Yonkers Railroad v. Hume

225 A.D. 313, 233 N.Y.S. 63, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11627
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 225 A.D. 313 (Yonkers Railroad v. Hume) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yonkers Railroad v. Hume, 225 A.D. 313, 233 N.Y.S. 63, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11627 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Kapper, J.

On February 17, 1927, the city of Yonkers granted to the Merchants Community Bus Transit, Inc., separate franchises and consents for the operation of bus lines on fourteen separate and distinct routes, all of the said franchises concededly being identical in form with the exception of the specification of the routes. On August 4, 1927, the Public Service Commission granted to said bus company seven separate certificates of convenience [315]*315and necessity for the operation of buses over that number of routes, at the same time refusing the petitioner’s application as to the seven remaining routes. The plaintiff here, a street railroad corporation operating in the city of Yonkers, opposed before the Public Service Commission the granting of nine such certificates, but was defeated as to two of them, which, together with the five unopposed, constitute the seven bus routes now before us.

On February 25, 1928, the defendant Arthur C. Hume was appointed receiver of the property of said bus company by the United States District Court, Southern District of New York. The receiver continued bus operation as prescribed by the franchises and the certificates of the Public Service Commission, but has since been operating on some streets not included in the franchises and certificates and has also attempted to operate buses interchangeably on different routes instead of a physical transfer of passengers which the plaintiff claims is the limit of right under the franchises and certificates.

This the receiver is endeavoring to accomplish by a combination of routes so as to continue a bus on one fine, without transfer of passengers, over the route of another and intersecting line or route. The object of the receiver may subserve public convenience by bringing passengers from the remote sections of the city of Yonkers into the heart of the city in and upon the same vehicle without the inconvenience of transfer, but whether such operation subserves the public interests is not for the courts to say, but is left, in my opinion, solely to the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission, after due consent of the municipality. The question is one of importance, not alone to the traveling public, but also to the plaintiff whose railroad is materially damaged if the receiver’s effort may be upheld.

The injunction granted by the learned Special Term incorporates certain streets on and over which the defendants are prohibited from operating buses, and for which, it is undisputed, the defendants have no franchise or certificate of convenience and necessity from the Public Service Commission. There is, therefore, no doubt of an attempted illegal use of the public streets by the defendants in so far as concerns those particular highways. The injunction order also prohibits the defendants from operating buses over intersecting lines by interchanging routes and effecting what is characterized as combination of routes.

The Transportation Corporations Law (§§ 65, 66, as amd. by Laws of 1926, chap. 762) declares bus companies to be common carriers, and that they shall not operate within the limits of a city in competition with another common carrier which is required by [316]*316law to obtain the consent of the local authorities of such city to operate over the streets thereof ” without having first procured the consent of the local authorities of such city, and thereafter only “ shall a certificate of public convenience and necessity be issued for such bus operation. (See Matter of City of Long Beach v. Pub. Serv. Comm., 249 N. Y. 480.)

In the present litigation the local authorities have consented to the bus routes of which the Public Service Commission in due course approved. Each route, as stated, was separately and distinctly defined. The Public Service Commission incorporated in each certificate certain requirements to be met upon the part of the grantee, but did not express in such certificate any authority or permission to effect combinations for continuous riding in a certain direction by running partly over one route and partly over another or others. The Public Service Commission had before it for consideration the provision of the franchises granted by the city, reading as follows:

Twenty-ninth. Combination of Routes: The bus operator may, with the approval of the Common Council, operate the motor bus lines herein authorized in combination with any other motor bus lines which he or it may be authorized to operate by the City of Yonkers, provided such combinations shall be for the convenience of the public and provided that before such combination of routes shall be put into operation, the bus operator shall submit, in writing to the Common Council, a statement of such proposed combination of routes and receive its approval of the same.”

The opinion of the Public Service Commission dealt with this subject of " combination of routes,” and pointed out the importance of conserving the rights of the railroad company consistent with public convenience and necessity, adding (pp. 8, 9 of opinion): “ Combination of routes means physical transfer of passengers from one bus to another. The petitioner expects this (minutes, p. 872) and such transfer can be no more inconvenient than transfer from one bus to street car. When there are two means of transportation covering different sections of a city, it is impossible to avoid physical transfer, and this condition would not be abolished were all the routes petitioned for, granted certificates.”

The situation thus dealt with was clearly intended to prevent the bus company from operating the same bus on two or more separate routes to bring passengers into the business heart of the city. The routes as laid out and approved by the Public Service Commission contemplated a five-cent fare on the bus on one of the routes, route No. 8, where a connection was had with the railroad company which in turn carried the passenger for another five-cent [317]*317fare to the city’s center. By allowance of the defendants’ purposes, this connection with the trolley railroad would be circumvented, to the obviously great injury of the plaintiff. The rate of fare was so fixed by the Public Service Commission that an additional fare would have to be paid on transfer to the bus company, so that the traveling public would not obtain a less expensive ride.

Section 53 of the Public Service Commission Law (as amd. by Laws of 1921, chap. 134) provides that no common carrier shall exercise any franchise or right “ without first having obtained the permission and approval of the Commission.” This statute, read in connection with the sections of the Transportation Corporations Law (supra), shows that two steps upon the part of the Public Service Commission are requisite to a valid bus franchise; one, the permission and approval of the Commission, and the other, the certificate of public convenience and necessity. Such is the construction placed upon the statutes as I read the opinion of Chief Judge His cock in People ex rel. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm. (227 N. Y. 248, 258, 259). While the Public Service Commission’s certificates to the bus company show that the public convenience and necessity required their being granted, it must also be assumed that the requisite permission and approval referred to in the statute was cotemporaneous with the granting of the certificates.

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.D. 313, 233 N.Y.S. 63, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yonkers-railroad-v-hume-nyappdiv-1929.