Southern Boulevard Railroad v. North New York City Traction Co.

16 Misc. 263
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Misc. 263 (Southern Boulevard Railroad v. North New York City Traction Co.) 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
Southern Boulevard Railroad v. North New York City Traction Co., 16 Misc. 263 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Beekman, J.

Pursuant to the requirements of section 93 of the Railroad Law, as amended by chapter 67(i of the Laws of 1892, a sale at public auction was .held on the 9th . day of October, 1895', by the comptroller of the city of New York, of a franchise for the-construction and operation of a street railroad in said city which had been duly created "under a resolution of its common council-The section in question required that the sale should be made “ to-the bidder who .will agree to give, the city the largest percentage [264]*264per annum of the gross receipts of such corporation, with a bond or undertaking in such form and amount and with such conditions and sureties as may be required and approved by the comptroller ■or other chief fiscal officer of the city, for the fulfillment of such agreement and for. the commencement and completion of its railroad within the times hereinafter designated, according to the plan or plans, and on the route or routes fixed for its construction.”

The right to hid at any such sale is limited to duly incorporated railroad corporations of this state, organized to construct, maintain •and. operate such a road, and who at least five days prior to the ■day fixed for the sale shall have filed with the comptroller a bond with sufficient sureties, to be approved by him, conditioned to pay to the city the sum of $50,000, as liquidated damages, should such corporation, being the successful bidder, fail to comply with the terms of sale, or to complete and operate stich railroad within the time provided by law, namely, three years after' the creation of the franchise.

The plaintiff and the defendants, The North New York City Traction. Company and the People’s Traction Company are corporations coming within the description of the statute, and they alone having filed the bond necessary, to qualify them to bid, were the only competitors at the sale. By the terms of sale, which in that regard followed the requirements of section 95 of the Railroad Law, the successful bidder is also required to pay to the city annually for the first five years 3 per cent., and thereafter 5 per cent, of its gross receipts, in addition to the percentage bid by it upon the sale. On the day above mentioned all three of these corporations were duly represented before the comptroller, the bidding was opened and proceeded on the part of all of the competitors until the plaintiff, having bid 3 1-2 per cent, of the gross receipts, retired from the field, and thereafter the bidding was continued by the two defendant corporations alone. In this contest the bids were repeatedly raised until one of 39 12-16 per cent, having .been made by The North New York City Traction Company, the People’s Traction Company followed with a bid of 97 per cent, of the gross receipts for the first five years, and 95 per cent, thereafter, Which, in view of the additional percentages required to be paid under section 95 of the Railroad Law, was equivalent to.an agreement to pay 100 per .cent., or the entire gross receipts of the road. This was immediately raised by the other company, and although the representative of The People’s Traction Company thereupon [265]*265protested against the receipt of any further bids, on the ground that the percentage of the gross receipts which hy law was to form the basis of bidding meant a portion of such receipts, and- that when the entire gross receipts had been offered no further competition was possible, the comptroller still continued the sale, receiving further bids from both companies, until at the close of the day a recess was taken until the following day, with the last hid made by The North New York City Traction Company standing at 6,975 1-8 per cent, of the gross receipts. The proceeding had degenerated into a farce.

Before the bidding could he resumed this action was brought, and an injunction obtained restraining the comptroller from proceeding further in the matter until the determination of the suit. The plaintiff alleges that it refrained from .bidding after its hid of 3 1-2 per cent, had been made because it believed that the bidding thereafter by the two defendant corporations was not made in good faith, nor with the intention of actually paying the percentages of gross receipts bid by them; that after the bids- were raised above 20 per cent., and particularly after they were raised above 39 12-16 per cent., none of said bids was bona fide, that -the plaintiff’s bid of 3 1-2 per cent, was the last bona fide bid, and that a continuance of the bidding would defeat the intent and purpose of the statute under which the sale was being held. Upon this, judgment is asked that an injunction should issue restraining the defendant corporations from bidding further; that the comptroller should be directed to award the franchise in question to the plaintiff upon its bid of 3 1-2 per cent., or that the proceedings upon the sale should be adjudged to he void and a new sale ordered.

The defendants having put in issue the - allegation in respect to the bona fides of .the bidding, the plaintiff upon the trial offered evidence hearing upon the cost of construction and operation of surface railways, the resources of the defendant corporations and other circumstantial evidence tending to show the impracticability, from a financial point of view, of running a road subject to the burden of paying any of the heavy percentages bid hy them. Evidence was also given in respect to the manner of bidding at the sale, and it was also shown on cross-examination of the representative of The People’s Traction Company that while his bid of 100 per cent, of the gross receipts was made in good faith, and in the expectation of complying therewith, should the franchise [266]*266be awarded to his company, his further bids were made, after he had protested against the receipt of any other bids, in order to prevent the franchise from being knocked down to his competitor. Upon this line of proof the plaintiff now claims that it is entitled to judgment.

I do not think, however, that a case has been at all made out to justify such a conclusion. Laying out of consideration all of the bids which were received after the full amount of the gross receipts had been offered, I fail to find in the proofs sufficient evidence of bad faith to; sustain the claim of the plaintiff that it has. been aggrieved, in any way by the action of the defendants. The allegations of the complaint in reference to the bona fides of the bids between that of 3 1-2 per cent, made by the plaintiff and that of 39 12-16 per cent, made by The North New York City Traction Company are somewhat contradictory. The charge is that the bids ceased to be bona fidé only “ after the bids were raised above 20 per cent., and'particularly after the bids were raised above 39 12-16 per cent.” This is hardly consistent with the claim made by the plaintiff that its bid of. 3 1-2 per cent, was the last bona fide bid made at such sale. At all events there is nothing in the proofs from which it may be found or inferred that there was any lack of goo,d faith on the part of the bidders, certainly until the bidding had far outstripped that of the plaintiff, and had passed the limits mentioned in the complaint. . It is impossible, therefore, to-see how the plaintiff has been aggrieved in any actionable sense by the matters of which it complains. The action is purely a private one, the plaintiff is in no sense whatsoever interested in the matter from a public point of.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Misc. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-boulevard-railroad-v-north-new-york-city-traction-co-nysupct-1896.