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Topham v. Interurban Street R. Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jul 1, 1904
96 App. Div. 323 (N.Y. App. Div. 1904)

Opinion

July, 1904.

Paul D. Cravath, for the appellant.

Edward B. Whitney, for the respondent.


This appeal comes before this court upon the allowance of an appeal by the justices of the Appellate Term. Mr. Justice FREEDMAN, in a learned and exhaustive opinion ( Topham v. Interurban Street R. Co., 42 Misc. Rep. 503), has traced the history of the statutory law of the State bearing upon the authority conferred by the Legislature upon a street surface railroad company to construct, operate and lease street surface railroads and to enter into traffic contracts from the inception of the right down to the present time, and reached the conclusion that the lease entered into between the defendant and the Metropolitan Street Railway Company was made and executed pursuant to the provisions of the Railroad Law as it now exists, and that section 104 of that act is not limited to traffic contracts alone, but embraces contracts of lease as well. With that conclusion we agree. The same question was considered by this court and the same conclusion reached in Mendoza v. Metropolitan St. R. Co. ( 48 App. Div. 62; S.C. on motion for reargument, 51 id. 430). It was also adverted to by the Appellate Division in the second department, and the same result asserted, in Barnett v. Brooklyn Heights R.R. Co. ( 53 App. Div. 432). Since that decision, we have been furnished with a manuscript copy of the opinion delivered by the same court in O'Reilly v. Brooklyn Heights R.R. Co. ( 95 App. Div. 253), wherein that court has decisively determined that the construction of the statute in this respect was the same as had been announced by that court in its former decision and by the decisions of this court. Whatever difference of view presently exists in this court upon this subject, I do not deem it necessary to re-examine this question, as the matter has been so thoroughly discussed by the learned court below and so decisively determined in the other cases adverted to, that such question, so far as the Supreme Court is concerned, ought to be regarded as settled.

We are also of the opinion that section 104 of the statute in question authorizes the recovery of cumulative penalties in one action. The language upon such subject is, "for every refusal." Similar language in the Revised Statutes (1 R.S. 586, § 44) was held in Suydam v. Smith ( 52 N.Y. 383) to permit the recovery of cumulative penalties, and that case distinguishes Fisher v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co. (46 id. 644). The same distinction is maintained in all the subsequent decisions upon the subject. The second department, in Suffolk County v. Shaw ( 21 App. Div. 146), adopted the same construction, holding that similar language in section 190 of the Public Health Law (Laws of 1893, chap. 661) was equivalent to "each offense."

Cox v. Paul ( 175 N.Y. 328) is not in conflict with this conclusion. The language of the statute in that case was: "For any refusal * * * such corporation and the officer or agent so refusing shall each forfeit." (Stock Corp. Law [Laws of 1892, chap. 688], § 53, as amd. by Laws of 1897, chap. 384.) The court held that from the language of the statute but one penalty could be recovered, and that the word "any" was not the equivalent of "each" or "every." The language in the present case is different and this is ground for the difference in conclusion.

As I view this case, however, this determination of these questions in favor of the plaintiff does not suffice to show that he is necessarily entitled to a recovery in this action; nor does it result in the affirmance of the order from which the appeal is taken. The real question which the case presents turns upon the construction to be given to section 104 of the Railroad Law. (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, § 105, renumbered § 104 and amd. by Laws of 1892, chap. 676). If that section is to be construed as constituting a mandatory provision by the Legislature that the defendant shall upon demand and without extra charge give to each passenger, paying one single fare, a transfer over its line of railroads at any point of intersection with a leased line, then there is an end of this case and the judgment must be affirmed. If, however, that section be construed as authorizing the defendant in the operation of its railroad to so operate the same and furnish transfers to passengers at such points upon its intersecting lines as will best serve the convenience of the traveling public by designating particular transfer points, and that such designations will accomplish the purpose of the act, then compliance therewith will have been shown. In order to have a clear view of this question, the provisions of the section are to be carefully scrutinized. It reads:

"§ 104. Contracting corporations to carry for one fare; penalty. — Every such corporation entering into such contract shall carry or permit any other party thereto to carry between any two points on the railroads or portions thereof embraced in such contract any passenger desiring to make one continuous trip between such points for one single fare, not higher than the fare lawfully chargeable by either of such corporations for an adult passenger. Every such corporation shall upon demand, and without extra charge, give to each passenger paying one single fare a transfer, entitling such passenger to one continuous trip to any point or portion of any railroad embraced in such contract, to the end that the public convenience may be promoted by the operation of the railroads embraced in such contract substantially as a single railroad with a single rate of fare. For every refusal to comply with the requirements of this section the corporation so refusing shall forfeit fifty dollars to the aggrieved party. The provisions of this section shall only apply to railroads wholly within the limits of any one incorporated city or village."

The primary purpose of this section is to compel the railroad corporation to carry over the lines of road operated by it passengers by such method as will best promote the convenience of the public who travel thereon. The learned court below assumed that the section was to be construed as mandatory provisions, requiring that a transfer should be given at every intersecting point, and in disposition of the suggestion that the corporation might adopt rules or a method in carrying the public over its lines by which transfers might be denied at some points, said (p. 505): "The fact that there was another route embraced within the defendant's system over which the plaintiff on each occasion might have traveled for a single fare can make no difference, and the fact that the giving of transfers at the point in question might cause undue crowding in the street and at the crossings is no excuse for not giving them, unless sanctioned by legislative action." No further discussion of such subject was had in making disposition of the question. It is evident that if the words of the provision which we have italicized do nothing more than declare that the issuance of transfers at all intersecting points will promote the public convenience, then such language might as well have been omitted from the section, as it neither adds to nor takes from the preceding provisions of the section, as the language therein contained is clearly mandatory. Indeed, the injection of this language into the section creates in this view somewhat of ambiguity, if it is to be thus limited, as it in no wise adds to the clearness of the preceding provision. The intent of the Legislature is the cardinal rule by which statutes are to be interpreted. It was said by the presiding justice of this court in Central Trust Co. v. N.Y. Equipment Co. (74 Hun, 405): "A strict and literal interpretation is not always to be adhered to, and where the case is brought within the intention of the makers of the statute it is within the statute, although by a technical interpretation it is not within its letter. It is the spirit and purpose of a statute which is to be regarded in its interpretation, and if these find fair expression in the statute it should be so construed as to carry out the legislative intent, even though such construction is contrary to the literal meaning of some of the provisions of the statute. A reasonable construction should be adopted in all cases where there is a doubt or uncertainty in regard to the intention of the lawmakers." And this rule is abundantly supported by authority and variously illustrated in the cases. ( People ex rel. Savings Bank v. Butler, 147 N.Y. 164.) It was said by RUGER, Ch. J., in People ex rel. Collins v. Spicer ( 99 N.Y. 225): "In looking for the intent of the Legislature, not only the language of the statute may be resorted to, but also the circumstances which occasioned its enactment and the object professed in its title, and if by these aids the intent of the act can be clearly ascertained effect may be given to it, although no retrospective words are contained in the law." "When a general intention is expressed, and also a particular intention incompatible with the general intention, the particular intention is to be considered in the nature of an exception." ( People ex rel. Churchyard v. Board of Councilmen, 47 N.Y. St. Repr. 149; affd. on opinion below, 135 N.Y. 660.) In Murray v. New York Central R.R. Co. (3 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 339) it was held that the letter of a statute would be restrained by the spirit of the enactment, even though a liability imposed thereby was without qualification. In that case the obligation imposed by the statute was to make the railroad company liable for damages which should be sustained when fences alongside of its tracks were not in good repair. The court held that although the language was mandatory and absolute, it was intended thereby to impose a liability only in case of negligence. The purpose here sought to be accomplished was to procure for a single rate of fare transfers over the lines of railroad operated by the defendant by such method as would promote the public convenience in transportation. The convenience of particular individuals is not the scheme or purpose of its enactment, but it is to administered, having for its object the greatest good and the largest convenience for the greatest number. If it should be admitted that the public convenience would be best subserved by rules and regulations fixing certain points where transfers should be issued and denying them at others, there can be no doubt but that the legislative intent would be carried out, as the public convenience would be conserved thereby. If traffic would be congested and rendered dangerous by compelling compliance with the act as a mandatory provision at every intersecting point, and thereby rapid transit would be retarded, it is evident that the public convenience, instead of being promoted, would be hindered. It is asserted that such would be the fact, and if this be so, to construe the provision as mandatory would result in nullifying the plain legislative intent and render nugatory the language which declares the purpose of the act. It is easy to say that the Legislature has provided a scheme, and that by following that scheme public convenience will be the result, but that is not what the statute says. Its language is, "to the end that the public convenience may be promoted." It is not that it "will be," but that it "may be." It is not that the railroad "shall be" run as a single line, but that it may be "substantially" run as such a line, to the end that the public convenience shall be secured. Manifestly, if transfers are provided at intersecting points, whereby the convenience of the public is secured, and it would not be so secured by transfers at all points, the intent of the statute, by adopting the former course, will have been carried out and the spirit of the statute will have been precisely applied. That some discretion has been left to the defendant in operation seems clear from the fact that the public convenience is to be secured and the safety of the passengers safeguarded, and the road still run substantially as a single line. The defendant is not required to run it as a single line, but only so far as conditions and surrounding circumstances will permit, having regard at all times to the convenience of the traveling public. It is so well known that a railroad can only be operated upon a system, the product of rules and regulations, that courts may take judicial notice of such fact. ( Hunter v. N.Y., O. W.R.R. Co., 116 N.Y. 615; Town of North Hempstead v. Gregory, 53 App. Div. 350.) Indeed, unless proper rules for management and operation are promulgated by railroad companies, it is an act of negligence which gives a civil remedy in damages to a person suffering injury arising out of such failure. This is the familiar rule. No one can have seen an assembly of human beings awaiting transportation over the lines of public rail transportation without being painfully impressed with the necessity for rules and regulations for their government, and for much discretion in management by the carrier. It oftentimes needs a more substantial structure than rules to keep the traveling public within bounds, and thus prevent injury to others and themselves. For these purposes structures of wood and iron are the necessary concomitants of crowded public travel, rendered necessary in the promotion of the public safety and convenience. In these respects an onerous public responsibility has been imposed upon the carrier of passengers which courts rigidly enforce. No one can witness the congested character of many intersecting streets without being at once impressed with the necessity for the most careful system in regulation in order to make such places reasonably safe, and to add to such congestion by the diversion of traffic which now goes over other lines would only aggravate such condition and is quite likely to create, not only public inconvenience, but danger to life and limb. The court may take judicial notice of conditions which exist at the intersection of Broadway and Twenty-third street; and in addition thereto such condition and the danger attendant upon the giving of transfers at that point was established by proof upon the trial, as it was shown that if this were made a transfer point, a diversion of travel from other lines to such point would be greatly increased and the danger to passengers and others at such point rendered hazardous. If there be under this statute no power of regulation in the issuance of transfers by the defendant, then the selection of routes rests in the volition of each individual passenger, and if transfers are required to be given at each intersecting point over all the lines of railroad operated by the defendant, then any passenger may at will ride over any and all parts of the boroughs of Manhattan and The Bronx, changing at as many intersecting points as he arrives at, for a single fare of five cents. Manifestly, the Legislature never intended such result to flow from a construction of the provision. Clearly, the right secured to the passenger is the right to be carried from the place where he boards the car in continuous line, as near as may be, to his point of destination; and in order to accomplish that result the defendant is burdened with the responsibility of so arranging its system of transfers as will promote the convenience of the greatest number who travel over its line; and it is equally manifest that in order to promote such convenience and carry the people who demand transportation during the so-called "rush hours" of the day it must have some system in respect thereto or breed confusion and danger.

I am of opinion, therefore, that the true construction of section 104 of the Railroad Law vests somewhat of authority in the defendant to fix transfer points where the convenience of the greatest number of the traveling public will be subserved in going to and from their respective points of destination, and if this result was obtained by the transfer points which were established at the time when this action was brought, no right of action existed, even though such right was denied at the particular point. When the defendant has made provision for the issuance of transfers at intersecting points where the public convenience will be promoted, it makes compliance with the act, even though under such system it refuses transfers at some points. The right in this respect is not to be exercised arbitrarily, but reasonably, having regard to the convenience of the largest number of passengers which it carries. If it does not make reasonable compliance in this respect and provide the best means for the convenience of the traveling public, it will violate the provision and incur the penalty.

This construction of the statute, however, does not avail the defendant in the present case, as it has pleaded no such defense in its answer, nor has it proved the same upon the trial. There is not a suggestion in the answer that the defendant has at any time fixed transfer points which will promote the convenience of the traveling public. The nearest approach to it is in paragraph 10, where it is averred that at the time in question there were other lines of railway which the plaintiff might have taken to reach his point of destination as easily and equally as well as to use the lines mentioned and described in the complaint. There is, however, no averment that these lines of road were under the control of or being operated by the defendant, and while such fact can doubtless be determined by a reference to the lease which is a part of plaintiff's proof, yet there is no averment that it issued transfers at intersecting points upon such line, or that it issued a transfer at its intersection with Eighteenth street, which would have carried the plaintiff to his destination. An examination of the testimony also fails to show that the defendant has made any compliance whatever with the provisions of section 104 of the Railroad Law, or that the plaintiff could have reached his destination by a single fare over any line operated by the defendant. The witness called to establish the fact of the issuance of the transfers failed in his recollection upon such subject and could not testify that retransfers were issued, nor does it appear that such question has been presented in such form as to be available to the defendant in any of the cases now pending before this court.

Since the foregoing was written, Mr. Justice INGRAHAM has considered the whole subject in an opinion handed down herewith. I concur in his opinion so far as it affects the leases made prior to May 1, 1891, for the reasons assigned by him. The provisions of section 78 of the Railroad Law (as amd. by Laws of 1893, chap. 433) expressly exclude its application to any lease in existence prior to May 1, 1891. The lease of the Broadway line falls within such exception, in consequence of which there was no obligation resting upon the defendant to issue transfers at Twenty-third street and Broadway.

My conclusion, therefore, is that the determination of the Appellate Term in this case should be reversed, and the judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed, with costs.

LAUGHLIN, J., concurred; VAN BRUNT, P.J., concurred in result; O'BRIEN, J., dissented.


I do not agree in the construction given by the learned court from which this appeal is taken to section 104 of the Railroad Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 565, § 105, renumbered § 104 and amd. by Laws of 1892, chap. 676). I do not understand that our decision in the case of Mendoza v. Metropolitan St. R. Co. ( 48 App. Div. 62; upon reargument, 51 id. 430) determines the question now before us. In that case, which came up on demurrer, we held that the defendant was not liable for the penalty there sued for.

I view the question presented on this appeal as an open one in this court.

This action is based upon refusals of the defendant to give to the plaintiff transfers which would entitle him to one continuous trip from a point on Twenty-third street to a point on Broadway, upon the line of the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company, and from a point on the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line to a point on the Twenty-third Street line. The line of the Twenty-third Street railroad intersects the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line at the corner of Twenty-third street and Broadway. For a first cause of action the plaintiff alleged that he boarded one of the defendant's cars at a point on Twenty-third street east of Broadway, paid his fare, and at the same time demanded from the conductor a transfer to be used over the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line from the intersection of the said line at Broadway and Twenty-third street south to his destination, which was refused and the plaintiff demands a judgment for the penalty prescribed by section 104 of the Railroad Law ( supra). There were several other causes of action all based upon similar refusals, some being for refusals to give transfers from the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line to the Twenty-third Street line, and some from the Twenty-third Street line to the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line, and the single question is presented as to whether the defendant, who was operating these two lines under a lease of a corporation which was the lessee of both the Broadway and Seventh Avenue railroad and the Twenty-third Street railroad, was required by section 104 of the Railroad Law to give such a transfer.

Section 104 of the Railroad Law is contained in article 4 of that act relating to street surface railroads. That article, as amended, provides for the construction of street surface railroads and specifies the conditions under which such corporations may be authorized to construct a railroad upon and along any street, avenue, road or highway in any city, town or village of the State. The article contains no provision authorizing railroad corporations to make contracts with each other, but section 104 provides as follows: "Every such corporation entering into such contract shall carry or permit any other party thereto to carry between any two points on the railroads or portions thereof embraced in such contract any passenger desiring to make one continuous trip between such points for one single fare, not higher than the fare lawfully chargeable by either of such corporations for an adult passenger. Every such corporation shall upon demand, and without extra charge, give to each passenger paying one single fare a transfer, entitling such passenger to one continuous trip to any point or portion of any railroad embraced in such contract, to the end that the public convenience may be promoted by the operation of the railroads embraced in such contract substantially as a single railroad with a single rate of fare," and a penalty is provided for a refusal to comply with this provision.

By section 78 of the Railroad Law (as amd. by Laws of 1893, chap. 433) authority is given for any railroad corporation, or any corporation owning or operating any railroad or railroad route within this State, to contract with any other such corporation for the use of their respective roads or routes, or any part thereof, but that section contains a provision that "nothing in this section shall apply to any lease in existence prior to May first, eighteen hundred and ninety-one." Article 3 of the statute of which section 78 is a part authorizes the "consolidation, lease, sale and reorganization" of railroad companies; and other sections of the article provide for the consolidation of one or more railroad companies.

The Railroad Law was originally enacted as chapter 565 of the Laws of 1890. Sections 103, 104 and 105 of that law were taken from sections 1, 2, 3 and 4 of chapter 305 of the Laws of 1885. It was amended by chapter 676 of the Laws of 1892, when sections 103 and 104, which were sections 1, 2 and 3 of the act of 1885, were repealed, and section 4 of the act of 1885, re-enacted as section 105 of the Railroad Law of 1890, was inserted in the Railroad Law of 1892 as section 104.

By the Railroad Law of 1890 the provision of section 105, "Every such corporation entering into such contract," applied to a contract authorized by section 103 of the act; but as section 103 was repealed by the amendment of 1892, section 105 of the act of 1890, which was made section 104 by the amendment of 1892, can only apply, as I understand it, to a contract made under section 78, which by express terms does not apply to a lease made prior to May 1, 1891. Chapter 305 of the Laws of 1885 was repealed by section 34 of chapter 687 of the Laws of 1892. If section 104 of the Railroad Law does not apply, the Municipal Court was correct in awarding judgment for the defendant.

It seems to me that the refusal of the defendant to give to the plaintiff a transfer to ride from the point on the Twenty-third Street railroad line to a point on the Broadway and Seventh Avenue railroad line, or a transfer to ride from a point on the Broadway and Seventh Avenue railroad to a point on the Twenty-third Street line, was not a violation of section 104 of the Railroad Law, as amended in 1892. The Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company was incorporated under the General Railroad Law of 1850 (Chap. 140, as amd.), and by an indenture of lease dated the 13th day of May, 1890, it leased all its railroads, including its leased lines, to the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company. The Twenty-third Street Railway Company was organized under the General Railroad Law of 1850, as amended, and by an indenture of lease dated April 25, 1893, it leased to the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company all its railroads, including leased lines, together with all the franchises, rights, powers and privileges of the Twenty-third Street Railway Company. The Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company thereby became the lessee of both roads. By an agreement dated November 29, 1893, the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company consolidated with several other railroad corporations and became the first Metropolitan Street Railway Company on or about December 13, 1893. The Metropolitan Street Railway Company thus organized subsequently consolidated with other companies, and in April, 1902, the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, then operating both the Broadway and Seventh Avenue railroad line and the Twenty-third Street railroad line under these leases to the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, leased all its lines to the defendant, the Interurban Street Railway Company, a corporation organized in 1901 under the Stock Corporation Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 688, as amd.), and operating a railroad running from Mt. Vernon to Tuckahoe in Westchester county. Thus, when the Railroad Law of 1892 was passed, the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company was operating its line of road, and was also operating the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line under a lease from that company. At that time the Twenty-third Street railroad line was operated by the Twenty-third Street Railway Company, an independent corporation having no connection with either the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company or the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, and there was consequently no obligation upon either company to give a passenger a transfer to ride upon the other line. Nothing contained in section 78 of the Railroad Law applied to this lease between the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company and the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company.

This being the situation, the lease from the Twenty-third Street Railway Company to the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company was executed and delivered. That lease, dated April 25, 1893, is between the Twenty-third Street Railway Company, party of the first part, and the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, party of the second part, recites that the party of the first part owns and operates the street surface railroads and railroad routes in the city of New York upon Twenty-third street from the North to the East river, and upon various other streets in the city of New York, and leases and operates the surface railroad and railroad route of the Bleecker Street and Fulton Ferry Railroad Company from Twenty-third street, North river, to the Fulton Ferry and the Brooklyn Bridge, and the indenture granted, leased and demised to the party of the second part and its successors all the railroads of the party of the first part, including the leased lines now or thereafter to be constructed or operated during the pendency of the lease, together with all the franchises, rights, powers and privileges of the party of the first part, to maintain, construct and operate a railroad, to have and to hold the same unto the party of the second part, its successors and assigns, for the unexpired term of the charter of the party of the first part, and any extensions of the said charter, and as a consideration for this demise, the party of the second part agreed to maintain, manage, use and operate the line of railroads leased, to pay all taxes, assessments and charges imposed upon the demised property, and to pay quarterly an annual rental of eighteen per cent on the par value of the capital stock of the party of the first part, and assumes all debts and obligations of the party of the first part. In this lease there is no mention of the lines of railroad operated by the lessee or by the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company. Neither of these railroads is described in the lease or in any way referred to therein, and it does not appear from the instrument that the lessee was the owner of or operating any line of railroad in the city of New York. As a fact, it was at the time operating its own line of railroad, and also under a lease with the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company it was operating that company's line of road, but that fact is not recited in the lease, and the only railroads described or referred to in the lease are the Twenty-third Street railroad and a railroad that the Twenty-third Street Company was operating under a certain lease or agreement with it.

I think that section 104 of the Railroad Law applies to contracts made in pursuance of section 78 of that law. By the express provisions of section 78, however, that section did not apply to any lease in existence prior to May 1, 1891. The Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company was, therefore, operating a railway under a lease by the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company, made in May, 1890, and nothing in section 78 of the law applied to such a lease. Then section 104 provides that "every such corporation entering into such contract (that is, such contract as is provided for by section 78) shall carry or permit any other party thereto to carry between any two points on the railroads or portions thereof embraced in such contract any passenger desiring to make one continuous trip between such points for one single fare." Now, "such contract" was one made in pursuance of section 78 of the act, and if the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company, or the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, had made a contract with the Twenty-third Street Railway Company, authorized by section 78 of the act, it was then obliged to carry any passenger desiring to make one continuous trip between any two points on the railroads, or portions thereof embraced in such contract, and to give each passenger paying one single fare a transfer entitling such passenger to one continuous trip to any point or portion of any railroad embraced in such contract; but it was only to the road or roads or portions thereof embraced in the contract to which a passenger was entitled to a transfer. A line of railroad operated by the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company under a lease at the time it received the lease from the Twenty-third Street Railway Company was not a railroad embraced in the lease of the Twenty-third Street road. As before stated, there is no recital in the lease that the lessee is operating any railroad. The Broadway and Seventh Avenue line is not mentioned in any way in the lease. The lease of the Twenty-third Street line had no possible relation to or connection with the lease of the Broadway and Seventh Avenue railroad, which was in existence before the passage of the act, and is by the express provisions of the act unaffected by its provision. The obligation to give a transfer is not imposed upon two roads which make contracts in relation to each other, but where a contract is made between two railroad companies, the statute imposes an obligation upon both companies to give to a passenger a transfer from one road to the other between two points on the railroads or portions thereof which are embraced in such contract. If it had been intended by this provision to include all railroads operated by the contracting parties, it certainly would have been easy to say so; but that is not the obligation that is imposed. It is the right of a passenger to be carried between any two points on the railroads or portions thereof embraced in such a contract, and this language negatives the intention of requiring each contracting railroad to give to passengers transfers to all portions of the lines operated by each contracting company, for the right is expressly limited to the "railroads or portions thereof" that are embraced in the contract. Now, as before stated, there was no portion of the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line embraced in any contract or lease made subsequent to May 1, 1891, or to which section 104 of the Railroad Law could apply.

I think, therefore, that there was no obligation imposed upon the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company to give a transfer from any portion of the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line to a point on the Twenty-third Street line, or to carry passengers upon the Twenty-third Street line which was imposed by the lease of the Twenty-third Street Railway Company to the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company. Nor do I think that the subsequent consolidation which merged the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company and other corporations into a new corporation, which was called the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, imposed such an obligation, or is included in the provisions of section 104 of the act. Neither the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company nor the Twenty-third Street Railway Company was included in the corporations which were merged and became the Metropolitan Street Railway Company. They are still existing corporations, the owners of their respective lines and railroads; and the Metropolitan Street Railway Company and subsequently the defendant corporation came into possession of these railroads simply as the assignee of the original lessee. The defendant corporation is located in Westchester county and has no connection with any portion of either the Twenty-third Street line or the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line; and so the provisions of section 104 of the Railroad Law did not apply to this lease made between railroad companies owning or operating lines of railway within and without the city of New York, as it is expressly provided by said section 104 that the "provisions of this section shall only apply to railroads wholly within the limits of any one incorporated city or village." I do not see how it can be said that the Broadway and Seventh Avenue line, which was being operated by the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company under a lease prior to the adoption of section 78 of the Railroad Law, was a railroad or a portion of a railroad embraced within the contract of lease made by and between the Twenty-third Street Railway Company and the Houston, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company in 1893. In none of the consolidation agreements which resulted in the organization of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company was the Broadway and Seventh Avenue or the Twenty-third Street railroad mentioned or included within the contract. Neither of these roads has ever been consolidated with or become a part of the Metropolitan Street Railway system, and the lease of the Metropolitan Street Railway system to the defendant was a lease of roads operated in the city of New York to a railroad company operating a line of railroad in the county of Westchester and thus expressly excluded from the obligation imposed by section 104 of the Railroad Law.

My conclusion is that the determination of the Appellate Term must be reversed, with costs, and the judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed.

VAN BRUNT, P.J., concurred.


The history of the legislation bearing upon the subject of transfers shows that it has been the uniform policy with reference to franchises dealing not alone with steam railroads, but with street surface railroads as well, that there should be no consolidation or leasing of competing lines, the theory being that it is in the interest of the public to have competing lines. It is conceded that this policy as a favor to street surface railroads has been departed from; but in all the cases in which the right to consolidate or to lease contiguous lines has been granted such leave or right was conditioned upon the corresponding benefit being conferred upon the public of obtaining a continuous ride for a single fare; and to that end it was the intent and purpose of the various acts to give to the public the right over the lines leased or consolidated to ride for a single fare. The present instance is not exceptional in the failure to express this idea clearly and in apt language. Having in mind the spirit and intent of the legislation, however, there is little difficulty, it seems to me, in reaching the conclusion that the language was intended to apply generally to all leases made by street surface railroad companies when leased by one to the other. The attempt, therefore, to limit this general policy by seizing on particular words in the statute which would have the act apply to leases made after a certain date or dependent upon whether the passenger sought to ride on what before the lease was the lessor or the lessee company, is to do violence to the spirit and intent of the legislation. As I have stated, the statute aimed at requiring, as a consideration or condition for the benefit and advantage which would flow to the railroad companies from permitting them to make leases through which there was practically effected a consolidation of two or more lines, that the public should receive as an equivalent for the concession granted the right for one fare to be transferred over the leased lines.

As to construing the statute in detail, I do not think it necessary to add to what was said in the opinion of this court in Mendoza v. Metropolitan St. R. Co. ( 51 App. Div. 430) or to what has been said herein by the learned Appellate Term. ( Topham v. Interurban Street R. Co., 42 Misc. Rep. 503.) For the reasons stated in those opinions, therefore, I think that the determination of the Appellate Term should be affirmed, with costs.

Determination reversed and judgment of Municipal Court, affirmed, with costs.


Summaries of

Topham v. Interurban Street R. Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jul 1, 1904
96 App. Div. 323 (N.Y. App. Div. 1904)
Case details for

Topham v. Interurban Street R. Co.

Case Details

Full title:HENRY R. TOPHAM, Respondent, v . INTERURBAN STREET RAILWAY COMPANY…

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department

Date published: Jul 1, 1904

Citations

96 App. Div. 323 (N.Y. App. Div. 1904)
89 N.Y.S. 298

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