The parties to this, action submitted the controversy existing between them to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, and the question which is presented for determination became solely one of law. So far as material to the present discussion, it appears that the defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company had authority to construct and operate a street railroad upon Neptune avenue, between West Sixth street and East Fourteenth street, in the town of .Gravesend. The right so to construct its tracks over this route was determined, by this court in Trelford v. Coney *496Island R. R. Co. (5 App. Div. 464; S. C., 6 id. 204). In Hay,. 1896, the plaintiff in this action commenced an action against the 1 defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company to-restrain-the latter- from entering upon Neptune avenue and constructing its railroad therein. This action resulted in a preliminary injunction restraining the defendant from constructing its railroad “ save'upon such strip of land in such avenue as was originally used for the old plank road, and so far as such defendants may have any rights on and in such strip by virtue of chapter 324 of the Laws of 1861.” In July, 1896, the plaintiff entered upon Neptune avenue for the purpose of constructing its railroad, and thereupon the defendant The Coney Island"and Brooklyn Railroad Company commenced an action to restrain the plaintiff from constructing its road in Neptune" avenue between Coney Island avenue and "West Fifth street, and" after an argument had the court granted a preliminary injunction restraining the plaintiff" from constructing any railroad in Neptune avenue between Coney Island avenue and West Fifth street. Thereupon the two railroads entered into an agreement which forms the basis of this action and upon which the rights of these parties must be determined. By this agreement it was recited that the defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company in or about the year 1863 had constructed its railroad upon the Coney Island plank road, between Coney Island avenue and what, is now known as West Fifth 'street, and operated its railroad thereon until about the year 1890; and that the? Coney Island plank road is now partly within the lines of Neptune avenue as opened; that the plaintiff had all.the rights necessary to construct and operate a double-track street surface' railroad upon Neptune avenue between Emmons avenue and West Eighth street'; and for the purpose of the construction and maintenance of the railroad upon Neptune avenue where their roads coincide, “ being the portion of Neptune- avenue between West Fifth street and Coney Island avenue, and also for the operation of the cars of each of the parties hereto upon such portion of Neptune avenue,” it. was agreed that the parties should construct a double-track street surface railroad upon -Neptune avenue, between West Fifth street and ConéyTsland plank road, making provision "for particular construction .by each, and the -expense of railroad construction and 'electrical equipment *497should be divided between' the parties 5 and it further provided “said tracks so constructed on Neptune avenue are to be used jointly by the parties hereto, and the expense of maintaining arid preserving the same shall be borne equally by the parties hereto.
• In such joint use of the said tracks each of the parties hereto shall have the privilege of operating as many cars over said track as in the conduct of its business it may deem necessary and proper:” The limitation of use in the agreement is found in section 5: “ The ■ parties hereto mutually agree that in the use of said tracks rio car " of either party shall, on any occasion, stop or remain stationary upon -' said tracks for a greater length of time than may be necessary to • take' up or let out passengers, and that all cars of the parties hereto ■ shall be run over said railroad tracks at a rate of speed not less • than that specified in' the time tables made or to be made from time ; tó time by the other party hereto.” The defendant The Coney ; Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company, having leased the'lines Of the defendant The Brooklyn City and Newtown Railroad Company, began running the cars of such leased line over this part of its ’ road, and the plaintiff seeks by this action to restrain the running • of any cars of the leased line over the road so jointly constructed " and maintained, the contention of the plaintiff being that the agree- ■ inent gave no right to the defendant The Coney Island and BrookTyn Railroad Company to make use of the jointly constructed line for any other purpose than the running over it of its own cars.
We do not think that this contention can be upheld. It is perfectly clear that the defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company had the right to construct in Neptune avenue its line of road and operate the same quite independent of any right held-by the plaintiff in such street. Indeed, so far. as the' agreed facts are concerned, and in the litigation between these companies, it -had been judicially determined that the plaintiff -had no right to construct its railroad in Neptune-avenue as against the right-of- the •defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company, as the agreed statement of fact- is that the plaintiff, at the instance of the defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Coihpany, -had been restrained- from constructing its railroad in-such street. -This- being" the -status- of- the-parties--hereto, it is quite evident that *498the-right of the defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company to operate its cars in the street was not subordinate to any rights possessed therein by the; plaintiff, and this right, which the , said defendant then had, would have entitled it to,maintain and-operate over such line either tire cars it was then engaged, in operating or the cars of any company whose line it might thereafter lease. This right is supported by the decisions in Ingersoll v. Nassau Electric R. R. Co. (157 N. Y. 453) and Roddy v. Brooklyn City & Newtown R. R. Co. (32 App. Div. 311).' By the agreement entered into between these railroads the right of each company was.made equal, not alone the.right to - operate such cars as it then possessed and operated, nor the right to operate cars of other railroads which it might -thereafter lease, or which it might enter into . trackage agreement with, but it was the right to make use of this track for the purposes of its business, as fully and completely as it might make use of any other portion of its track, saving only that such use should not operate as an infringement upon the equal -right of Use held, by the plaintiff. In other words, the right which each' railroad company obtained by virtue of this agreement was to make use of. this piece of road equally for all the purposes of use which the business of either company required either in the then existing . condition or for future development. It is not claimed by. the . plaintiff that the act of the defendant The Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company in anywise curtails its use of -the road for all the purposes of its business, or that the' use, by the said defendant is. of such a character as to deprive the plaintiff of the same usé if it chooses to enjoy it. .Such being the rights' of the parties hereto, . neither has the right to complain of the other, nor will there be any right of complaint until the act of one deprives the other of its , opportunity to equal use of this track. Brooklyn Crosstown R. R. Co. v. City R. R. Co. (51 Hun, 600) and Coney Island (6 B. R. R. Co. v. Brooklyn Cable Co. (53 id. 169) have iio-application to this case. They each presented the ordinary case of 'a trackage'- agreement, by which one. railroad obtained the right to the use of the' tracks, of another ;at<an. agreed Compensation, and it was held that such arrangement did-, not operate to authorize the lessee .to.make use of the track for the operation of . cars of other line's which- it had subsequently leased. ... -
*499We have no doubt that those cases were well decided. The question turned upon the construction of the agreement. So here the determination is upon the construction of an entirely different agreement, whereby the parties obtained an equal right to use this piece of track for all of the purposes for which they might find occasion, either in their business, which then existed, or in their subsequent development and extension, there being no limitation, except that one may not be permitted to impair the right existing in the other.
It follows that thé judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.