Couch v. President of the Ulster & Orange Branch Turnpike Co.

4 Johns. Ch. 26, 1819 N.Y. LEXIS 189, 1819 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 38
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 31, 1819
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Johns. Ch. 26 (Couch v. President of the Ulster & Orange Branch Turnpike Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Couch v. President of the Ulster & Orange Branch Turnpike Co., 4 Johns. Ch. 26, 1819 N.Y. LEXIS 189, 1819 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 38 (N.Y. 1819).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The persons assessed were entitled to make the road through their town, instead of paying the assessment, so that the same be commenced “ by the 1st of August next,” and completed in three years. The act meant to grant a privilege for a pretty heavy burden, and it ought not to be in the power of the company to deprive them of it, by delaying the assessment until after the 1st of August ensuing the passing of the act. It appeared by the bill that the assessment was not made until after the 1st of August, 1817 ; and taking the act together, and comparing one part with another, the true construction must be, that the road was to be commenced by the 1st of August, [30]*30next after the assessment made. On no other construction can the privilege granted to the plaintiffs be preserved, and the act kept in force. It must, therefore, be deemed the necessary and true construction.

The following decretal order was, thereupon, entered :

“ It appearing to the court, from the discussions upon the bill only, that those persons mentioned therein, are justly entitled, according to the true intent and meaning of the act in the said bill mentioned, in lieu of payment of the sums at which they are respectively assessed, to make the road according to the provisions in the second section of the act, by commencing the same by the first day of August next, (which means the first day of August, next after the assessment made,') and completing the same within three years thereafter, it is thereupon ordered that the motion be denied, and the injunction continued until further order,” &c.

The defendants, afterwards, put in their answer, stating that three commissioners were appointed under the act, on. the 15th of April, 1817, who received immediate notice of their appointment. Two of the commissioners met on the 13th of May following, for the performance of their duty, but declined proceeding without the other commissioner, Eiersted, who was a surveyor, and well acquainted with the lands through which the road was to run. That Kiersted. having been previously appointed a commissioner under another turnpike act, was engaged in the summer, and autumn of 1817, in the discharge of that trust, and though repeatedly requested, was unable to attend during that time, with the other two commissioners under this act, and who could not well execute their trust without a competent surveyor. That the commissioners did not review and finally settle their assessment, until the 7th of August, 1818, but had completed their assessment roll on the 8th of April, 1818, at which time, and on the 20th of June, 1818, they caused notice of the assessment list to be published according'to the-[31]*31act. That on the 10th of July last, the defendants caused a written notice to be affixed up along the whole extent of the road, giving notice to the owners of lands assessed, that they should receive proposals for making such parts of the said road as are not under contract, until the 6th of August, when the commissioners would meet, for the purpose of reviewing their assessment: that the defendants have been, at all times before and after the 1st of August, 1817, until they entered into contracts for making the road, ready to permit the plaintiffs and others to make the road within their lands, &c„ according to the act. That the plaintiffs did not commence working the road before the 1st of August, 1817, nor afterwards; nor did they, at any time, offer or propose to make the road. That on the 4th of September last, the defendants entered into contracts with two persons for making part of the road; and on the 7th, 8th, and 10th of October, they entered into other contracts with other persons, for making the other parts of the road, and that the persons with whom they have contracted were assessed, and have contracted to make the road through their lands, &c.

Van Vechten, and H. Bleecker, contra.

On the ground that the answer denied all the equity of the bill, Betts again moved to dissolve the injunction.

When the motion was made in January last, to dissolve the injunction, the answer of the defendants had not come in, and the conclusion from the statement in the bill was, that the defendants, by the postponement of the assessments, had been deprived of the opportu- • nity of making the road through their lands, or town, according to the provision in the second section of the act. The bill charged, that the commissioners did not make the assessments until the 7th of August, 1818, and that the delay had deprived the plaintiffs of the privilege of making the [32]*32road, and that the defendants were proceeding to sell their lands, for default of payment of the sums assessed thereon. The construction put upon the act by the bill was, that the assessments were to be completed so as to have enabled the plaintiffs to have commenced making the road by the 1st day of August, next after the passing of the act, and which was, of course, the first day of August, 1817, as the act passed on the 11th of April, 1817.

By the answer of the President and Directors of the Turnpike Company, it appears that the delay in making the assessments, in 1817, was unavoidable, and was the act of the commissioners, and not of the company. That the assessment roll was made and completed on the 8th of April, 1818, and notice thereof immediately given according to the requisitions of the act. That on the 10th of July, 1818, notice was affixed up, on the part of the company, at suitable places, on the whole extent of the road, giving information to the owners of lands assessed, that they would receive proposals for making such parts of the road as were not under contract. That they have at all times been ready, until the road was put out by contract, in September and October, ISIS, to permit the plaintiffs and others, to make the road within their town, or through their lands, according to the act. That no such offer or proposal was ever made to them. Indeed, the bill does not state that the plaintiffs ever intended or offered to make the road.

It would be too strict a construction of the act to hold, that if the assessment was not made and completed before the 1st daj'of August, 1817, the whole object of the act must be defeated and destroyed. The facts in this case show that it could not have been done by that day, though tfie Turnpike Company were guilty of no laches. Some time was requisite to appoint, and notice, and assemble the commissioners. An accurate survey and assessment upon so great a tract of new and uncultivated country, also required considerable time. When the assessments were made, the com[33]*33missioners were to give six weeks notice in two papers, of which one was to be in Orange county, and the other in the city of JYew- York, and the parties concerned were to have one month to examine the assessments, and to make objections, if they conceived themselves aggrieved. The commissioners were to review and correct the assessments, if sufficient cause was shown, and have the maps and lists filed, and then, and not before, the assessment became a lien on the lands assessed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Johns. Ch. 26, 1819 N.Y. LEXIS 189, 1819 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couch-v-president-of-the-ulster-orange-branch-turnpike-co-nychanct-1819.