City of Buffalo v. Delaware, L. & W. Railroad

39 N.Y.S. 4
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 N.Y.S. 4 (City of Buffalo v. Delaware, L. & W. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Buffalo v. Delaware, L. & W. Railroad, 39 N.Y.S. 4 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

LAMBERT, J.

It is conceded by the pleadings that about the year 1805 Wilhelm Willink and others, as joint tenants, commonly known and described as the Holland Land Company, owned all the land now included within the present limits of the city of Buffalo, which includes the premises in controversy, and that prior to the year 1807 the said Holland Land Company caused a portion of said property to be surveyed, laid out, and subdivided into lots, streets,, highways, and squares, and caused a map or plan thereof, showing such lots, streets, and squares, so surveyed and laid out, to be made by Joseph Ellicott, as a plan and survey of New Amsterdam, and filed the same in the office of the clerk of Niagara county, that being the county in which the premises were located at that time. By this map it appears that a street was laid out, commencing at the intersection of the present Main street with Buffalo river, and extending along the margin of the river, the width of one chain, to South street,. [6]*6and designated thereon “Water Street”; also another street, beginning at the southerly termination oí the present Pearl street, and running southwesterly along Little Buffalo creek to Big Buffalo creek, and to a point now known as the “Evans Ship Canal.” The territory between Main and Washington streets was known on said map as “Lot 78,” and between Main street and now “Commercial” street “Lots 84 and 85.” It will be observed that a street was laid out or designated, one chain wide, between the margin of Buffalo river and the southerly line of lot 78, as plotted and designated on such map, while the southerly boundary of lot 84 and a small portion of 85 is the Buffalo river. The territory now occupied by the defendant is that along the margin of Buffalo river on the southerly line of lots 78, 84, and 85, and between the westerly side of Washington street and the easterly side of Commercial street, except the space occupied by the junction of Main street and Buffalo river. By the map referred to, no evidence of an intent is manifested by the Holland Land Company to lay out or dedicate a street or public highway at the southerly terminus of lots 84 and 85, but the same may not be said with respect to lot 78, for a street was there plotted and tendered to the public, one chain wide, from the intersection of Willink’s avenue (now Main street) to South street, and thereafter sanctioned and accepted by chapter 106 of the Laws of 1813, in creating the village of Buffalo as a corporate body; and such and other proceedings had in relation thereto, both by the town and village authorities, prior to the incorporation of the plaintiff, necessitate the consideration of the questions that arise in respect to the two localities separately. Much of the record evidence makes reference to the situation over the entire water front, from the Evans Ship Canal to South street, but in disposing of this case it will be only necessary to refer to the same, and the evidence given, so far as it relates to and controls the legal consequences that must be applied to the territory directly in controversy.

We come now to the question whether the dock known as “Central Wharf,” between Main and Commercial streets, is a public highway. There is no pretense that the city has title to the fee of the premises in controversy, as this property was owned by the Holland Land Company, and by the first deeds of conveyance of outer lots 84 and 85 they were described as bounded on the southerly side by Buffalo creek, and in all of the conveyances thereafter made, down to the acquisition of title by the defendants’ lessor, the property was described by like descriptions; so that from the earliest history the fee of the property under consideration has been in the owners of lots 84 and 85, so that, if this territory ever became a highway, support for it must be found in some one of the ways defined by the law. In City of Cohoes v. President, etc., Delaware & H. Canal Co., 134 N. Y. 402, 31 N. E. 887, the court said that public highways may be created in four ways: (1) By proceedings under the statute. (2) By prescription, based on adverse user by the public. (3) By dedication through offer and implied acceptance, or where the owner throws open his land, intending to dedicate it for a highway, and the public use it for such a length of time that they would be seriously incon[7]*7venienced by an interruption of the enjoyment. This rests upon the principle that the owner is estopped from revoking his offer after the public have acted úpon it for so long a period that it would be a fraud upon them if he were permitted to do so. No particular length of time is required to effect such a dedication, as every case of an estoppel in pais necessarily depends upon its own facts. (4) By dedication through offer and formal acceptance.

The first position assumed by the plaintiff is that the territory in question (which shall, for convenience, be hereafter mentioned as “Central Wharf”) was, by virtue of proceedings taken by the municipal authorities, under the charter formally and legally laid out as a highway. In December, 1837, a resolution was passed, of which the following is a copy:

“That all the docks and wharves on the north side of the Big Buffalo creek in the city, commencing at the Evans slip, and extending up the creek to the bridge, shall hereafter be built, constructed, and repaired, or rebuilt, under the direction of the common council, as a public highway; that the city surveyor, with the assistance of the street commissioner, be, and he is hereby, directed to survey and ascertain the front line for the said docks and wharves on the said creek, and their elevation or height, fixing the line where docks now are, or heretofore have been, erected, as nearly as may be, at the front of those docks, and ascertaining and making the height or elevation for said docks or wharves at said front line at least six inches above where the highest floods of water in said creek during the year 1837 have reached. And it is hereby further resolved that the standing committee on streets, wharves, and public grounds be, and are hereby, appointed a special committee, and that, as such committee, they are directed to prepare and report to the next meeting of the council a plan for the erection of said docks and wharves, and the raising and improving of the streets near said docks and wharves, in the First ward of the city.”

After the passage of this resolution, no action seems to have been taken under it, although both before and after the common council passed various resolutions, among them one fixing a dock line along the waters of Big Buffalo creek, and providing for a uniform height, and regulating the materials to be used in the construction of docks and wharves, not necessary to be more specifically mentioned in this connection. On April 30, 1839, the following resolution was adopted:

“Resolved that the street commissioner be directed to ascertain the width of space, if any there be, between the right of each individual or company, by deed or otherwise, and the outer line established for the building of wharves, on the north side of Big Buffalo creek, within this city, and report to the council as soon as practicable.”

Thereafter, and on March 5, 1840, the street commissioner reported a map and survey of the line of lots on the northerly bank of Buffalo creek between Main street and Commercial slip, showing a space of from 25 to 30 feet wide. Thereupon, and upon March 7th of the same year, this survey was ratified, and the map ordered filed with the city clerk, and the following resolution was passed and recorded in the record book of streets:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y.S. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-buffalo-v-delaware-l-w-railroad-nysupct-1895.