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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
April 19, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
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BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Tuesday, April 19, 2005
Pelham Manor Residents Fight Construction of the Toonerville Trolley
Line
On July 31, 1937, the Village of Pelham Manor hosted a celebration
attended by about 8,000 people for the last run of the "Toonerville
Trolley" in Pelham Manor. Everyone in Pelham and tens of thousands of
others across the nation and around the world loved the little trolley
line that inspired Fontaine Talbot Fox to create a rickety and
unpredictable trolley car known as the "Toonerville Trolley" in his comic
strip entitled "Toonerville Folks". Everyone loved Pelham's Toonerville
Trolley line.
It was not, however, always like that. Indeed, a number of Pelham
residents fought bitterly to keep trolley tracks out of Pelham Manor.
There were at least two lawsuits that resulted in reported decisions in
which Pelham Manor residents sought to block construction of the
Toonerville Trolley tracks through Pelham Manor along Pelhamdale Avenue.
Today's blog posting will discuss these two decisions.

Anna M. Secor v. Board of Trustees of Village of Pelham Manor,
et al., 6 A.D. 236, 39 N.Y.S. 993 (App. Div. 2d Dep't 1896).
In 1895, the Westchester Electric Railway Company submitted an application
to the Board of Trustees of the Village of Pelham Manor to permit it to
lay trolley tracks through the village along Pelhamdale Avenue. On
December 2, 1895, the Board took the matter under advisement but adopted a
resolution setting January 4, 1896 as the date the application would be
considered.
To comply with statutory notice requirements, the Board arranged for
publication of notice of the hearing on the railroad company's application
for four successive weeks in the weekly local newspaper Pelham Manor
Tribune. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees approved the application
of the Westchester Electric Railroad Company.
Anna M. Secor -- whose family owned a large tract of land in Pelham Manor
-- commenced an action and obtained an injunction prohibiting the railroad
company from "acting upon the consent granted by" the Board of Trustees
and restraining the Board from further acting on the application of the
railroad company "until they have published the notice as required by
statute."
The suit seems to have been a delaying tactic. The statute at issue
required that in the case of a village like Pelham Manor without a daily
newspaper, public notice most be provided "for fourteen days" in "a
newspaper published therein, if any there shall be, and if none, then
daily in two daily newspapers if there be two, if not, one published in
the city nearest such village or town."
The plaintiff's principal argument was laughable. Anna Secor, through her
lawyers, argued that although the Pelham Manor Tribune was
distributed in Pelham Manor, it was not published in Pelham Manor
since it was printed in New Rochelle. The Court rejected the argument,
holding that "We think that there has not been established any substantial
departure from the requirements of the statute, and a case was not made
warranting the interference of the court by injunction. The order should
be reversed, and the injunction dissolved, with $10 costs and
disbursements."
McLean v. Westchester Electric Ry. Co., et al., 25 Misc. 383,
55 N.Y.S. 556 (Sup. Ct. Kings Co. 1898). A more serious
challenge to construction of the trolley line along Pelhamdale Avenue
seems to have been mounted two years later by a Pelham Manor resident
named Joseph F. McClean. He owned a piece of property along Pelhamdale
Avenue. He sought an injunction from the court to stop Westchester
Electric Railway Company from building the trolley line with its tracks
and electrical lines above the street.
In this reported decision, the Court had to address two issues -- a
technical one and a substantive one. The technical issue was whether
McClean had "standing" to sue the Railway Company (i.e., did he
have a legally recognized right to make a claim to enjoin construction of
the trolley line). The Court concluded that although numerous court
decisions supported the proposition that a nearby property owner's "right
to protect public highways from invasion is very limited", an abutting
property owner has standing before a court of equity "to compel the public
officer to the performance of his duty" to protect against "invasions" of
public highways.
The second issue was substantive -- whether McClean was entitled to the
injunctive relief he sought. The Court concluded that he was. It wrote:
"The conclusion brings me to the consideration of the franchise and rights
of the defendant corporation. Without discussing other points, it seems to
me that there is one fatal defect in the defendant's franchise. The
consent of the local authorities, the trustees of the village of Pelham
Manor, it is conceded, is necessary. Conceding that the trustees elected
for one year, without any new advertisement could amend the resolutions or
proceedings passed or had in relation to defendant by the board of the
previous year; conceding that not forfeiture, loss, or taint came by
reason of any forfeiture, loss, or taint came by reason or any inaction or
default on the part of the company, - the question stands as though it had
asked and obtained the consent of the trustees in January, 1898. But the
difficulty is that at that date the defendant, as I regard it, had no
capacity to ask for or receive this franchise, - a franchise to construct
and maintain a railroad on Pelhamdale avenue. That avenue was not
described in the defendant's articles of association, and the defendant
bases its right to ask for and to receive the consdent for this avenue
upon proceedings under which such an extension is claimed were, I think,
clearly invalid. They did not constitute an extension of either of the
railroad or of the route or routes of the defendant. They only projected a
railroad, not only independent of, but separate from, all the routes or
roads to which the defendant then had any right or claim whatever. It may
be that this point is technical, but does it not follow that, if that
extension proceeding was good, the defendant, if it had received the other
necessary consents, could have constructed and operated a railroad upon
the so-called 'extension,' making no connection with its railroad built on
the routes described in its articles of association, and so have secured
the right to build and operate two independent railroads in two different
political divisions, and that under articles of association and provisions
of law which contemplated but a single connected road, carrying from end
to end for a single fare? But it is said that the defendant has taken a
second extension proceeding, by which it has closed the gap between its
routes as described in its articles of association and in its first
extension. But that came in February, 1898, and after the final action of
the village trustees has been had. Holding that the action of the village
trustees was invalid, because of the defect I have indicated in the first
extension proceeding, I consider that, while the second extension
proceeding might cure defects in the first, it could not relate back,
operating as it were, nunc pro tunc, so as to make valid the resolutions
of the village authorities which were before inoperative and ineffectual.
Unless this defendant, proceeding under the railroad law, had located a
route upon Pelhamdale avenue, either by its articles of association, or by
formal and valid extension proceedings, it seems to me very clear that it
no more had capacity to take and exercise the franchise here in question
than would a manufacturing corporation or a private individual. So
holding, I decide that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief by
injunction, as prayed for in his complaint. Injunction granted."
Ultimately, of course, the trolley line was built ensuring that a few
years later Fontaine Fox would experience his inspiration for the "Toonerville
Trolley" and change Pelham's history forever.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
6:42 AM
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for April
18, 2005.
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