In re Olinger

160 A.D. 96, 145 N.Y.S. 173, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4692
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 160 A.D. 96 (In re Olinger) 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
In re Olinger, 160 A.D. 96, 145 N.Y.S. 173, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4692 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Scott, J.:

The order appealed from must rest, if it be sustained, upon the proposition that the relator has sustained damages by reason of' the alleged closing of Madison avenue of such a nature as to entitle him as matter of strict right to the ascertainment of such damages in the manner provided in the Street Closing Act (Laws of 1895, chap. 1006). The expense of such a proceeding to the city of New York, or to the property owners who are subject to the payment of assessments, is very considerable, and before the relator is entitled to compel the incurring of such expense it is no more than reasonable that he should be required to affirmatively show that he is entitled to damages and that such damages are more than nominal.

The first objection which the city urges against the maintenance of the proceeding sought to be compelled is that it is not shown that Madison avenue, in respect of which the relator seeks damages, is or ever was a public street. The petition states: “ That the said Madison Avenue between 180th and 181st Streets as aforesaid had been a lawful public highway of the State of New York, and actually open and in public use by the People of the said State of New York since in or about the year 1850.” It is evident upon its face that this is a statement of mixed law and fact. That the street or road called Madison avenue was actually open as a street or road and in public use from the time stated is the statement of a fact, but the allegation that it was a lawful public highway ” is a conclusion of law not necessarily following upon the allegation of public use, for a street or road never adopted or laid out as a public highway may be actually open and in public use. It is quite apparent, and has been so held by this court, that the Street Closing Act of 1895 did not relate to mere private ways, but only to those streets in which the public has acquired some interest or in relation to which there has been imposed upon the public or the city a duty to maintain them as public streets. (Matter of Mayor [182d Street], 41 App. Div. 586.)

In that case, as in the present, there was no evidence or allegation that the street in respect of which damages were claimed had ever been acquired by the city or had ever been adopted by [98]*98the city as a public street by inclusion as a street in any official map or plan or in any other manner. In that case, as in the present, the only record showing the street as such was to be found in a private map made and filed by the owners of the bed of the street and of the adjacent property. This did not make it a public street, nor impose upon the city the duty of keeping it open and maintaining it as a public street, for obviously the owners of property cannot impose a street upon the city against its will by designating the street on a private map, or even by using it or throwing it open to the public as a right of way. Until the city formally adopts it or indicates in some way its acceptance of the attempted dedication of the street for street purposes it remains a private and not a public way and is not within the purview of the Street Closing Act.

So - far as appears from the petition and other papers in the case, Madison avenue, between One Hundred- and Eightieth and One Hundred and Eighty-first streets, never appeared upon any official street map or plan until 1879, when the department of parks filed a map showing the public streets, roads and places within a part of the twenty-fourth ward of the city of New York as laid out, classified and closed by said department of parks pursuant to law. On this map or plan the streets, avenues and roads laid out by the department were shown in red, and were thereafter to constitute the only legal public streets, avenues and roads in the territory covered by the plan.

Madison avenue was not thus shown and, therefore, was not by virtue of that plan adopted and laid out as a public street. It was, however, indicated in gray, by means of india ink shading. As to it and other streets similarly indicated a legend upon the plan stated that “The roads and portions of roads which are discontinued and closed by said Commissioners are indicated by india ink shading. ” This certainly did hot amount to an admission, binding upon the city of New York, that, the roads thus indicated had ever been legally opened or acquired public city roads. At the most the legend I have quoted meant no more than that the roads and parts of roads shown in gray were not included in the system of roads, streets and avenues shown on the map as those which should thereafter be the legally established city roads, streets and avenues.

[99]*99Madison avenue differs in an important respect from Seventh and Eighth avenues and Walnut street considered in Matter of Mayor, etc. [Walton Ave.] (131 App. Div. 696). As in the present case, those streets were first shown on private maps. . When the park department came to make an official map or plan of the territory in 1879 it included them as streets then existing and to be continued, instead of indicating them, as it did Madison avenue, as streets to be discontinued. It was chis inclusion of the old streets as a part of the new plan which was deemed to establish an acceptance of the attempted dedication by the former owners. (See, also, Matter of Department of Public Parks, 53 Hun, 556.) Ho such acceptance is shown in the present case. On the contrary, the park department, while recognizing the physical existence of the proposed street, expressly repudiated it as a public street and refused to continue it as a part of the new plan. In 1895, after the passage of the Street Closing Act, the commissioner of street improvements for the twenty-third and twenty-fourth wards filed a map or plan of projected roads, streets and avenues in the same territory, which were duly approved and filed in accordance with law. On this map or plan, according to the petition, “ the lines of Madison Avenue between 180th and 181st Streets were omitted, and the said street was shown as discontinued, closed and abandoned.”

There is, therefore, a complete failure of proof that Madison avenue between One Hundred and Eightieth and One Hundred and Eighty-first streets ever was a public street in which the city had ever acquired any interest, or one as to which the city had ever assumed or had imposed upon it any duty to keep it open or maintain it as a public street or highway. On the contrary, the evidence is all to the effect that it was originally laid out as a private road upon a map filed by the owners of the bed of the road and the adjacent property in or about the year 1850; that it was never acquired or accepted by the city of Hew York, or other public authority, as a public street or road and consequently that it remained until the end as merely a private road or right of way over which the city exercised no control and in which the city had no interest, and which could have been closed and discontinued at any time by the owners of the adja[100]*100cent property. If it be said that the filing of the private map in 1850 indicated an intention on the part of the then owners to dedicate the strip of land as a public road, the answer is that there is no evidence that the city ever accepted the dedication, and without such acceptance the dedication remained ineffectual to impose upon the city any duty or obligation with respect to the road, or any liability for damages for refusing to accept it and include it in the permanent street plan.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A.D. 96, 145 N.Y.S. 173, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-olinger-nyappdiv-1914.