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Matter of Kings County E.R. Co.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jan 15, 1889
19 N.E. 654 (N.Y. 1889)

Opinion

Argued December 7, 1888

Decided January 15, 1889

Wm. J. Gaynor for appellant. Leslie W. Russell for respondent.



At the threshold of this case stands a question which is alleged to supply a perfect barrier to the attack made upon the corporate life of the company which, in this proceeding, seeks to condemn property for the public use. That question concerns the force and effect of a judgment rendered in an action brought in the name of the People, by their attorney-general, against the corporation, and which adjudged the lawful organization of the Kings County Elevated Railroad Company, and its right to continue to exist. We pass by that question without discussing or determining it, although fully appreciating its importance and interest, because we have reached a conclusion upon the merits of the controversy which makes the possible protection of that judgment unessential, and desire to free our previous adjudications from inferences stretching seriously beyond what was intended at the time, and what is warranted by the decision actually made.

Four separate and distinct grounds are asserted by the landowners defending this proceeding upon which it is claimed we should decide that the moving corporation never became such in fact; and all of these respect the manner in which the commissioners under the rapid transit act performed their duties, and the sufficiency of the plan which they formulated for the construction of the road.

One of these grounds relates to the provision limiting the number of tracks permitted to be laid. The sixth subdivision of the general plan adopted by the commissioners reads thus: "There shall not be more than two rows of columns, or more than two tracks in any one street or avenue or public place, except as hereinafter authorized." No wider or different authority was afterwards given, and the provision limits the company to two tracks, but does not in express terms direct the construction of two; and that is the criticism now made upon the sufficiency of the plan as it respects the tracks.

It is first to be observed that no such question was raised in or decided by the Cable Case ( 104 N.Y. 1), upon which these appellants principally rely. The defect there was that no limitation was put upon the number of tracks which the company might build, and it was left in possession of the power to occupy the whole width of the roadway with its rails and trains, and no property-owner could know in advance how grave or slight would be the resultant interference with the street. That difficulty does not here exist. The number of tracks is limited to two, and occupation of the street beyond that is restrained. But it is a new defect which is suggested, and consists of an omission to command the construction of two tracks, and leaving the company at liberty to lay but one. Some things, however, the commissioners could safely assume. They were placed in position to guard the public against injuries or encroachments which the interest of the company might lead its managers to attempt, and were bound to protect the right of the People at every such point. Consistently with that duty they could safely and prudently omit details which the interests of the company would be certain to supply. I do not think that any one would have imagined, at the date in question, that a corporation would seek to run a rapid transit elevated road through a large city upon a single track, or that there was danger of such a mistake against which precaution was needed. The numerous stations comparatively near together would require side-tracks for the frequent trains to pass, with an expensive accumulation of switches and of men to operate and guard them, and, when completed, little more of rails would be needed to make the track double, with a vast increase to the company of its capacity to run frequent trains, and of safety to its own equipment. The danger was not at all that the company would not build two tracks; its own obvious necessities would provide for that; but the temptation might come with increase of population and growth of business to add more, and so affect injuriously the public right. Against that peril the commissioners guarded, and assumed, as they very well might, that there could be no possible temptation on the part of the company to run their road with a single track. Indeed, that assumption rises almost, if not quite, to the level of a command, for the commissioners repeatedly speak of transverse girders carrying the tracks, and never describe a single track except in connection with two rows of columns, each row carrying its own. And more specifically, when providing an alternate plan for wide streets they prescribe the distance between the center lines of "the two tracks," plainly contemplating them as involved in the plan of construction. And so we are quite certain that the omission pointed out does not, in fact, exist, or if it does, constitutes no defect in the commissioners' plan.

Another alleged fault respects the alternative plans provided for streets exceeding forty-two feet in width. It was first required that in the streets of that width or less there should be a row of columns on each curb, and a superstructure carrying the tracks upon transverse girders spanning the street. With that requirement no fault is found. But in streets more than forty-two feet wide the company were given an alternative. They were permitted to build upon the plan devised for the narrower streets, but, as it was obvious that a roadway might be so broad as to make the transverse girders, stretching from curb to curb without intermediate support, dangerous and unfit, an alternative plan was provided to avoid the difficulty. That was two rows of columns, not on the line of the curb, but in the roadway, carrying the tracks upon transverse girders, or each row carrying its own track separately. The point of the criticism upon this alternative is that it does not locate the columns in the roadway or their distance from the curb. But that distance would vary with the varying widths of the streets, and directions are given as nearly as possible outside of the details of an engineer's specifications. The articles forbid columns between the tracks of surface railways where they are less than five feet apart. On Fulton and Washington streets, Myrtle, Lexington and Nostrand avenues the distance between the two tracks, measuring from the center line of each, is not to exceed eighteen feet, and each track is to be equidistant from the center line of the street. Where columns are to be put in the roadway on each side of a surface railroad track, the transverse distance between the columns is to be at least twenty-one feet in the clear. It is thus apparent that in wide streets where the columns were to stand in the roadway their location was dictated so far as was deemed necessary. Greater precision would have been needless, and as likely to result in injury as benefit. We said in the Cable Case that the accuracy and detail of building specifications was not requisite to the validity of the commissioners' plan, and that the line between essentials and non-essentials was not easy to draw. In the present instance we think the further details insisted on involve a degree of minuteness and precision not requisite to the end in view, and that the alternative plan for wide streets was sufficient, and a substantial compliance with the law.

We have now reached the two remaining objections which were the subject of comment in the Cable Case, and for that reason are now said to be conclusive upon us. It seems to me very plain that such an inference from the doctrine of that case is entirely unwarranted by the terms of the decision. It was stated in the opinion that there was some degree of disagreement among us, and not a concurrence in all respects; and so, five propositions were formulated as the result of the opinion and upon which the court acted, and concurrence in the propositions did not involve a necessary indorsement of all the reasons urged in their support. In the fifth proposition the whole court concurred, and do still concur. That was, as stated in the opinion, that the action of the commissioners was not "a substantial compliance" with the requirements of section 5 of the Rapid Transit Act. We have not the least disposition to recede from or question or modify that proposition. It rested upon at least two omissions of the most important and vital character, one, that it was left undetermined, for seventeen miles of the routes authorized, whether the construction should be a surface or an elevated road; an omission properly characterized in the opinion as a flagrant violation of the statute; and the other that the number of tracks was left unlimited, so that the whole width of the roadway might be occupied by them, and in some streets even a third row of columns might be erected. These facts alone established that no definite plan was dictated by the commissioners, but the choice of a plan was substantially left to the corporators. To these essential and palpable defects were added two others — not as in and of themselves so vital and important as alone sufficient to invalidate the action of the commissioners, for no such doctrine is asserted — but as further and added illustrations of the defectiveness of the proposed plan considered in its entirety as such. These were a failure to fix definitely the height of the structure, except that it should not be less than fourteen feet; and an omission to locate the stations and the stairways leading to them. The opinion treated these omissions as defects; the decision did not necessarily involve that concession, or hamper the freedom of the court. But if it did the question would still remain whether the two omissions are of such importance and so vital that a plan complete and perfect in all other respects must be deemed for those defects alone a failure to substantially comply with the Rapid Transit Act. To that question, which is the one here presented, and which the Cable Case did not assume to decide, we must now direct our attention.

I do not regard the omission to prescribe the fixed height of the structure as a defect at all, but, if it be one, it is certainly of so slight and unimportant a character as not to justify a condemnation of the plan adopted with the consequence of destroying the corporate life founded upon it. In settling the details of that plan it must have been obvious to the commissioners that the danger to the public welfare and convenience was not that the structure would be too high, but too low. Every foot of increased height would involve so much of additional expense in both material and labor, and in the inevitable necessity of heavier columns and girders and further means of securing stability and safety. In addition to that, the height of the structure above the surface necessitating stairways up which the passenger must ascend is, in itself, a disagreeable consequence of the system, which no company would be likely to make worse at a needless increase of cost. On the contrary, the temptation would be to build as little above the surface as would at all answer, and the danger to be apprehended was not one requiring restraint in an upward direction. Such restraint might reasonably be deemed unnecessary as a prudent element of the plan devised; and, indeed, might produce serious evil, and hamper and mutilate the general design rather than improve it. Of course the builders of the track would aim to make it level or depart from that effort only by moderate grades, and any plan made in advance would show varying heights above the surface dependent upon the confirmation of that surface and the consequent grades. The prudent and proper height would, therefore, largely depend upon these grades, and, of necessity, be variable and irregular. It could not be fixed except as the result of an accurate survey and profile, and by the precise figures of an engineer dictating the details of construction. It was not within the duty of the commissioners thus to establish permanently the grades of the road. So much minuteness and accuracy was not intended to be imposed, and the only danger to be apprehended was provided for in the provision which fixed the minimum of height. The omission to go further cannot justly be deemed a material defect in the plans, and that, quite certainly, would have been our conclusion in the Cable Case had its fate hung upon that one omission, or its solitary existence challenged a specific consideration.

There remains, therefore, but a single defect in the plan formulated by the rapid transit commissioners upon which the appellants have relied. That is the omission to fix the specific locations of the stations and stairways. Of this omission the opinion in the Cable Case declared that it gave the company power to erect stations over the sidewalks and cross streets, and to occupy as much of the sidewalks as it might deem necessary for stairways or approaches without any restrictions. The opinion also seems to assume that section 5 of the Rapid Transit Act required a location of such stations and stairways. I think that assumption was an error which would not have been made had specific attention been drawn to the language of the statute. If that section compels the location of stations and stairways, it equally compels that of every column or "necessary support," of every turn-out or siding, of every connection, of every landing place and platform, and of every telegraph and signal device. Certainly that was not the meaning or purport of the section. These details were mentioned as incidents of the railroad, and as included and embraced within it as such, and the meaning of the section is that the commissioners must decide upon the plan or plans of the railroad with its specified incidents upon the routes and in the locations determined by them. It does not follow, however, that the opinion in the Cable Case was erroneous in holding that some general location of the stations was within the duty of the commissioners. Such action as an element and detail of the plan might very properly, in the interest of the public, have been made and included in the conditions imposed. The interest of the company might not in all respects coincide with that of the People, and it might build fewer stations and further apart, or in more unfitting localities than the public convenience required. We cannot, therefore, say that the omission was not a defect, and we are thus compelled to take the measure of its importance and determine whether by itself and standing alone it should prevent a judgment of substantial compliance.

Of course it was not necessary to direct that stations should be built, for without them no capital would construct the road, nor to say that, in the main and as a general, rule they should be built at the cross streets, for the interest of the company, and of the public would concur in that. Wherever built they would occupy space in the air above the streets and their stairways spring from the sidewalk. Such consequent occupation of street and sidewalk was contemplated by the act and inseparable from that element of the plan which dictated an elevated instead of a surface road. The defect, therefore, accurately measured, respects simply the number and localities of the stations. I do not think it was requisite to fix the precise number of all and exact locality of each, but if the articles had prescribed that the stations should be not more than a certain number of blocks apart, and not less than a certain other number of blocks apart, so as to prevent either too many stations on the one hand or too few on the other that would have been a sufficient location. We see, therefore, the true character and measure of the omission. It is not at all vital, or even serious; for the company could not operate its road without stations at which to receive and discharge passengers; the sharp rivalry of the surface roads would tend to make them sufficiently frequent and convenient; and no very serious or appreciable injury could reasonably be apprehended from an omission to dictate locations in some general way. The property owners, called upon for their consent, would understand that stations were requisite, and each would know that one might come in his own locality. He could refuse for that reason, although experience has taught the lesson that such stations are often a benefit rather than an injury to the business property in their immediate vicinity.

If in the Cable Case, the omission as to stations had been the sole and only defect in the commissioners' action, I am confident that the learned and lamented judge who wrote the opinion, and the court which concurred with him, would not have denied the corporate existence. Such a result standing upon a single ground so narrow and relatively unimportant would not have been justified, and is not within the scope and spirit of the decision. That question, not then presented, is before us now, and I do not hesitate to conclude that in the case at bar the action of the commissioners was a substantial compliance with the law notwithstanding the omission under consideration. All through the opinion in the Cable Case runs the concession that not a detailed and precise and rigid compliance is to be exacted, but one which, looking over the whole action taken, is substantial and does fair justice to the purpose and aim of the law. Substantial compliance involves the admission that there has not been exact and perfect compliance and that there are minor defects and omissions. The single one here existing seems to us of that character, and not sufficient standing alone to require us to deny the corporate existence.

The questions thus discussed were not presented in Matter of Kings Co. Elevated Railroad Co. ( 105 N.Y. 97), but those there considered, with a single exception, related to an alleged forfeiture of the rights acquired and a failure to secure the necessary consent. The corporate existence of the company was there asserted and maintained against the objections then presented.

The order should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur, EARL and GRAY, JJ., on the ground that the case of the People v. Kings County Railroad Company is conclusive here; it was a proceeding in rem, instituted by the state, and its determination established the legality of the corporate existence of the company, and it could not be disputed collaterally thereafter.

Order affirmed.


Summaries of

Matter of Kings County E.R. Co.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jan 15, 1889
19 N.E. 654 (N.Y. 1889)
Case details for

Matter of Kings County E.R. Co.

Case Details

Full title:In the Matter of the Petition of the KINGS COUNTY ELEVATED RAILWAY COMPANY…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Jan 15, 1889

Citations

19 N.E. 654 (N.Y. 1889)
19 N.E. 654

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