Hyland v. President & Trustees

57 Misc. 212, 107 N.Y.S. 225
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Misc. 212 (Hyland v. President & Trustees) 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
Hyland v. President & Trustees, 57 Misc. 212, 107 N.Y.S. 225 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Morschauser, J.

The revised act under which these defendants continue to conduct their municipal affairs is chapter 242 of the Laws of 1906. There have been amendments, but such did not effect that part of the act relating to this action.

A petition was presented to the defendants asking for the altering, widening and change of alignment of a portion of the Secor road in said village, and the closing of Main street at its intersection with the west side of Secor road. The petition was filed on the 16th day of July, 1907, with a map thereto. After some adjournments, an order was made by the defendant trustees, wherein it was ordered that the petition be granted and that Secor road be altered or widened and the alignment changed and Main street be closed at its intersection with the west side of Secor road therein, in accordance with the description and specifications contained in said petition, and that the parcels of land described in the petition be acquired therefor in the manner provided by the charter of the village. [214]*214The plaintiff William Hyland appeared with others upon a hearing and filed objections before the order was made.

The defendants, after the order was made, passed various resolutions for the purpose of erecting the abutment and closing Main street at its intersection with Secor road. A contract was entered into and the work was begun, proceeding until this action was commenced by the plaintiffs against the defendants on October 21, 1907, when an injunction was obtained pendente Hie.

The plaintiffs, by their complaint, after alleging that they are the owners in fee and in possession and occupying certain premises situated on Main street, and continuing along Main street for a distance of more than 150 feet, allege that they, the plaintiffs, are the owners to the center of the street;-that such highway has been such for more than 150 years;, that the premises are of the value of $15,000; and that the defendant village is a municipal corporation organized under the law mentioned.

The complaint further alleges that the defendants,* without any right or authority, entered upon the highway and dug a trench or ditch across the highway, describing the ditch to be several feet in depth and width, and setting 1 herein certain uprights arid cross pieces of timbers and closing up the highway for travel; and that the defendants intended to build a solid wall of masonry and carry such wall of masonry to the height of eight feet-above the surface and threatened to continue such excavation along the lands of the plaintiffs on Main street for a distance of more than 100 feet, and intended to fill in such excavation with a wall ofz solid masonry and to permanently maintain such a wall; that the defendants rendered fit impossible to use it for public travel and have deprived the plaintiffs of access to a barn on the westerly side of the premises, and that, if the defendants are permitted to carry out the work, the plaintiffs’ dwelling-house, as well as the barn and premises,' will be shut off from the free use of said street and rendered valueless, and that no proceeding of any kind had been legally instituted to close the highway and no [215]*215compensation made to owners of property abutting on the highway, and that no public purpose requires the closing of the highway; that the acts of the defendants were malicious and in wanton disregard of the plaintiffs’ rights and that, if such acts are permitted, the plaintiffs will suffer irreparable injury. The plaintiffs ask that the defendants be restrained from continuing these acts and be enjoined from closing said approach and be compelled to restore said Main street to its former condition. They ask for damages in the sum of $1,000.

The defendants, denying the several allegations of the plaintiffs’ complaint, except that no compensation was made to the plaintiffs or other persons abutting on the highway, allege that proceedings have been taken by the defendants as provided by law to close the highway described in the complaint, and that public purpose and necessity require the closing of the highway.

As a defense, the defendants allege that it is planned to change the grade of Secor road, which plan for a change has been duly adopted by the defendant village, providing for the construction of a new approach from Secor road to Main street, and taking no property of the. plaintiffs in changing the grade of the aforesaid streets in the manner provided by law.

The plan adopted by the defendants was to erect a wall, commencing some distance below Main street in Secor road and continuing in a northerly direction for more than 150 feet, the height of the wall varying at the end, but in the center, or at the part where it crosses Main street, or where Main street is intersected by Secor road, to be from four to five feet in thickness at the base, becoming narrower at the top, and to be from five to six feet in height. It would be built of concrete and would close the road at this point. The proposed wall would continue in its course in a northerly direction, after reaching the sidewalk in front of plaintiffs’ premises, and, when finished, would be of such height that the top thereof would be on a line with the top of plaintiffs’ front door, and continue then in the same direction until it reached the barn on plaintiffs’ premises, where the [216]*216wall would he four feet high; and the plaintiffs’ premises would then be inclosed along the line in front of plaintiffs’ premises at the point indicated. An iron rail was to be placed on the top of the masonry wall. The defendants, by their engineer and road committee, changed the plan and made a new plan, laying out a street to begin in Secor road below the abutment on the south and then proceed in a northerly direction and make an abrupt turn into Main z street; the road to be eighteen feet in Main street, and twenty feet wide at the beginning of Secor road. This was designed to be used for vehicles and steps were to he made over and on the abutment on Main street for the use of pedestrians; and the wall, instead of. being erected on plaintiffs’ premises, was to he placed by the new plan on the sidewalk in front of the premises. This plan, the defendants claim, although changed by the engineer and road committee on the ground, was adopted by the defendants after this action was commenced; and the defendants claim that .they were acting within their legal rights when they did this. The work was begun, and it has so far progressed that the wall is partially completed on Main street with an opening reaching to the sidewalk in front of plaintiffs’ premises for the purpose of erecting the wall.

By stipulation of the parties, it was requested that I should view and examine the premises.

The erection of this proposed wall in the manner contemplated will eventually destroy-the use and-enjoyment " of plaintiffs’ premises, unless some radical changes are made. The defendants claim that these changes were necessary at this place because of accidents happening and likely to happen'at this intersection. I cannot find this from the evidence. The defendants undoubtedly acted and carried out this plan with an honest intention to serve the village and change the condition of the streets at this intersection with a purpose of bettering the highway, and without any malice or wanton disregard of the plaintiffs’ rights, and believing that they had a legal right so to do and that it was for. the best interest of the village. I think, upon proper application, the change contemplated by the defendants [217]

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133 A.D. 677 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
57 Misc. 212, 107 N.Y.S. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyland-v-president-trustees-nysupct-1907.