Village of Nyack
25 A.D. 150 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Huntington v. Cortland Home Telephone Co.
62 A.D. 517 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
53 Misc. 392, 102 N.Y.S. 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-shore-traction-co-v-town-of-brookhaven-nysupct-1907.