Chapman v. . Gates

54 N.Y. 132
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 54 N.Y. 132 (Chapman v. . Gates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. . Gates, 54 N.Y. 132 (N.Y. 1873).

Opinion

Lott, Ch. C.

There was no question made on the trial as to the commission of the acts complained of as obstructions to the road in question, and it was also shown that the defendant was then the owner of and in possession of the land on which they were committed; but the defendant denied that it was subject to a public highway. It was proved that it had been used as such for fifteen years, and that the defendant, as a .commissioner of highways, in connection with his co-commis.sioners, had expended two hundred dollars in a single year to protect it, and that he had also, “ as path-master,” ordered it to be worked as a public road. This expenditure was incurred three or four years before the obstructions were made, and it appeared that the defendant at that time owned land on one . side of the place where the money was expended, and that it was protected by what was done, that he was consulted about it, and did not object to it; nor did he make any objection that the land was not a public highway while the money was being expended, at any time during his term of office as such commissioner of highways. He afterward, for the consideration of one hundred.and fifty dollars, purchased and obtained title to a piece of land containing eight acres (including the ground on which the obstructions were made, but not in any manner referred to as a highway), from one Hathan Reynolds, who had acquired his title from John I. 'Heckart and others, lieirs-at-law of Peter Heckart, deceased, by deed bearing date the 17th day of October, 1853, and it is claimed on behalf of the respondents that, notwithstanding such purchase and acquisition of title, the defendant “is estopped by his own acts and dealings with the public from disputing this road to be a public highway.” Their counsel insists and urges in his points that “ the law will not permit a man so far to ignore good faith and common *137 honesty as to expend the public money, controlled by him as a public officer*, so as to benefit his own private property, and then turn around and affirm he had no right so to expend it, and thus rob the public of the benefit of its expenditure; nor will it permit him to use his official right to the records of the title of the public to property, in order to search or spy out defects in that title, and then to buy up eight acres, for one hundred and fifty dollars, so as to deprive the public of their title to about one acre and a half, which has cost them three hundred dollars in cash and a yearly amount of labor for fifteen years.”

Whatever may be thought of the propriety of such conduct, such claim, as a legal proposition, is not tenable. The defendant, in reference to the expenditure of the money and his acts as overseer of highways in ordering work to be done as above stated, testified as follows: I then had no suspicion but that the town claimed it as a road, but afterward, the commissioners came to the conclusion that it was not a road, and they went to the town board and they said it was not a road, and upon that I purchased it of Reynolds, and since my deed, I have claimed to own the strip,” adding: “ I have before refused to buy it of him on account of the road.”

It will be seen from the preceding statement of the facts, that the defendant, at the time when the transactions relied on as an estoppel occurred, did not own the land, which is the subject-matter of the controversy. His acts could not affect the rights or title of Reynolds, who was then the owner; and, although the conduct of the defendant, under all the circumstances, may be deemed illiberal to his neighbors and the public, discreditable to'himself as a citizen, and properly condemned by every fair-minded man, he had, nevertheless, the legal right to acquire the title of Reynolds, and that vested him with all rights which Reynolds had to the property. Those rights were entirely unaffected by the defendant’s previous acts in reference to and over it as a public officer, in ignorance of the fact that it was not a public road, and he has done nothing in recognition of it as a highway, since the *138 acquisition of those rights, which could prevent him from closing it up.

It then remains to be considered whether the premises were subject to a highway when he acquired Reynolds’ title.

There were several exceptions to the admissibility of evidence on the trial, which are not referred to in the points of the appellant’s counsel, and were not relied on by him on the argument, and, therefore, will not be particularly noticed by me. Those that appear to be insisted upon will hereafter be considered. It was sufficiently proven that an application in'writing, signed by a person liable to be assessed for highway labor in the town of Big Flatts, was presented to the commissioners of highways of that town for laying out the road in November, 1844, and that a certificate, by twelve freeholders, of the necessity and propriety of such road was also delivered to them. The commissioners refused. to lay out the road, and made an order to that effect, which it appears was signed by two of the commissioners only, the other being absent. An appeal was taken by the applicant from that order to the judges of the Court of Common Pleas of Che-mung county, who, in May, 1845, made an order reversing the determination of the commissioners, and laying out the . highway pursuant to the application. That order recited such apppal to them, that they had given a notice of it to the commissioners, specifying therein a time and place at which they would commence to hear it; that they had so met, and that they had, after hearing the proofs and allegations of the parties, determined and decided that such determination ought to be reversed.

The making of the said order by those judges is not denied by the appellant’s counsel, but he claims that “ no valid order refusing to lay out the road was ever made by the commissioners,” and that “ there was, therefore, no foundation for the appeal or the judges’ order laying the road.” Two objections are stated by him to the commissioners’ order: First, that, although there was evidence, to which he refers tending, to show that such order was, in fact, made, he claims that there should *139 be some evidence of the genuineness of the commissioners’ signatures to it, to justify submitting it to the jury,” and that, “ at most, the evidence is not sufficient to justify taking the fact from the jury and directing a verdict; ” and, second, that it had been testified by one witness that there were three commissioners at the -time of the determination refusing to lay out the road, but one of them was absent,” and that, therefore, their action was void.”

There is a sufficient answer to these objections in the fact that they were neither of them taken on the trial. A copy of the judges’ order was offered in evidence, which was objected to by defendant. Among the grounds of objection stated were the following: That it had not been shown “ that the commissioners of highways had made a determination refusing to lay out such highway; nor that any person had appealed from such determination,” and none other was made having any application to the two objections above set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.Y. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-gates-ny-1873.