
    The People ex rel. New York Elertric Lines Company, Relator, v. William B. Ellison, Commissioner, Etc., et al., Respondents.
    
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    June, 1906.)
    Electricity — Eights in streets — Subways.
    Corporations — Incorporation and organization — Time of organizing — Requirement, how satisfied.
    Mandamus — Mandamus against public officers — Use of streets — Electrical subways.
    A corporation formed in 1882, for the purpose of owning, conducting, using, maintaining, and leasing lines of electrical conductors to be placed underground, which .organized and obtained a franchise from the city of New York to lay wires underground within one year from the date of its incorporation, satisfied the requirement of the statute in force at the time of its incorporation which provided that if any corporation should not organize and commence the transaction of its business within that period its corporate powers should cease.
    Subsequent inaction would not affect the right of the corporation to exist except through direct proceedings by the State for the annulment of its charter; and its franchise from the city was irrevocable by the city because not forfeited by any term of the agreement itself.
    But chapter 499 of the Laws of 1885, creating a board of commissioners of electrical subways, having provided that any corporation desiring to lay wires underground should within sixty dajs submit its plans to the board and failing this the board was empowered to devise a subway which all operators of electrical conductors under the streets should be bound to use, the relator’s individual right to open the streets for the laying of electrical conductors in conduits of its own has passed and an application, based upon its franchise to lay wires under the streets, for a peremptory mandamus directing the commissioner of water supply, ■gas and electricity to grant permission to construct subways or conduits beneath the surface of certain streets, must be denied.
    Application for peremptory writ of mandamus.
    Alton B. Parker, Tracy 0. Becker, J. Aspinwall Hodge and Frank B. Vermilya, for relator.
    William P. Burr, William J. Clarke and Leonce Fuller (John J. Del any, corporation counsel), for respondents.
    
      
       Received'too late for insertion in proper place.
    
   Bischoff, J.

This is a motion for a peremptory writ of mandamus directing the respondent, commissioner of water supply, gas and electricity, to grant a certain application made to him by the relator, the Hew York Electric Lines Company, for permission to construct subways or conduits beneath the surface of certain streets of this city, and further directing the respondents Aheam and Haffen to approve the permit of the commissioner, when issued, so far as that permit relates to streets in the boroughs of which each is, respectively, president.

The relator is a corporation, organized in the month of October, 1882, under the General Telegraph Act (Laws of 1843, chap. 265), “ for the purpose of owning, conducting, using, maintaining and leasing lines of telegraph wires or other electric conductors for telegraphic or telephonic communication, and for electric illumination, to be placed under the pavements of the streets, avenues and public highways of the City of Hew York and Brooklyn, * * * and for the purpose of owning franchises for laying and operating the said lines of electric conductors.”

On April 10, 1883, the board of aldermen of the city of Hew York granted permission to the corporation to lay wires in and through the streets of the city, which privilege or license was accepted in writing; but no actual work of construction was ever begun and no wires have ever been laid by the corporation pursuant to the permission thus given. .

It appears, however, that the company proceeded to procure the control of patents covering devices applicable to underground electric construction; that it maintained an office and factory, was engaged in the preparation of plans and designs and expended between $30,000 and $50,000 in preparatory and experimental work during the first year of its existence. On May 18, 1883, the company filed in the office of the county clerk a map showing the route of its proposed electrical conductors; and, on July 21, 1886, it applied to the commissioner of public works for a permit to open the streets, the denial of which application, upon the ground that the commissioner was not the proper official to grant the permit, was followed by litigation, consistently unsuccessful, to enforce the company’s asserted rights in the matter. The litigation ended in the year 1892, since which time nothing appears to have been done by the company excepting to resist two applications to the Attorney-General, looking to the annulment of its charter, and excepting its payment of the annual taxes upon its corporate property and upon the- assessed value of its corporate franchise.

On December. 8, 1905, this company, the relator, filed with the predecessor of the respondent commissioner applications for permits to open the streets, and certain discussion as to the relator’s standing to demand the permits resulted. Finally, on May 11, 1906, the commissioner refused the permit upon the ground that the Few York Electric Lines Company has no valid franchise or rights in the streets in the City, nor has it a legal corporate existence.” Upon this state of facts a writ of mandamus is applied for.

On behalf of the respondents, it is shown that, on May 18, 1906, the city, through a resolution adopted by the board of estimate and apportionment, with the approval of the mayor, declined its election to terminate and revoke the permission or privilege granted to the relator in the year 1883 to lay wires in and through the streets of the city; and it is contended that whatever rights the relator may have had, through its incorporation and the earlier grant of privileges, were lost through inaction, which, it is also claimed, terminated the existence of the corporation, without further proceedings, by the force of the statute. 1 E. S. 600, § 7.

This statute, in force when the relator was incorporated in 1882, provided: “If any corporation hereafter created

by the legislature shall not organize and commence the transaction of its business within one year from the date of its incorporation, its corporate powers shall cease.”

It is claimed for the respondents that this provision of the statute was self-executing (Brooklyn Steam T. Co. v. City of Brooklyn, 78 N. Y. 524; Matter of Brooklyn, W. & N. R. Co., 72 id. 245), and, for argument, I may assume that it was, although the requirement to “ organize and commence the transaction of its business ” lacks much of the definite character of the conditions which were considered in the cases last cited, and is more closely within the rule of construction applied in Matter 0f Kings County Elevated R. R. Co., 105 N. Y. 97, 120, where it was held that a statute providing for the “release and forfeiture” of franchises'of the corporation, upon default of certain conditions, was- not self-executing because the conditions were not defined by some specific act as in the case referred to and which the court distinguished.

It is quite apparent, however, that the relator did conform to the condition of the statute, as expressed. It organized within one year and also commenced the transaction ■ of its business; for it obtained a franchise from the city to lay wires underground, one of the purposes of -its incorporation, as stated in its charter. The statute did not require that it should commence the work of construction of electrical subways, nor that it should undertake any particular endeavor ; one step in the transaction of its business within the year was a commencement, and, when obtaining a franchise from the city, it took that step and did commence the transaction of business.

The corporate life of the relator was not, therefore, brought to an end by the statute; and if its subsequent inaction was to affect its right to exist, this was a question for the State to raise in direct proceedings for the annulment of the charter. People v. U. & D. R. R. Co., 128 N. Y. 240, 248.

So, too, it may be held that the franchise from the city, obtained by ' the relator in the year 1883, was irrevocable by the city, because not forfeited by any term of the agreement itself (People v. O’Brien, 111 N. Y. 1) ; but, as I view the case, the application must be denied upon the ground that the franchise was modified by the State, in the exercise of the police power, and that the relator’s individual right to open the streets, for the laying of electrical conductors in conduits of its own, had passed.

By chapter 499 of the Laws of 1885 there was provided a system for the regulation of underground electrical conduits, to be carried into effect by a board of commissioners of electrical subways, created by the act.

It was further provided that any persons or corporations desiring to lay wires underground in the streets of cities should, within sixty days after the passage of the act, submit to the board their plans for that purpose; and, failing this, the commissioners were empowered to devise a ground subway which all operators of electrical conductors under the streets should be bound to use. That this regulation was' a valid exercise of the police power and thus to be upheld, notwithstanding its effect upon the contract rights existing by virtue of the relator’s charter and the franchise from the city, has been settled by conclusive authority (People ex rel. N. Y. Electric Lines Co. v. Squire, 14 Daly, 154; 107 N. Y. 593; 145 U. S. 175) ; and there is no provision in the subsequent statutes amending this Subway Act ” (Laws of 1886, chap. 503; Laws of 1892, chap. 263) which in any way removes the restriction to use the general subway devised and operated in this city.

The effect of the Subway Act ” was to give the relator sixty days in which to assert its right to lay its wires in its own conduits; and, thereafter, it was in no better position than any other person or corporation for the purposes of a claim of right to open the streets and operate a private and individual system of its own.

This application is based upon the relator’s franchise to lay wires under the streets, and is not founded upon facts showing the failure of the respondents to provide sufficient general facilities for the operation of electrical conductors. Indeed, the only facts presented upon this branch of the sul> ject are contained in the respondents’ papers, and disclose the sufficiency of the present system to meet all requirements.

As I have noted, the relator’s franchise has been so modified by competent legislation that it cannot assert an individual right to operate its own subway system; and, this assumed right being the sole basis of the application before me, I must hold that the papers do not justify the granting of a writ of mandamus.

Motion denied, with ten dollars costs.  