In Re Laying Out of a Town Highway in the Town of Ballston

23 N.E.2d 10, 281 N.Y. 322, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 1013
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 N.E.2d 10 (In Re Laying Out of a Town Highway in the Town of Ballston) 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
In Re Laying Out of a Town Highway in the Town of Ballston, 23 N.E.2d 10, 281 N.Y. 322, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 1013 (N.Y. 1939).

Opinion

Crane, Ch. J.

An application was made to the Town Board of the town of Ballston by one James B. White to lay out as a public highway a new highway extending easterly to the westerly shore of Ballston lake from the State highway running between the city of Schenectady and the village of Ballston Spa. The length of this proposed highway is about 3,200 feet. It will cross the tracks of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation and also the trolley tracks of the Schenectady Railway Company. The new road has been laid out with the exception of a distance of about 150 feet, upon and over an existing private road, that portion west of the railroad tracks having a width of *325 sixty feet, and that extending easterly a width of fifty feet. This private road has been, it is stated, rather extensively used to reach the westerly shore of Ballston lake and a bathing beach and pavilion operated by White Beach, Inc. This private road was on the old Manning farm, of approximately 242 acres, which, in 1926, was purchased by James B. White, petitioner herein, for the purpose of a land development. It was surveyed and plotted out into 274 lots, the map thereof being filed in the Clerk’s office of Saratoga county. The railroad tracks run north and south. The highway mentioned runs north and south, and this private road or proposed new highway cuts across the tracks at about right angles.

The tracks of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad Corporation are below the level of the ground some four feet. The highway, which under the present law cannot pass upon grade, would either go overhead with an appropriate bridge, or else by an underpass. The policy of this State is against the construction of any more grade crossings and for the elimination, as far as practicable, of those now in existence.

There are highway crossings half a mile or more above and below this proposed crossing with roads that lead along the shore of the lake for a large portion of the way at least, and by means of which, with additional construction, the westerly shore could be approached. The petitioner has dedicated the private road, or attempted to dedicate it, to the town, although I cannot find that sections 170 and 171 of the Highway Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 25) relating to dedications have been complied with. These sections read as follows:

§ 170. Survey for the laying out of a highway. Whenever the town superintendent shall lay out any highway, either upon application to him or otherwise, he shall notify the county superintendent, whose duty it shall be to either make a survey, or cause the same to be made, and the town superintendent shall incorporate the survey in an order to be signed by him, and to be filed and recorded in the office *326 of the town clerk, who shall note the time of recording the same.
“ § 171. Highways by dedication. Whenever land is dedicated to a town for highway purposes therein, the town superintendent may with the consent of the town board, either with or without a written application therefor, and without expense to the town, make an order laying out such highway, upon filing and recording in the town clerk’s office with such order a release of the land from the owner thereof. * *

Both required formalities of the law have never been complied with. There is no proof in the record that the land of the proposed road which petitioner White offered to dedicate has been accepted by either the Town Superintendent of Highways or the Town Board; nor is there evidence that the Town Superintendent of Highways has laid out the proposed road, or made or filed any order with the Town Clerk laying it out; nor is there any evidence that the County Superintendent of Highways has made any survey of the proposed road. In fact the decision and resolution of the Town Board indicates that there was up to the time of the hearing no acceptance, for it reads: “ Whereas, the acceptance of the said highway as so offered to be dedicated would mean the construction of the road across the tracks and right of way of the Delaware & Hudson Railroad Company and the Schenectady Railway Company,” etc.

The Town Board, after due notice to the railroads and public hearing, determined, in accordance with section 90 of the Railroad Law, the necessity of the highway, the vote of the Board not being unanimous. On appeal to the Appellate Division that court, by a three to two vote, has reversed this finding of the Town Board both upon the law and the facts. A question has been raised on this appeal as to the power of the Appellate Division to review the conclusion of the Town Board that this highway was necessary. Section 91 of the Railroad Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 49) says: “Any person aggrieved by such decision, or by a decision made pursuant to sections eighty-nine and ninety hereof, and *327 who was a party to said proceeding, may within sixty days appeal therefrom to the appellate division of the supreme court in the department in which such crossing is situated, and to the court of appeals, in the same manner and with like effect as is provided in the case of appeals from an order of the supreme court.” That this review may be had of the decision of a municipality that a new proposed highway is necessary, was determined by this court in Matter of City of Buffalo (Delavan Ave.) (167 N. Y. 256), which held that a determination of a Common Council that it is necessary to lay out an avenue over the tracks of a railroad company is appealable to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, which has power to review such determination. The court there said: “ It is further objected in behalf of the city that the determination of the municipal authorities is not an exercise of any judicial function, but is an act of political sovereignty, legislative in its nature, to be exercised by the body to whom the legislature has delegated the authority, and, therefore, not the proper subject of judicial review. If the legislature had delegated the authority to the municipal body without qualification to determine as to the necessity of this crossing, the case would be different ” (p. 259).

The one thing to be reviewed, therefore, by the Appellate Division is the necessity for this highway crossing, which means a review of the evidence to determine whether it be sufficient to justify the conclusion reached by the Board in this instance. (See, also, Matter of City of Niagara Falls [Nineteenth Street], 66 App. Div. 618; affd., 170 N. Y. 576, with the statement that no question of law was presented for the court to consider.) The Appellate Division in that case said: While we would ordinarily be disposed to give almost controlling effect to the judgment of the common council in a matter of this kind, we feel that this court would not be justified in approving its determination, when such action might result in taking Nineteenth street over the appellant’s tracks at grade, and thus create a situation extremely dangerous to those traveling the highway, as well as to the *328 public traveling upon the railways. These considerations lead to the conclusion that the determination of the common council in the premises should be reversed ” (p. 619).

We are not unmindful of the limitations upon the power of review stated in

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E.2d 10, 281 N.Y. 322, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-laying-out-of-a-town-highway-in-the-town-of-ballston-ny-1939.