People v. Kerr
People v. Kerr
Opinion of the Court
Having carefully examined the case, I shall content myself by stating, without elaboration, the conclusions reached:
1. The authority conferred on the defendants by the act of April 9, 1860, to construct, operate and use a railroad for the conveyance of passengers for compensation through, upon and along certain streets and avenues in the city of New York, was not an invalid exercise of legislative power, in the absence of any constitutional inhibition or restraint. The legislature has entire control of any public rights in the highways or streets, and what it authorizes, so that it be constitutional, cannot be complained of by the attorney general or any one else.
2. The act referred to authorizes the defendants to construct and use a railroad track, but makes no provision for compensation to the corporation of the city of New York
3. The plaintiffs, other than the people, have no property, estate or interest in the land forming the bed of the
4. The streets in question are not owned by the corporation of New York. The corporation cannot sell or dispose of them, or even divert them to private use. Any and all title or interest which the city has in them is held for public use ; is public property, and not private or municipal. By an exercise of state power they were taken or confiscated to public use, and compensation made for them, not from any fund levied on the corporation or its corporate property, or on the city or its inhabitants generally, but by an exercise of the taxing power of the.state. The legislature acted under its taxing power in raising the fund or means of payment.. It cannot be known that a single city corporator contributed any sum toward the purchase; and for anything that appears, the streets in question may have been wholly paid for by non-residents. By force of the statute of 1813, the corporation became seized in fee of the land embraced within the streets, not absolutely as private or corporate property, but in trust for public use. The fee being vested in the corporation, the statutory command and authority followed to take possession and hold the streets “ in trust, that the same be appropriated and kept open as public forever, in like manner as the other public streets in said city are, and of right ought to be.” (2 R. L., p. 408, §§ 177, 118.) It would be strange, indeed, if these streets belonged to the'city and were beyond public control, when they were acquired by the exercise of the right of eminent domain, and were confiscated to public use, when vested in the corporation, by the proceeding to open them. I am clearly of the opinion that the city corporation has no property in the streets of a character to be protected by the constitutional limitations upon the right of eminent domain. It is perhaps unnecessary in this case to consider the question whether, in' other streets' of the city not opened under the act of 1813, the corporation has
5. The effect and object of the act of 1813, in relation to the streets in question, were to establish a public trust for the benefit of the whole people. All public streets or highways are for the use of the people of the whole state, whether located in town or country. The interest in such use, or the ownership thereof, is publici juris. It is a prevalent notion that the inhabitants of the city have some distinct and peculiar right to the use of the streets, not pertaining to the whole people, and that the corporation having paid for them they are, in a sense, corporate property, and the right to govern and regulate their use a sort of corporate franchise. But this is an erroneous view; as has been said in regard to the streets opened under the act of 1813, compensation was made, not from the city treasury, or from corporate property, but the fund for payment
The interest in the use of the streets being publici juris, the power of governing and regulating such uses is vested in the legislature as the representative of the whole people. It is a part of the governmental or political power of the state, in no way held in subordination to the municipal corporation. If the legislature could not authorize the use of the streets in the way prescribed in the act of April, 1860, the power exists nowhere. The permission of the municipal government, the mere creature existing at the will of the state, would add nothing to the power. I know of no restraint upon legislative actioñ, unless it can be found in the constitution, and there is nothing there but the limitation on the exercise of the right of eminent domain. The city corporation, as freeholder of the streets in trust for publie use as highways, is but an agent of the state. Any control which it exercises over them, or the power of regulating their use, is a mere police or governmental power delegated by the state, subject to its control and direction, and to be exercised in strict subordination to its will. The corporation, as such, has no franchise in connection with the use of the streets for the transportation of passengers. Whatever power or authority it possesses in respect to the carriage of persons for hire, was derived from acts of the state legislature, which power may be resumed by the grantor, at its pleasure. I am aware that what is called the franchise for carrying persons for
I discover no obstacle, therefore, to state legislation in respect to the use as well of public streets and highways in the city as in the country. The power which the municipal corporation holds and exercises in controlling and regulating the use of the streets of New York has been delegated to it by the state. It is a grant of governmental power, for local purposes, subject to the control of the supreme power in the state. The legislature may at any time resume the power delegated.
It is not necessary that the courts should maintain or even approve of the policy and justice of that species of legislative interference with the local affairs of a great municipality which the act under consideration discloses. The question is simply one of power. I cannot doubt that the power exists with the state legislature, without the consent or license of the municipal corporation, to so control the use of the public streets of the city as to authorize the construction of a railroad track therein, on which city passengers may be transported for hire. It can make no difference with the question that the right granted is in
All the judges concurred substantially in the foregoing opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The People and others agt. John Kerr and others
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published