In re Redmond

105 N.Y.S. 936
CourtNew York County Court, Steuben County
DecidedAugust 16, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 105 N.Y.S. 936 (In re Redmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Court, Steuben County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Redmond, 105 N.Y.S. 936 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

BURRELL, J.

The commissioners appointed by the County Court have made and filed their decision by which the application is granted as to the portion of new highway requested to be laid out, but denied as to the alteration of the old highway requested. This motion is now made by Jesse T. Atkins through whose premises both roads pass to vacate and set aside the decision of the commissioners in toto on various grounds.

It is urged, first, that the decision of the commissioners is inadequate in law, in that the starting point of the proposed road is not definite, and that the description given in the decision only describes a line, with nothing to show whether it is the center of the road or one of its sides, and also that the commissioners failed to state the width of the proposed highway. The application presented to the highway commissioner requesting him to lay out the proposed highway, as well as the petition to the County Court for the appointment of the commissioners, contained a survey of the proposed highway by distances, degrees, and minutes, and the starting point is stated as follows, to wit:

[937]*937“Beginning at a pile of stones in a clump of bushes, on the south side of the highway running east and west past the Mullen schoolhouse, near a beech stump west of said schoolhouse. * * * The line of survey to be the center of the proposed highway which proposed highway shall be three rods in width.”

The decision of the commissioners contains exactly the same survey set forth in the application to the highway commissioner and in the petition presented to the County Court, but fails to state that the survey is to be the center line, and also fails to state the width._ It would seem that the starting point given in the survey as set out in the -decision of the commissioners is definite starting point, sufficient to_ designate the beginning of the highway, for taken in connection with the other marked points in the survey makes it definite and easy of ascertaining. It is, in effect, a stone monument, and the center of that monument is presumed, and this stone monument is situate by a clump of bushes, on the south side of the highway, near a beech stump, west of' the Mullen schoolhouse. It is fair to presume that when the commissioners examined the proposed route, as they state in their decision that they did, they saw the schoolhouse, the clump of bushes, and beech stump and this pile of stones, so that they knew exactly where the starting point was and the direction the road was to extend from this pile of stones.

It is, however, urged that the stones might be removed or that a stake might be moved; but, when we bear in mind that every angle in the proposed road is marked in some way, and the distance and course from every angle back to the starting point is given, so that if this pile of stones, near the stump, should accidentally or in any way be removed, the starting point could be ascertained by following back the first course given in the description, which is from the pile of stones S. 53° E. 1,400 feet, to a stake, and all that would be required to find the starting point would be to measure it back N. 53° W. 1,400 feet from this stake and the point would be where the pile of stones should be found, it seems to me that the starting point complies with the law, and gives a certain, fixed starting point.

It is also urged that the commissioners failed to state the width of the proposed highwa)--. In their decision they lay out the proposed highway, but' refuse the alteration of the old highway, and, after setting forth the survey in their decision, they say as follows :

“The said proposed highway commences near the Mullen schoolhouse and extends in a southeasterly direction, following the route described in the petition until it strikes the Andover róad,” etc.

They thus refer in their decision to the route described in the petition, and the petition sets forth the width of three rods and also that the survey shall be the center line. It plainly seems to have been the intention of the commissioners to lay out the road described in the petition three rods in width, and it is a sufficient statement of the width and center line, referring as they do to the petition which contains it. In People ex rel. Wells v. Brown, 47 Hun, 459, the court says:

“The order did not state that, the prescribed route was to be the center of the proposed road nor state the width contemplated, but it described the highway laid out in accordance with the application of Caleb Wells before referred [938]*938to, and which application did state the proposed course so adopted by the referees to be intended for the center of said proposed road. The description thus given is a sufficient compliance with the statute according to adjudicated authority and has reference to the object to be attained.”

In the case at bar the decision of the commissioners goes further, and gives the actual survey of the road by degrees, minutes, and distances, starting at a definite point and ending at a definite point, and then, in addition, they give the general course of the proposed road along the route described in the petition, and the route described in the petition is three rods in width and the line of survey the center line, and seems to me to effectually dispose of the contention that the width is not stated.

Second. It is urged by counsel that the decision is illegal, in that it allows damages where no damages are asked, to wit, to John Mullen and Catharine Trainor $203. It is true that these parties offered no proof of damages to their land, but they did ask damages to cover the cost of building and maintaining fences and cattle passes, and the commissioners on viewing the premises and hearing the evidence of all parties decided that they were damaged in the sum of $203, and this court has no power to set aside those damages. People ex rel. Hanford v. Thayer, 88 Hun, 137, 140, 34 N. Y. Supp. 592. The County Court cannot arbitrarily set aside an award made by commissioners, unless some error of law is plainly manifest. The commissioners in assessing damages are to be guided by their own judgment as they view the premises, and can better estimate the amount of damages sustained than a court sitting in review of their action. Matter of Carpenter, 11 Misc. Rep. 690, 32 N. Y. Supp. 826; In re Public Parks, 53 Hun, 280, 6 N. Y. Supp. 750; In re Main Street, 25 N. Y. Supp. 267, 71 Hun, 611. The commissioners have evidently given the matter very careful attention and consideration, and have evidently taken in, which they had a right to do, the cost of building and also the probable cost of maintaining the fences for a term of years, as well as the building of suitable cattle passes for which they have provided, and no error of law has been committed, and I see no reason to disturb their decision in that respect.

It is also urged by counsel that inasmuch as the commissioners failed to alter the old highway, as requested in the petition, but have laid out the proposed new road and also left the old road, that the lands of Jesse T. Atkins affected by both roads were damaged in a greater amount than allowed by the commissioners, and that the proof 'of damages given on behalf of Mr. Atkins was offered on the theory that the new road should be laid out and the old road taken up, and that, had he been aware that such was the intention of the commissioners, his proof of damages would have been different.

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Related

In re Department of Public Parks
6 N.Y.S. 750 (New York Supreme Court, 1889)
Murphy v. Carey
24 N.Y.S. 585 (New York Supreme Court, 1893)
In re Main Street
25 N.Y.S. 267 (New York Supreme Court, 1893)
People ex rel. Hanford v. Thayer
34 N.Y.S. 592 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)
In re Carpenter
11 Misc. 690 (New York County Courts, 1895)
In re Carpenter
32 N.Y.S. 826 (Ulster County Court, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.Y.S. 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-redmond-nysteubenctyct-1907.