This was an action to recover a penalty of $100 for an alleged violation by the railroad company of an ordinance of the common council of the city of Hew York-, which required the several street surface railroad companies to operate their roads 1 as frequently as public convenience may require and not less than one car every twenty minutes between the hours of 12 midnight and 6 o’clock a. m. each and every day, both ways, for the transportation of passengers.”
The particular violation charged in the complaint was the
In 1860 the legislature passed “An act to authorize the construction of a railroad in Avenue D, East Broadway, and other streets and avenues of the city of New York.” (Chap. 512, Laws of 1860.) This defendant is the assignee and owner of the rights, privileges and franchises conferred on the grantees named in the act. In its second section it was provided, as follows:
• “ § 2. Said railroad shall be constructed on the most approved plan for the construction of city railroads, and shall be run as often as the convenience of passengers may require, and shall be subject to such reasonable rules and regulations in respect thereto as the common council of the city of New York may from time to time by ordinance prescribe.”
In 1890 the ordinance in question was passed by the common council, and the defendant questions its power and right to pass it, upon the ground that it alters or violates the contract between the state and the defendant. The argument, however, disregards the fundamental fact that it was a part of that contract that the defendant should be subject to such rules and regulations as the common council should prescribe, and the only limitation or qualification imposed by the legislature, in that respect, were that they should be such as were reasonable.
Within the boundaries of the authority conferred by the legislature upon the common council, that body may make ordinances for the regulation of the conduct of the affairs of
When the charter, under which the defendant acquired its right to operate its railways, was granted, in 1860, it was one of its conditions or provisions, and, as such, quite as much obligatory upon the grantees as any other part of the legislative grant, that the corporation should comply with any ordinances prescribed by the common council; which constituted a reasonable regulation of the use of the corporate franchises. There is not here any question of an alteration of a charter, or of any impairment of the contract with the state. The ■defendant took the charter with all the conditions expressed in it, and, by acceptance, has agreed that the operation and enjoyment of the privileges and franchises conferred shall be in subordination to such reasonable regulations as the common council of the city shall ordain. By accepting the charter, the grantees voluntarily consented to be bound by all of its provisions and conditions, and the corporation cannot complain of the enforcement of any, if, by a fair reading of the language, the enforcement in the particular manner is authorized. The -question then simply is whether this ordinance of the common council, which was adopted with respect to all the surface roads in the city, was a reasonable regulation with respect to this defendant; for if it was not, then it is not obligatory within the meaning of the act of incorporation. The authority of the common council in prescribing regulations was qualified as to this defendant, and, when it is sought to recover a penalty for non-compliance with a regulation, it is competent for the defendant to show that it should not apply to it, because
The adoption of the ordinance in question does not conclude the courts in passing upon the case of its alleged violation, because their determination is to be controlled by the question of whether it was reasonable as to the defendant, and that can only be determined from facts in evidence. The court will imply the existence of reasons rendering the adoption of such a public measure presumptively proper, and it is for the defendant to show the facts which should exempt it from compliance with the general regulation. Presumptively, the ordinance was required in the interests of the public, for whose convenience railroad companies hold and must operate their
But, if limitations are affixed to the law which control in its application to subjects, it is for the court to decide whether, under the circumstances as disclosed, the conditions for its application are met by the case. Whether this ordinance should apply to the defendant would depend upon whether the defendant has succeeded in proving that it was an unreasonable regulation in its particular case. If it could prove that, when obeying the ordinance, upon a fair trial of the regulation, few or no passengers were carried, the judge might and, possibly, should find that the regulation was an unreasonable one and, therefore, should not be enforced. With the evidence upon the subject before him, it would be for the judge to decide upon the question of the reasonableness of enforcing such an ordinance.
That the evidence offered related to a period of time subsequent to the date when the ordinance went into effect, is not a
We think that there was no force in the objection, and no basis for it in the facts, that the ordinance was unreasonable for the want of sufficient time within which to comply with its requirements; and we do not think that it was a sufficient compliance by the defendant to operate its Avenue B line of cars. The ordinance related to all lines of railroads using the streets of the city, whether they were main lines or branches..
For the error committed in excluding evidence offered by the defendant to show that, with respect to the running of its cars over the Avenue D branch, the regulation embodied in the ordinance of the common council was not a reasonable one, the judgment below should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.