City of Rochester v. Gray

121 N.Y.S. 42
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 N.Y.S. 42 (City of Rochester v. Gray) 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 Rochester v. Gray, 121 N.Y.S. 42 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

BENTON, J.

The plaintiff is a municipal corporation. Its source of water supply is Hemlock Lake. It desired to guard the waters of the lake from contamination, and secured the passage of chapter 1018 of the Laws of 1895, whereby it was empowered to acquire for the use of the city the shore of the lake within 200 feet of the water line. The act also provided that the commissioners appointed thereunder might at any time take any highway or portion thereof within said 200 feet, but required them to reconstruct said highway in a manner satisfactory to the highway commissioner of the town in which it was located, and in a way so as not to materially interfere with public travel.

The commissioners, acting under said law, changed the route of the highway in the town of Livonia running east and west for a distance along the northerly shore of the lake. The commissioners rerouted this line along the lake shore for a distance of some 1,525 feet, but still within 200 feet from the high-water mark of the lake. So far as convenience of travel is concerned, the new line is equal, if not better, than the old; but access to the lake by the public is by the change of route in the road cut off, save by passing over private property.

The work was done to the satisfaction of the highway commissioner, but he did not assent to the change of route, and entered upon the old route,' and was proceeding to improve or repair the road thereon, when this action was begun to restrain him from so doing. The constitutionality of the law, so far as affected by section 18, art. 3, subd. 2, [43]*43of the Constitution, was sustained on appeal. 133 App. Div. 852, 117 N. Y. Supp. 1091.

Defendant claims, however, that the right of access to the lake is inalienable in the public, and that the Legislature was without power to cut off that access, or to authorize the commissioners so to do. In the opinion of the Appellate Division, it is stated:

“The lake as a highway still remains, and access to it is not cut off. There are many other means of access to it besides this old highway, which was never designed as a means of access to the lake, and the authorities have no power to retain the highway for that purpose.”

Upon this trial new evidence was introduced, and it is now found as matter of fact that the public did have access to the lake over the old highway, and that access is now cut off.

The defendant was commissioner of highways of the town of Livonia. He was as such—

“an independent public officer, exercising public powers and charged with public duties specially prescribed by the statute law of the state.” Flynn v. Hurd, 118 N. Y. 19, 27, 22 N. E. 1109, 1110.
“The road was not the property of the town. Its use was public, not for the benefit of individuals of the town alone, but for the whole community. True, the town elected commissioners of highway, tand determined the amount to be raised by taxation for its improvement; but that election was only a convenient method of designating the commissioner as a public servant to discharge his duty thus imposed upon him for general public purposes.” People ex rel. Keuren v. Town Auditors, 74 N. Y. 315.

Hemlock Lake is a body of navigable water. The riparian owners owned the bed of the lake to its center. The state, nevertheless, retained its sovereignty over the waters for the public right of passage. This right grows out of and is based upon public' benefit in promoting trade and commerce, supposed to be derived from keeping open navigable bodies of water for public highways for the common use of the people. Smith et al. v. Rochester, 92 N. Y. 463, 44 Am. Rep. 393.

“The public have the right of way in every stream which is capable in its natural state and its ordinary volume of water of transporting, in a condition fit for market, the products of the forests or mines or the tillage of the soil upon its banks.” Morgan v. King, 35 N. Y. 454, 459 (91 Am. Dec. 58).

This sovereignty is the subject of legislation.

“The Legislature of this state had the power to modify to any extent the public right in the navigable waters of Hemlock Lake, or to absolutely destroy the same.” Langdon v. Mayor of N. Y., 93 N. Y. 128, 155, 156.

No individual rights of property are concerned in this> litigation. The city had acquired the fee in the lands over which the route of the old highway was located. The city is the riparian owner of the entire shore of the lake; consequently, no claim arises subject to condemnation proceedings or notice. The only use or right which is claimed to be presented by the defendant is that of the public in general.

“The right of the public in the street, such as the right of passage and travel, is within the supreme and absolute control of the Legislature.” People v. Kerr, 27 N. Y. 188, 192.

Even a riparian owner has no right which the state may not destroy at pleasure by a construction or filling in beyond his outer line, and [44]*44this, too, without compensation to him'. Slingerland v. International1 Contracting Company, 169 N. Y. 60, 70, 61 N. E. 995, 56 L. R. A. 494. _ ' -

_ It will be asserted, however, that these powers have been asserted thus broadly only when called into exercise for the general public benefit in the -improvement of navigation, either by the federal or state government. I do not believe the distinction is well taken. The public health is certainly of as much concern as such rights of navigation as are shown to exist or to have formerly existed upon Hemlock Lake..

It is to be noted that no individual is shown to have been bereft of any particular advantage in being deprived of sailing upon the lake,, fishing in the waters thereof, or cutting ice therefrom. .It was an incident of the road that it touched the lake. As a thoroughfare, the public is better served in its present condition than formerly. A special proceeding instituted to lay out a highway to the shores of the lake might bring more sharply the question here raised before the-court. Nevertheless, I think the defendant has the right to interpose the defense now made, inasmuch as, if the change of the route was-unauthorized and void, it remained his duty to keep open the old line,, which would then be.the0highway for the use- of the public.

In performing this, his assumed duty, he did enter upon the old line,, and this action was brought to restrain his interference therewith. The whole power and scope of his authority is statutory. The rights- and interests of the public, both on navigable waters and highways,, are likewise statutory, so far as the so-called jus publicum is concerned, and with that only are we dealing in this action. I know it is-said in Bedlow v. N. Y. Floating Dry Dock Co., 112 N. Y. 263, 274, 19 N. E. 800, 804, 2 L. R. A. 629:

“The right of the people to use the natural public’hiebwavs, of the state isjus publica, and. cannot be taken away or seriously impaired by any .legislation! whatever."

The courts have become compelled to construe the language of the-opinions relative to the issues of the* case wherein the language is-used, and not in the broad meaning of the words abstracted from the-case.

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Related

Dubbs v. Zak Brothers Co.
175 N.E. 626 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1931)
City of Rochester v. Gray
123 N.Y.S. 1111 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.Y.S. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-rochester-v-gray-nysupct-1910.