City of New Rochelle v. New Rochelle Coal & Lumber Co.

83 Misc. 194, 144 N.Y.S. 852
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 Misc. 194 (City of New Rochelle v. New Rochelle Coal & Lumber Co.) 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 New Rochelle v. New Rochelle Coal & Lumber Co., 83 Misc. 194, 144 N.Y.S. 852 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Mills, J.

This is an action for a mandatory injunction to compel the defendant to remove certain obstructions from a certain specified locality, which the plaintiff claims constitute the southern terminus or part of a highway known as Echo avenue in the city of New Rochelle, and to refrain from further obstructing the same.

The fact of the existence of the obstructions is conceded by the defendant, but it attempts to justify the same by denying that the locality is a highway or a part thereof, and it claims that it is the private property of the defendant, subject to no public easement whatever. The question in the case therefore is this: Was that locality, when this action was commenced, about June, 1911, a part of said highway? Upon that issue the burden of proof resits upon the plaintiff.

As now physically appearing by present day user, the highway runs southeasterly from Huguenot street to a point about 125 feet north of the water of Echo bay, a branch or arm of Long Island sound, and there turns sharply to the southwest and proceeds thence in that general direction. The part running southeasterly from Huguenot street is called Echo avenue, and the rest of it, that is the part running southwesterly, is known as Cedar road. The locality in question is the parcel of land embraced within the lines of said Echo avenue continued southeasterly to the waters of Echo bay and being about 125 feet long and 66 feet wide, that is from west to east, and said to contain one and nine hundred and twenty-five thousandths acres.

[197]*197By its charter, the city of New Rochelle has control of all highways within its limits, its street commissioner being given all the powers of town commissioners of highways, except as otherwise limited by that act.

Although a great volume of evidence has been taken, a careful analysis of it reveals that there is very little conflict as to any material fact, except as to the extent of the public use of the locus m quo during the last twenty years.

It is apparent that the learned counsel have very carefully examined the records in the town, county and state public offices for matter affecting the problem presented by this case, and have placed in evidence all such of which they have learned. Since the submission of the case I have very carefully examined the record evidence and other testimony as well, and am convinced that the following material facts are established by the evidence, or at least its greater weight:

The highway now known as Echo avenue is one of the most ancient highways within the present territorial limits of the city of New Rochelle. It seems to be impossible to find definitely any record of the original laying out of that highway. Undoubtedly the oldest highway in the locality is the road known generally since colonial days as the Boston post road, now (within the city limits) called Huguenot street. Undoubtedly that highway was laid out and traveled by the public prior to the original grant by Pell to Leisler, in 1689, of the 6,000 acres which shortly thereafter were settled by the Huguenot refugees and called by them New Rochelle. This court recently had occasion to investigate the origin of that road and stated the results of such investigation in an opinion in the case of Parsons v. Village of Rye, 140 N. Y. Supp. 961, 966. [198]*198It was there found that it is impossible to ascertain exactly the original laying out of that highway, and the same appears to be true of the one here under consideration.

The Boston post road is undoubtedly the road which was referred to in the original deed by Pell to Leisler, dated September 20, 1689, as “ The Road.” Bolton’s History of Westchester County (2d ed.), 583.

The first evidence of the existence of Echo avenue appears to be found in a resolution recorded in the first volume of the New Rochelle Records, at page 4, and there stated to have been adopted by the general assembly of the inhabitants of New Rochelle April 2, 1700. The record is written in French but, being translated, reads thus: “ The Great Kings Road from York town to Boston the* Assembly has confirmed it as it now stands, being a chain broad, and for the water road the Assembly has also confirmed it as it now stands from the Boston Road to the water side, betwixt John Jeffreys and the widow Mackett, and this is to be also a chain broad.”

From this record it would seem that the second road therein referred to, as well as the first, which must have been the Boston post road, had previously been laid out or at least had previously existed. The expression used as to each road is “ confirmed it as it now stands.”

The researches of the surveyor, Mr. Crosby, who has had very long and extensive experience in that locality, as testified to by him, have fully satisfied me that such second road is the present Echo avenue.

In 1711 Captain William Bond, a surveyor employed by the local authorities, made a map of New Rochelle, which appears to be the first one known to have been in existence. That map remained among the. town records, in the town clerk’s office, until recent years, [199]*199when the evidence indicates that it somehow disappeared. A copy of it is published in Bolton’s History of Westchester County, volume I (2d ed.), page 686, and is in evidence here. That map showed four roads as running southerly from the Boston post road to the water, and the most easterly of those roads corresponds with remarkable exactness with the present course and location of Echo avenue. Thus the distance from the latter highway, along the Boston post road, easterly to the small stream formerly called Stony brook and now known as Crystal lake stream, is about 1,600 feet upon both that map and the ground at present; and the area of the land between that stream, on the east, and that highway (Echo avenue) on the west, is about the same on the map, as it is stated, and on the ground now, namely forty-two acres by the map and forty-four as now measured on the ground. This excess is readily accounted for by the well-known surplusage of ancient surveys. It is suggested in behalf of the defendant that the second road described in the resolution of April 2, 1700, was the present Center avenue, but the location of that avenue does not at all correspond with the most easterly cross road shown on the Bond map. Thus the distance from Center avenue easterly along the Boston post road to the present Crystal lake stream, (formerly Stony brook) is more than half a mile instead of 1,600 feet, as shown by the map; and the area of the land between that brook and Center avenue is many times forty-two or forty-four acres. Moreover, it is clear by the record proof (see Town Records, vol. I, p. 26), that the present Center avenue was laid out in 1702 to 1703. The record there shows that a committee of four named persons, chosen February eighth of that year, laid out a road from the great way [200]*200(namely, the Boston road) to the water “sade” (side), by the lands of Sicard, near the church.

The evidence appears fairly to locate the present Echo avenue by the adjoining owners and occupants of land as given in the above resolution of April 2, 1700, namely, “betwixt John Jeffreys and the widow Mackett.” No record of any deed to Jeffreys can be found.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Misc. 194, 144 N.Y.S. 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-rochelle-v-new-rochelle-coal-lumber-co-nysupct-1913.