DeWitt v. Elmira Transfer Railway Co.

32 N.E. 42, 134 N.Y. 495, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 320, 89 Sickels 495, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1542
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 32 N.E. 42 (DeWitt v. Elmira Transfer Railway 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
DeWitt v. Elmira Transfer Railway Co., 32 N.E. 42, 134 N.Y. 495, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 320, 89 Sickels 495, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1542 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Landon, J.

The complaint to which the demurrer was interposed sets forth in detail a series of facts which the *496 plaintiffs claim show that two lots, which they own on the easterly side of State street in the city of' Elmira, extend to the center of the street, and that the fee to "the center of the street is in them subject to the public easement for street purposes; that the defendant, a street railroad corporation, obtained the consent of the city to lay its railroad tracks and operate its railroad in State street and over the portion thereof ot which the fee is in the plaintiffs, but has not obtained any right from the plaintiffs, and was proceeding to lay its tracks. This action was commenced to enjoin the defendant. The material facts are hereinafter stated.

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 embracing the locus in quo, and what now constitutes State street in that city. The state was the owner in fee of such lands. The city of Elmira subsequently acquired from the state under Ch. 785, Laws 1872; Ch. 834, Laws 1873; and Oh. 171, Laws 1878; whatever title to the portion thereof now constituting State street that the terms of those acts granted to the city, or authorized it to acquire. Before the abandonment of the canal the plaintiffs owned two lots, then adjoining the easterly side of the canal, and now adjoining the easterly side of State street. Under Oh. 482, Laws of 1881, the plaintiffs acquired from the state whatever title then remained in it to the land embraced by extending the side lines of their adjoining lots to the center of the prism of the canal and making such center line their western boundary. Such center line is now the center line of State street.

If the city acquired from the state only an easement in the land used for State street, then the plaintiffs are owners of the fee, subject to the easement, and are entitled to relief, otherwise the judgment is right and should be affirmed.

Oh. 785, Laws 1872, purported to confer upon the city of Elmira authority to convert the abandoned canal into a public • street, and to use it for that purpose, but’it expressly reserved the fee in the land to the state.

*497 Cli. 834, Laws 1873, was a recognition of the authority conferred upon the city by the previous act, and conferred upon the Utica, Ithaca and Ehnira Railroad Co., subject to the consent of the city of Elmira, the right to use such bed of the canal for its railroad. Section 6, art. 7 of the Constitution of 1846 provided that “ the legislature shall not lease or otherwise dispose of the canals of the state.” It is not necessary to consider the scope of this constitutional provision further than to remark that it is not improbable that the legislature did not grant the fee of the abandoned canal to the city, lest such a grant might contravene the provision.

Prior to April 25, 1878, the city had accepted the privilege conferred by the state respecting the use of the canal bed for a street, but owing to a claim of title made by Lucius and Joseph Humphrey and Samuel Hubbell to the fee of another portion of the abandoned canal forming part of the proposed street, the actual grading and opening of the street had not been completed. The claim of Humphreys and Hubbell to title was under letters patent from the state, which were granted to their grantors July 17, 1866, the same day that the canal board declared the canal within the city of Elmira abandoned.

In 1876 the people of the state brought an action to vacate the letters patent, and in the same year obtained judgment to that effect at Special Term, which, in 1878, was reversed by the General Term. (People v. Stephens, 13 Hun, 17.) No judgment upon the decision of the General Term was entered. Ho appeal was taken. The Humphreys and Hubbell claimed $23,000 as the value of the land involved in the litigation and to be taken for the street. The city proposed to assess this sum upon other property benefited in case the letters patent were sustained; the result of an appeal to the Court of Appeals was considered doubtful, and on April 25, 1878, chapter 171 of the laws of that year was passed. All its provisions material to the title granted to the city were subsequently complied with. It is upon this act that the nature of the city’s title chiefly depends. The act is entitled “An act transferring a portion of the Chemung canal to the city of Ehnira for street *498 purposes.” Its material parts are as follows: “ Sec. 1. All that portion of the Chemung canal (describing it) is hereby released and transferred to the city of Elmira for the uses and purposes of a street upon the condition that the city of Elmira pay to Lucius A. Humphrey and Joseph S. Humphrey jointly the sum of five thousand dollars, and to Samuel A. Hubbell 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 said suit respecting the letters patent, and also upon the condition that the city of Elmira should raise such sums of money by assessment upon the lands to be benefited by changing the canal into a street.

Thus, under the act of 1872, the city had acquired the right to use all that part of the bed of the abandoned canal that it needed for a street, except the portion thereof claimed by Humphreys and Hubbell. The validity of their claim was in litigation at the suit of the state. While the suit was pending, the construction and use of the street were delayed.

In 1874, the section of the Constitution above referred to was amended, the amendment taking effect January 1, 1875. The section was changed so as to read: “ The legislature shall not lease or otherwise dispose of the Erie canal, the Oswego canal, the Champlain canal, the Cayuga and Seneca canal, or the Black Eiver canal.” The Chemung canal was thereafter exempt from the constitutional prohibition of lease or disposal by the legislature. The state was thus enabled to confer upon the city the title to the canal bed which it had thus far withheld, and had not granted by the letters patent in litigation. It was willing to settle the pending litigation with Humphreys and Hubbell, and vest in the city whatever title and interest it had in the canal bed, if Humphreys and Hub-bell would do the same in respect to their title, upon condition that the city would pay the state its costs and expenses of the litigation, and pay Humphreys and Hubbell $8,000. Hence, the act of April, 1878. ' Its terms were accepted by all parties in interest and complied with.

*499 Thus, whatever title to the canal remained in the state and in Humphreys and Hubbell was paid for by the city both to the state and to Humphreys and Hubbell. Unless the terms of the act of 1878 granted to the city less title than it paid for, the city acquired all the title that was outstanding. By the terms of the act, the state “released and transferred” the canal to the city.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 42, 134 N.Y. 495, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 320, 89 Sickels 495, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewitt-v-elmira-transfer-railway-co-ny-1892.