City of Cohoes v. President of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co.

31 N.E. 887, 134 N.Y. 397, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 612, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1529
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 887 (City of Cohoes v. President of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co.) 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
City of Cohoes v. President of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co., 31 N.E. 887, 134 N.Y. 397, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 612, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1529 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Vann, J.

Public highways may be created in four ways :

1. By proceedings under the statute. (2 R. S. [8th ed.] p. 1372 eiS seq.; also p. 1383, § 100.)

2. By prescription, or where land is used by the public for a highway for twenty years, with the knowledge, but without the consent, of the owner. The presumption of a grant of the right of way springs from the mere .lapse of said period of time in connection with the adverse user by the 2>ublic.

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 usé it for such a length of time that they would be seriously inconvenienced by an interruption of the enjoyment. This rests u|)on the principle that the owner is estopped from revoking his offer after the 2>ublic have acted on it for so long a period that it would be a fraud upon them if he were permitted to do so. Bo particular length of time is required to effect such a dedication, as every case of an estoppel in pais necessarily. de2>ends upon its own facts.

' 4. By dedication through offer and actual acceptance,' or where the owner throws open his land and by acts or words invites acceptance of the same for a highway, and the public authorities, in charge of the subject, formally, or in terms accept it as a highway. In the absence of an actual conveyance the owner does not part with his title to the land, but only with the right to possession for the purpose of a highway.

Although there has been some conflict of opinion upon the subject, we understand this to be the law as established by the weight of authority in this state. (Flack v. Village of Green Island, 122 N. Y. 107, 113; Driggs v. Phillips, 103 id. 77; *403 People v. Loehfelm, 102 id. 1; Cook v. Harris, 61 id. 448, 454; Holdane v. Trustees of Cold Spring, 21 id. 474; McMannis v. Butler, 51 Barb. 436; Carpenter v. Grynn, 35 id. 395; Wiggins v. Tallmadge, 11 id. 457; Clements v. Village of West Troy, 10 How. Pr. 199; Ward v. Davis, 3 Sand. 502; Hunter v. Trustees of Sandy Hill, 6 Hill, 407; Denning v. Roome, 6 Wend. 651; Colden v. Thurbur, 2 Johns. 424; Elliot on Roads & Streets, 119; Thompson on Highways, 65; Angell on Highways, § 144; Greenleaf on Ev. § 662; 2 Dillon Mun. Corp. § 491; 5 Am. & Eng. Encyc. 396.)

The same rule prevails in the Supreme Court of the Hnited States, in the courts of most of the states, and in England. (President, etc., of the City of Cincinnati v. White, 6 Pet. 431; Barclay v. Howell, id. 499; Buchanan v. Curtis, 25 Wis. 99; Marcy v. Taylor, 19 Ill. 634; Green v. Town of Canaan, 29 Conn. 157; Kennedy v. Le Van, 23 Minn. 513; City of Waterloo v. Union Mill Co., 72 Iowa, 437; State v. Trask, 6 Vt. 655; Abbott v. Mills, 3 id. 521, 526; Hobbs v. Lowell, 19 Pick. 405; State v. Hill, 10 Ind. 219; Price v. Town of Breckinridge, 92 Mo. 379; Wolf v. Brass, 72 Tex. 133; Commonwealth v. McDonald, 16 Serg. & R. 390; Doe v. Jones, 11 Ala. 64, 84; Dovaston v. Payne, 2 Smith’s Leading Cases, 142, 153, note; Rughby Charity v. Merrywather, 11 East, 375, n.; The King v. Inhabitants of Leake, 5 Barn. & Ad. 469; Lade v. Shepherd, 2 Str. 1004; Jarvis v. Dean, 3 Bingh. 447; Woodyer v. Hadden, 5 Taunt. 126; Regina v. Petrie, 30 Eng. L. & Eq. 207.)

There are some cases holding otherwise, aud others that have been supposed to hold otherwise, but upon examination it will be found that they depended on local statutes or special circumstances. (Underwood v. Stuyvesant, 19 Johns. 181; L. 1787, ch. 61, 88; L. 1797, ch. 43; L. 1799, ch. 70; Oswego v. Oswego Canal Co., 6 N. Y. 257, 266; L. 1811, ch. 231.)

There are obiter remarks also scattered through the books showing that certain judges have held views at variance with the foregoing rule, but we do not regard it essential, in order to decide this case, to make specific reference to them, or to *404 analyze the authorities, for the learned counsel for the defendant, with great fairness, states the law substantially as we have stated it.

The trial judge found in the decision upon which judgment was entered, “ that the Cohoes company, the original owners of the fee, in surveying, designating and laying down said Yan Rensselaer street upon the aforesaid maps, selling said lots and allowing the same to be used, expressed an equivocal and qualified intent to permit such user as a public highway, subject to the right of revocation by said Cohoes company; that the action of the Cohoes company, permitting the defendant to lay its tracks and build its freight-house in said Yan Rensselaer street and by other acts, expressed an intent to revoke t said equivocal and qualified dedication of Yan Rensselaer street for highway purposes before it was accepted by the city authorities, or by user by the public, or otherwise.”

Upon the request of the plaintiff, the trial judge also found “that there has been a continuous user on the part of the public of the whole of said territory between Pine and Oneida streets since in or before the year 1845, except as the same was temporarily deflected by the laying down of said railroad tracks and the erection of said freight-house; that from 1845 down to the time of the commencement of this action, the public user of said Yan Rensselaer street from Oneida to Pine street has been general, continuous and exclusive for all the purposes of a public street or highway; that the Cohoes company, the original owners of the fee, in surveying, designating and laying down said Yan Rensselaer street upon the aforesaid maps, and opening, or allowing the same to be opened, for use, intended to and did dedicate the same as a public street or highway,” and “ that before the laying down pf the railroad tracks in 1853, the dedication by the Cohoes company of said Yan Rensselaer street between Oneida and Pine streets as a public street and highway had been accepted by the public by user and public travel thereon.”

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 887, 134 N.Y. 397, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 612, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cohoes-v-president-of-the-delaware-hudson-canal-co-ny-1892.