Abraham Lent & Edison Electric Illuminating Co. v. Tilyou

106 A.D. 189, 94 N.Y.S. 479

This text of 106 A.D. 189 (Abraham Lent & Edison Electric Illuminating Co. v. Tilyou) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abraham Lent & Edison Electric Illuminating Co. v. Tilyou, 106 A.D. 189, 94 N.Y.S. 479 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

The plaintiffs are an electric lighting corporation, and Lent, who is a would-be customer. In order to furnish light to Lent or any other customers who might apply, this corporation sought to lay down conduits, tubes and other apparatus in certain ways known as the Bowery, Tilyou’s walk and Kensington walk. Lent is the lessee of the premises which' abut upon the Bowery. It is practically undisputed that these three ways are walks made and maintained by the defendant or by a company which he controls over private property of which parts have been leased to various persons, as in Lent’s case, for places of amusement, and of which a large part has been kept and maintained by the defendant and liis said company for like purposes. The public has used these ways ’ or walks for access to these various places of amusement. ■ The Bowery has existed about thirteen years. The defendant asserts that none other has ever exercised authority or asserted any jurisdiction over these ways, that he or his company has laid them down and maintained them; that such use by the public has been under the permission of the said defendant and the other said owner; that lie has personally improved the Bowery at large outlay that he and the other [191]*191said owner have always held the ways as private property, and in evidence thereof, in every year, for a time, they have excluded the public from the Bowery by barrier. The defendant refused permission to the plaintiff corporation to lay down its conduits and tubes in these ways and thereupon this action was brought to restrain the defendant from any interference. .An injunction pendente Ute was granted, and this appeal is by the defendant from the order of injunction.

The learned and able counsel for the respondents concedes that the appellant is the owner of the legal and equitable title to all that part of the Bowery between the westerly terminus of the company’s conduit and Lent’s premises, and that the said Bowery and the said walks “ have never been acquired by the city or dedicated so as to become streets in the legal sense but he asserts that Lent, with other occupants, “received their grants or leases, as the case might be, bounded by such streets or with such streets in physical existence at the time.” He asserts that the plaintiff corporation “bases its right to extend its conduits * * *. solely by reason of its employment by the said plaintiff-respondent Abraham Lent, and by other occupants of premises abutting upon the Bowery, Kensington walk and Tilyou’s walk.”

It is contended that the reasoning in Thousand Island Park Association v. Tucker (173 N. Y. 203, 209) is applicable. In that case, the plaintiff, a camp meeting or summer (park association, had leased lots, and it was held that as against the plaintiff, the errand of Tucker, a farmer who supplied certain lessors of the lots with poultry and vegetables, was lawful; Cullen, J., saying: “ But however this may be, the lots leased were laid out on a map and plan of the park showing the streets and roads. By leasing the lots as designated on such maps, the plaintiff thereby dedicated the land in the streets and roads to the use of the lot lessees, and any one using a road for access to the premises of such lessee on the latter’s request can justify his presence there as against the plaintiff under such dedication.” The cases may be discriminated. Tucker, incidentally to the errands of his business, merely used the road for access as he had' the right to do in common with the public. _ Naturally, he simply passed and repassedalong.it as his business required. The ease at bar would be analogous if the plaintiff sought' to use the [192]*192way to carry lamps to Lent, or to deliver illuminating oil to him. But the plaintiff does not seek any such occasional use of the way in common with the public, but a permanent physical invasion thereof pro tanto, to the permanent physical exclusion of the, defendant. The passing to and' fro of Tucker was like unto the user of the public which was contemplated by the defendant in this case. But in permitting the public to use this way for access to the various places, the defendant did not thereby contemplate such use as the plaintiff would make of the land within the ways. In Eels v. A. T. & T. Co. (143 N. Y. 133, 139, 140), the court, per Peckham, J., say : “ Still, the primary l'aw of the' highway is motion, and whatever vehicles are used, or whatever method of transmission of intelligence is adopted, the vehicle must move and the intelligence be transmitted by some moving body which must pass along the highway, either oil or over, or perhaps under it,. but it cannot permanently appropriate any part of it.” And again, speaking of a highway: “It is not a place which can be permanently and exclusively appropriated to the use of any person or corporation, no matter what the business or object of the latter might be. It was because the highway was permanently, and, to some extent, exclusively appropriated by the elevated railroads that it was held their erection, without the consent of the abutting owners, was illegal. (Story v. Railroad Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.D. 189, 94 N.Y.S. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abraham-lent-edison-electric-illuminating-co-v-tilyou-nyappdiv-1905.