The People v. . the Albany and Vermont Railroad Company

24 N.Y. 261
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 24 N.Y. 261 (The People v. . the Albany and Vermont Railroad Company) 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
The People v. . the Albany and Vermont Railroad Company, 24 N.Y. 261 (N.Y. 1862).

Opinion

*263 Wright, J.

The defendant has voluntarily abandoned all of its road east of the Waterford Junction, whilst it is continuing the operation of that part between Albany and Waterford,, in connection with the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad. It is exercising its corporate rights and privileges, and the franchise granted by the State to maintain and operate a railroad between Albany and Eagle Bridge, in the operation of one between Albany and Waterford Junction, without any assent by the legislature to the abandonment of any part of its road, or any legislative modification of the franchise granted to it. This cannot be legally done. It is the exercise of a franchise or privilege not conferred upon the defendant by law. But it is not the precise question now presented. The presenil question is, whether a railroad corporation, formed under the general act, for constructing, maintaining and operating a railroad upon a definite route and between places specified in its articles of association, may be compelled by a court of equity, in an action brought by the State, after it has constructed its road, to continue to maintain and operate it. Of course, it is not pretended that such an action can be maintained, or the power exercised by the courts, unless the obligation, or duty, is imposed by law on the corporation to maintain and operate/ its road for the public use and benefit.

The inquiry primarily suggested is, whether there be any express legal obligation or duty, or any to be necessarily implied, resting on a railroad corporation, to maintain and operate its road for the public use, irrespective of its own interests. If any such obligation or duty is imposed, it is by the general law under which the corporation is created, or to be implied from its provisions, or those of the charter of the company. The railroad act does not, in terms, require a company organ- | ized under it to construct, maintain or operate the railway I mentioned in its articles of association. The act is permissive, 1 and not mandatory. The associates are endowed with corporate existence, and, as a corporation, vested with powers to construct and operate a railroad for the conveyance of persons' and property between established points, and, in this sense, to *264 exercise a public employment. The associates, by the act of acquiring corporate existence, do not absolutely agree with the State that, in consideration of such corporate existence, and the franchise with which they are invested, that they will construct the railroad mentioned in the charter, and continue to operate it during their corporate existence. Ho contract obligation is thereby created on the part of the corporation. This is apparent from the act itself. The corporation is first brought into existence, and powers conferred on it for the execution of a special purpose, viz., to construct, maintain and operate a railroad for the conveyance of persons and property. There is no absolute requirement, or obligation assumed, by the corporation created under thé act, to execute the purpose. Indeed, the law itself contemplates that there may be an omission neglect to carry out the object of the association, and a nonuser of the corporate privileges. Unless the corporation begins to construct its road, and expend ten per cent of its capital in such construction, within two years after its articles of association are filed, or finish the road and put it in operation in five years from the time of filing such articles, its corporate existence and powers are to cease. (Laws of 1850, ch. 140, § 47.) The penalty for the non-user of the corporate rights and privileges for five years, is a forfeiture of such rights and privileges. It is optional with the corporation whether it will exercise the powers bestowed, or undertake the work; and, being so, the grant and acceptance of the railroad franchise cannot properly be construed as a contract between the State and corporation, binding the latter to construct and maintain the railroad for the public benefit. It is only from the charter and its acceptance that any contract relation between the State and the corporation can arise; and such contract must be operative, if at all, the moment the charter is accepted. The provisions of the railroad act negative the idea that any contract relation between the State and the corporation formed under it springs out of the grant and acceptance of the franchise. There is, therefore, no contract obligation resting on a corporation, brought into existence by the railroad act, in favor of the State or interested *265 citizens, to construct, maintain and operate, for the public convenience and use, the road named in its articles of association. But is the duty specially declared, or necessarily to be implied from the provisions of the railroad act ? There is no such duty specially declared. There are no express words of the act requiring the corporation created under it to make and maintain the roadway. Had there been, there would probably have been but few corporations formed under it. Nor do I think the duty can be clearly collected from the general purview of the whole statute. To promote the construction and maintenance of railroads to be publicly used in the conveyance of persons and property," is undoubtedly a purpose of the law. It invites capitalists into this field of enterprise, not as public servants, charged with a public duty, but as private corpora-tors, whose privileges are to be exercised, if at all, under limitations and restrictions, looking to the benefit of travelers and patrons of the work. The legislature, in effect, say, as the proposed road is to be of public utility, we empower you to build and-operate it, and to that end confer on you corporate existence and the power to act in a corporate capacity, and also the further power to take lands for corporate use, in invitum. The corporation is essentially a private one. If it constructs and operates the road, it is to do it under the limitations and restrictions imposed by the law. It may never, however, enter upon the construction of the proposed road. Insurmountable obstacles may intervene to the prosecution of the work. The law seems to contemplate such a state of things; and provides that, in the event of non-user of the corporate privileges, or a non-completion of the road within a limited period, such corporate privileges shall cease. These provisions are inconsistent with the idea that the duty is assumed by the company to construct the proposed road from having obtained a charter for that purpose, or that it is within the scope' or intention of the act to absolutely impose, for public, benefit, such duty on the corporators. Permission is given to make the road, and the law leaves the question of the exercise of ita powers to the option of the company. This would not have *266 been so, if the legislature had intended to require the construction and operation of the proposed road for any period whatever. For anything of an obligatory character in the act, the associates, after corporate organization, may proceed to construct the projected road, or they may omit or neglect to do it and forfeit-their corporate privileges. This option existing, it negatives the notion that any duty is imposed to build the road. And if no duty is imposed to construct, it must follow that there is none to maintain and operate the road after construction. Such duty cannot be created by the act of the corporation itself.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-the-albany-and-vermont-railroad-company-ny-1862.