Hulburt v. Harris

37 N.Y.S. 1056

This text of 37 N.Y.S. 1056 (Hulburt v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hulburt v. Harris, 37 N.Y.S. 1056 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

HARDIN, P. J.

In June, 1891, Robert Harris addressed his petition to the county court of the county of Monroe, which was verified, in which he stated that he" was the owner and possessor of certain “swamp, bog, and other low and wet lands, situated in the town of Penfield, county of Monroe, and state of New York, and being desirous to drain the same, and who also deem it necessary, in order thereto, that a ditch or ditches, or other channels for the free passage of water, should be opened through lands belonging to your petitioner and another person or persons,” and that he deemed “it necessary for the public health that such lands should be drained.” The petition further stated that the ditch or ditches or other channels should commence at a certain point, and run in certain enumerated directions to a certain highway, “of sufficient distance to gain a suitable fall for drainage purposes, following substantially the course of the present ditch.” The petition also stated that it was necessary for" a lateral ditch; and it stated the names of all persons, “so far as he [the petitioner] has been able, with due diligence, to ascertain the same, and who are the owners of all lands to be affected.” The prayer of the petition was for the appointment of three commissioners, “with all the powers and duties conferred under and by virtue of chapter 888 of the Laws of [1057]*1057the state of New York, passed by the legislature in the year 1869, relative to proceedings for the drainage of swamp, marsh, and other low and wet lands, and for draining farm lands, and all acts amendatory thereof.” The petition was presented to the county court on the 22d of June, 1891, and an order wras made by that court appointing three commissioners—

“To hear and determine: First. Whether it is necessary, in order to drain such lands, that a ditch or ditches, or other channels for the free passage, of water, should be opened through lands belonging to others 'than the petitioner. Second. Whether it is necessary for the public health that such lands should be drained. Third. To take other and further steps with reference thereto as provided for by the general drainage law of this state, * * * * as amended by chapter 888 of the Laws of 1869; * * * and the said commissioners are hereby given the full powers and authority conferred upon commissioners by said title of the Revised Statutes and said act of 1869, and various acts amending the same; and that a commission issue to said commissioners, under the seal of this court, for such purposes.”

Subsequently, and in July, 1891, Guy McGowan and five other persons presented a petition containing somewhat similar language to that already quoted from the petition of Harris; and on the 13th of July, 1891, an order was made that the proceedings under the last-named petition “be continued and consolidated as petitioners with the proceeding or petition presented by Robert Harris, of the town of Penfield,” and substituting George W. Clark, as commissioner, in the place of George Salmon, who had resigned. The commissioners named in that order were authorized to—

“Hear and determine: First. Whether it is necessary, in order to drain such lands, that a ditch or ditches, or other channels for the free passage of water, should be opened through lands belonging to others than the petitioners, Robert Harris, Guy McGowan, and others. Second. Whether it is necessary for the public health that such lands should be drained. Third. To take such other and further steps with reference thereto as are provided by the general drainage law of this state (title 16, c. 8, pt. 3, of the Revised Statutes, as; amended by chapter 888, and the acts amendatory to the said acts of 1869). * * * Fourth. That a commission issue to said commissioners, Smith, Glark„ and Titus, under the seal of this court, for such purposes.”

On the 3d day of August, at a term of the county court, the papers and proceedings were read, and the parties were heard, and. it was ordered “that the above-mentioned order of consolidation: in these proceedings be, and the same is hereby, in all respects,, confirmed.” That order was entered in the Monroe county clerk’s office on the 8th of August, 1891. The commissioners took the usual oath of office, and entered upon the discharge of their duties, and viewed the lands mentioned in the petitions, “and found water standing in considerable quantities” on certain lands mentioned in the report, and their report states, viz.;

“On the 11th day of April, 1892, at which all of said commissioners were present,” as appears by the report, they did “determine that it is necessary, in order to drain the lands described in said petition, that a ditch for the free passage of water shall be opened through lands belonging to others than the petitioners; and we have further determined at such meeting, and do hereby determine, that it is necessary for the public health that such lands should be drained; and we further report that the minutes of the testimony taken by us, and of our proceedings in the said proceedings, are hereto annexed, marked ‘B.’ ” That report was signed by two of the commissioners, and a [1058]*1058minority report was made by Commissioner Clark, dissenting “from so much of the foregoing report as determines that it is necessary for the public health that said lands should be drained.”

And in his dissenting report he further stated:

“I do hereby report, and I do hereby determine, that it is not necessary for the public health that said lands should be drained.”

On the 30th of April, 1892, an appeal was taken to the county court from the said determination. That appeal seems to have been heard at a' term of the county court in 1895, and a decision and opinion delivered and filed in August, 1895. The learned judge who presided at the term of the court, among other things, in the course of his decision, said, viz.:

“Upon the whole case, I am unable to find that the drainage of these lands is necessary for the public health.”

That conclusion was followed by the following language.

“A determination may be entered in the minutes of the court that the lands -of the petitioner are agricultural lands; that the same are swampy, low, or wet lands; and it is necessary, in order to drain such lands, that a ditch or •ditches, or other channels for the free passage of water, should be opened •through the lands belonging to the persons other than the petitioners whose names are set forth in the petition in this proceeding.”

It appears that the decision was also followed by an order or judgment which contained the following language:

“After hearing all of the evidence produced on the part of the appellants and respondents, and after due deliberation being had thereon, it is hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the lands of the petitioners are agricultural lands, and they are swampy, low, or wet lands; and it is necessary, in. order to drain such lands, that a ditch or ditches, or other channels for passage of water, should be opened through the lands belonging to the persons other than the petitioners, whose names are set forth in the petitions in this proceeding.”

In section 1 of chapter 888 of the Laws of 1869, it was provided that:

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y.S. 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulburt-v-harris-nyappdiv-1896.