
    EMPIRE CITY SUBWAY CO., Limited, v. BROADWAY & S. A. R. CO. et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    May 17, 1895.)
    1. Injunction—Against Violation op Statute—Who may Sue.
    An electrical subway company, to which has been granted the right to construct subways in certain streets, and to lease space therein to persons operating electrical conductors, cannot enjoin the maintenance of the electrical wires in such street, not placed in its subways, in violation of the laws relating to electrical conductors, unless it has an exclusive right to have all electrical conductors placed in its subways, either by contract or by statute.
    2. Electrical Subways—Rights in Streets. •
    A contract between a city and an electrical subway company, by which the city grants to the company the right to construct subways in the streets, and to lease space therein to persons operating the electrical conductors, and providing that the contract is to be without prejudice to the rights' of the city to enter into such other, further, and different contracts as shall be necessary to carry out the intent of the laws relating to electrical conductors, and that nothing in the contract shall be construed as granting any exclusive privileges, does not give any company an exclusive right to maintain subways in the streets.
    3. Costs—Extra Allowance—Amount.
    In an action by an electrical subway company to enjoin a cable railroad company from maintaining electric wires in the cable conduit of its road, or using any electrical conductors not placed in plaintiff’s subways, the value of the right of the railroad company to maintain the wires in the cable conduit, according to the rates charged by plaintiff for the use of its subways, is the amount in controversy.
    Appeal from special term, New York county.
    Action by the Empire City Subway Company, Limited, against the Broadway & Seventh Avenue Railroad Company and Houston, West Street & Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company. From a judgment dismissing the complaint on the merits, and from an' order granting an extra allowance of costs, plaintiff appeals.
    Affirmed.
    This action was begun July 11, 1893, to enjoin the defendants from maintaining a conduit for the reception - and operation of a telegraphic and telephonic conductor on the line of the defendants’ road, and to restrain them from using any electrical conductor not placed in the plaintiff’s subways and conduits. The defendants were incorporated under chapter 252 of the Laws of 1884, for the purpose of constructing, maintaining, and operating surface railroads in certain streets of the city of New York. The Broadway & Seventh Avenue Railroad Company owns the road extending from South Ferry, through Whitehall street, Broadway, and Seventh avenue, to Central Park, at the intersection of that avenue and Fifty-Ninth street. Formerly the Broadway & Seventh Avenue road was operated with horses, but, by chapter 531 of the Laws Qf 1889, it was authorized, upon obtaining certain consents, to move its cars by a cable, and make such changes in its road and the bed thereof as should be necessary so to operate its line. Afterwards the consents of the owners of more than one-half in value of the property on this line were obtained that the corporation might substitute a cable for horse power; and November 12, 1889, the common council of the city consented that the corporation might operate the road by a cable, on terms and conditions agreed on, which were expressed in a preamble and resolutions adopted on that day, and approved by the mayor November 13, 1889. By chapter 259 of the Laws of 1890, the aforesaid acts of the authorities of the city were validated and confirmed. On the 13th' of May, 1890, the roads owned by the Broadway & Seventh Avenue Railroad Company were leased to the Houston, West Street & Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, since which date the leased lines have been operated by the lessee. On the 31st of July, 1890, the board of railroad commissioners of this state approved of the proposed change of power, and of the terms and conditions agreed to between the city and the corporation, and imposing certain other conditions, which were expressed in their determination on file in the office of said board, among which is the following: “The counsel of the company agreed that every provision that ingenuity could suggest would be adopted to operate the cable with safety to the traveling public, particularly in the form of grip and system of signaling to the central house to stop the engines in case of accident.” Pursuant to the authority so obtained, cable power was substituted for horse power for propelling the cars. To effect the change, a central or power house was erected, where power was generated and applied to the cable, and a subway constructed in the roadbed for the cable; and an iron pipe 2y2 inches in diameter was laid, wherein were placed electrical wires for the purpose of transmitting signals between the power house and signal boxes placed along the line and about 600 feet apart. These wires are used solely for communicating between the power house and the various signal boxes intelligence relating to the operation of the road, and especially for the purpose of stopping the movement of the cable in ease of an accident on the line. Prior to July, 1886, the Consolidated Telegraphic & Electrical Subway Company was incorporated under the laws of this state for the purpose of building and maintaining subways in the city of New York, and renting space in such ways to the owners of electrical conductors. In July, 1886, and in April, 1887, the board of commissioners of electrical subways entered into contracts with the Consolidated Telegraphic & Electrical Subway Company by which this corporation was granted the right to construct subways in accordance with plans thereafter to be agreed on, manage and operate the same, and charge and receive compensation for the use of space in such subways. By chapter 716 of the Laws of 1887 the board of electrical control in the city of New York was created and invested with the power previously conferred upon the board of commissioners of electrical subways in said city; and by the sixth section of the act the contracts of July, 1886, and of April, 1887, were ratified and confirmed. On the 26th of April, 1890, the Empire City Subway Company, Limited (the plaintiff), was incorporated, pursuant to chapter 611 of the Laws of 1875 and the acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto, for the purpose of constructing, maintaining, and operating electrical conductors, subways, and conduits, and to lease space in the subways and conduits so constructed to persons and corporations having the right to operate electrical conductors in this city. In December, 1890, the Consolidated Telegraphic & Electrical Subway Company, with the consent of the city, conveyed to the plaintiff all subways and conduits for telegraphic and telephonic conductors of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company of New York. May 15, 1891, the board of electrical control and the plaintiff entered into a contract by which the latter agreed to construct, equip, maintain, and operate subways, conduits, and ducts for telegraphic and telephonic conductors, and for low tension electrical light and power conductors of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company in certain streets and avenues in the city of New York. By the fourth article of this contract it is provided: “This contract to be without prejudice to the right of the parties of the first part [the city authorities] to enter into such other, further, or different contracts as shall be necessary to carry out the intent and purpose of chapter 716, Laws of 1887.” The fifteenth article of this contract contains this provision: “Nothing in this contract shall be construed as granting to the party of the second part [the plaintiff] any exclusive privileges, immunity, or franchise whatsoever.” Pursuant to the statutes and contracts referred to, the plaintiff has constructed and maintained subways and conduits for electrical conductors in the streets occupied by the defendants’ roads, and is engaged in renting space to the owners of such conductors.
    Argued before VAN BRUNT, P. J., and O’BRIEN and FOLLETT, JJ.
    Melville Egleston and Edward Lauterbach, for appellant.
    Elihu Root, for respondent.
   FOLLETT, J.

It is a general rule, subject to few exceptions, that an individual cannot maintain a suit in equity to restrain the violation of a statute enacted for the protection of the public, unless he shows that he has been or will be injured in person or property by the violation of the statute. It must be shown that the plaintiff has sustained or will sustain special damage. The same rule is applicable to private corporations, and this plaintiff is not within any of the exceptions to the rule. A concession that the defendants have violated the subway statutes, and that the city or the commissioners of electrical control might maintain an action to restrain the defendants from continuing such violation, would not constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff, unless it could be shown that some right of property had been injured by the violation. Woodruff v. Paddock, 130 N. Y. 618, 29 N. E. 1021; Smith v. Lockwood, 13 Barb. 209. The authorities holding that an action to restrain the defendants could be maintained by the people or by the municipal authorities are not in point, and need not be considered. The only theory upon which this action can be maintained is that the plaintiff has acquired an exclusive right to maintain subways and conduits for electrical conductors in certain streets in this city, and that all persons and corporations using such conductors must place them in their subways, and pay rent for the privilege. Such a right can be acquired only by contract or by statute. No contractual relations have ever existed between the litigants, and the plaintiff has acquired no right as against the defendants by virtue of any contract with them.

This brings us to the question whether the plaintiff has acq aired by statute or by grant from the city, pursuant to some statute, an exclusive right to maintain subways and conduits for electrical conductors. Our attention has not been called to any statute conferring an exclusive franchise on tire plaintiff or on its grantor, and, upon an examination of the statutes relating to the subject, we find no provision from which it can be inferred that the legislature intended to confer an exclusive right upon any corporation, nor do we find any statute authorizing the authorities of the city or the board of railroad commissioners of the state to grant such a franchise. But, apart from the question of authority, it is manifest that the authorities of the city and the board of railroad commissioners did not grant or intend to grant to this plaintiff an exclusive right to construct, maintain, and operate subways and conduits in which all electrical conductors must be placed. By the fifteenth article of the contract of May 15, 1891, entered into with this plaintiff, it is expressly provided:

“Nothing in this contract shall be construed as granting to the party of the second part [the plaintiff] any exclusive privileges, immunity, or franchise whatsoever.”

By the fourth article of the same contract it is provided:

“This contract to be without prejudice to the right of the parties of the first part [the city authorities] to enter into such other, further, or different contracts as shall be necessary to carry out the intent and purposes of chapter 716, Laws of 1887.”

Under these limited grants there is no ground upon which it can be successfully contended that this plaintiff has any exclusive right to maintain subways and conduits for electrical conductors. The board of railroad commissioners, in approving of the proposed change of power for the operation of the defendants’roads, expressly provided that it should adopt and use a “system of signaling to the central house to stop the engines in case of accident.” There is no provision in the statutes which makes it obligatory upon the defendants to place their wires forming a part of their signal system in the conduits owned by the plaintiff, nor is there any provision preventing the defendants from constructing and using conduits of their own. If the construction of the subway statutes contended for by the plaintiff is to prevail, it would be impossible for a surface road to be operated on many of the streets by electricity, as authorized by chapter 531 of the Laws of 1889, unless its conductors were placed in the plaintiff’s subways.

On dismissing the complaint, the court granted an extra allowance ■of $750, which is at the rate of 5 per cent, on $15,000. Upon the application for this allowance, it was shown that the annual rent charged by the plaintiff for the use of such conductors as are used by the defendants would be $700 per mile, and that the value of the isubway, the right to maintain which was in controversy, was at least $60,000. These facts are not disputed, and they are quite sufficient to sustain the allowance granted.

The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.  