De Witt v. Elmira Transfer Railway Co.

9 N.Y.S. 149, 5 Silv. Sup. 568, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 613, 55 Hun 612, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 61
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.Y.S. 149 (De Witt v. Elmira Transfer Railway 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
De Witt v. Elmira Transfer Railway Co., 9 N.Y.S. 149, 5 Silv. Sup. 568, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 613, 55 Hun 612, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 61 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

Merwin, J.

This action is brought to restrain the defendant, incorporated under chapter 252, Laws 1884, from constructing or operating a street surface railroad along the center of State street, in the city of Elmira, in front of plaintiff’s premises. The plaintiffs are the owners of two lots abutting upon that street on its easterly side, and the question in the case is whether their title extends to the center of the street. If it does, then, concededly, they are in a position to maintain this action; otherwise, not. State street is laid out and constructed upon lands formerly occupied by the Chemung canal. These lands were owned in fee-simple by the state of Hew York. ■ The plaintiffs purchased their lots in 1864 and 1865, the canal being then in operation. Whatever title the plaintiffs have to the street is obtained under the provisions of chapter 482 of the Laws of 1881. By section 2 of that act it is provided that “all the estate, right, title, interest, and property which the people of this state have heretofore acquired, and now have, in and to all the lands and water privileges taken and appropriated for the purpose of constructing and operating the Chemung canal and Chemung canal feeder, excepting that portion extending from the city of Elmira to the intersection of the Utica, Ithaca & Elmira Bailroad at Horseheads, shall revert to, and is hereby granted, released to, and vested in, the person or persons owning the lands adjoining, to the center of the prism of said canal, in consideration of, and upon condition precedent, that such owners shall file with the superintendent of public works an instrument in writing, under their hands and seals, and duly acknowledged,releasing and discharging the state from all obligation to maintain the bridges and other structures connected with such portions of said canal and feeder, and from all liability for damages arising from the abandonment thereof; whereupon they, and each of them, are hereby authorized and empowered to hold, grant, devise, and convey the same.” The plaintiffs complied with the conditions referred to, and if the state then owned the fee of the street it passed to the plaintiffs. It is, however, claimed by the defendant that the state had previously, by chapter 171 of the Laws of 1878, conveyed all its interest to the city of Elmira. That act is set out in the complaint. It is entitled “An act transferring a portion of the Chemung canal to the city of Elmira for street purposes.” Sections 1 and 2 are as follows: “Section 1. All that portion of the Chemung canal lying south of the junction of said Chemung canal with the Junction canal, and north of the north boundary of Water street, in the city of Elmira, is ‘hereby released and transferred to the city of Elmira for the uses and purposes of a street, upon condition that said ’ city of Elmira pay to Lucius A. Humphrey and Joseph S. Humphrey, jointly, the sum of five thousand dollars, and to Samuel Hub-bell the sum of three thousand dollars, for the title and interest of the state, and of the said persons therein, respectively, and also pay the sum of twelve hundred dollars, the costs, charges, and expenses of the state, incurred in a suit heretofore brought by the state, to vacate certain letters patent issued to Daniel Stephens, Frederick C. Steele, and Elijah P. Brooks, bearing date Au[151]*151gust seventeenth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, covering lands heretofore used for the purposes of the Chemung canal, lying immediately north of the north boundary of Water street, in said city; and upon a further condition that said sums of money shall be raised by the city of Elmira, or reimbursed to the city of Elmira, by the amount thereof being assessed upon the lands to be benefited by the change of said canal into a public street, and each parcel of land so to be benefited to be assessed pro rata, according to the benefits to be derived from such change; and the common council of the city of Elmira is hereby authorized to take proceedings to open said part of the Chemung canal above described as a public street, under and according to the provisions of the charter ot' said city in the matter of street openings. Sec. 2. The state hereby reserves the right at any time to connect the sewer running from the state reformatory, located in the vicinity of Elmira, with the sewer now laid in said portion of the Chemung canal, and to maintain the same. No claim is made but that the city of Elmira performed all the conditions required by this act to be performed by it. The claim of the plaintiffs is that the use in section 1 of the expression, “for the uses and purposes of a street,” and of the expression in the title, “for street purposes,” operates to limit the estate conveyed to an easement simply, and that, therefore, the fee remained to pass by the act of 1881.

There were some prior transactions leading up to the passage of the act of 1878, and which may furnish aid in its construction. On July 17, 1866, .the canal board of the state declared abandoned by the state for canal purposes certain of the lands of the Chemung canal, in the city of Elmira, including, among others, so much of said lands as extended northerly from the north line of Water street, a distance of 150 feet. This, on the same day, was granted by the state by letters patent to Daniel Stephens, Frederick C. Steele, and Elijah P. Brooks. The interest of these grantees was, on or before April 2, 1871, acquired by Lucius A. Humphrey, Joseph S. Humphrey, and Samuel Hubbell, named in the act of 1878. On the 20th May, 1872, an act was passed by the legislature entitled “An act authorizing the city of Elmira to use a portion of the Chemung canal for a public street, and for other purposes. ” By section 1 of this act it was provided that “from and after the passage of this act the city of Elmira is authorized to use that portion of the Chemung canal situate south of its junction with the Junction canal, at Elmira, to the southern terminus of the said Chemung canal, or so much of said portion as may be determined by the common council of said city, for a public street, and to fill in, sewer, improve, and otherwise adopt the same for a public street; but nothing in this act contained shall be construed as conveying from the state, or otherwise disposing of, the fee in the lands occupied by said portion of the said Chemung canal.” By section 3 of this act it was provided that “the common council of the said city of Elmira may declare said portion of said canal a public street, and, except as against the state, the same shall be deemed a public highway for all purposes; and the same may be tilled up, graded, or otherwise improved, at the expense of the said city, in such manner as may be determined by the said common council, or in accordance with the provisions of the charter of the said city.” On the 24th July, 1873, the common council of the city of Elmira, by ordinance, accepted the conditions and privileges of the act of 1872, and declared to be a public street that portion of the Chemung canal described in the act. That included the locality here in controversy. Thereafter, proceedings were taken by the common council to open the street across the lands conveyed to Stephens and others in 1866. Commissioners to appraise damages were appointed, and they were proceeding to appraise the lands to be taken at the sum of $24,000, and to assess the same on the land bounding upon or near the street deemed by them to be benefited. The owners of such lands, feeling aggrieved, applied to the attorney general of the state to bring an action to set aside the [152]*152patent to Stephens and others.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y.S. 149, 5 Silv. Sup. 568, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 613, 55 Hun 612, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-witt-v-elmira-transfer-railway-co-nysupct-1890.