In re the Town of Rutland

70 Misc. 82, 128 N.Y.S. 94
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 Misc. 82 (In re the Town of Rutland) 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
In re the Town of Rutland, 70 Misc. 82, 128 N.Y.S. 94 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

This, as stated in the title, is an application to require the authorities of the town of LeRay to join the authorities of Rutland to contribute to and with the town of Rutland one-half the expense of building a bridge across Black river at a point at and upon an alleged highway 3,440 feet down stream and southwesterly from the point where said highway crosses another highway leading to another bridge in the village of Black River.

The Black river is the boundary line between said towns. Laws of 1801, chap. 163; Laws of 1802, chap. 93; Laws of 1806, chap. 16; Laws of 1813, chap. 101.

This proceeding can be successfully maintained, if at all, only upon a finding that the locus in quo constitutes a highway, a part being in LeRay and a part in Rutland, and the connection across the river being by virtue of a bridge. Beckwith v. Whalen, 70 N. Y. 430.

On the 13th of August, 1873, the three highway commissioners of the town of LeRay and two of the highway commissioners of the town of Rutland made an order assuming to discontinue said highway including the said bridge. This order was made pursuant to the provisions of chapter 516 of the Laws of 1873, passed May fifteenth of that year.

Making the order presupposes the existence of a highway to be discontinued; because, unless there was a highway, the town authorities would have had no jurisdiction to institute or entertain a proceeding for discontinuance. Miller v. Garlock, 8 Barb. 153; Matter of Fox Street, 54 App. Div. 488.

Whether the highway wás created by deed, user, dedication or proceedings under the'general statutes does not appear; nor does it appear for what length of time it existed prior to 1873, except that it was beyond the memory of any witness produced upon the trial and except, also, that it is designated in the said proceedings for discontinuance as tire “ Old Plank Road.”

[84]*84The policy of the law in this State has heen to appropriate as highways abandoned turnpike and plank roads. People ex rel. Keene v. Supervisors, 151 N. Y. 190-194.

¡Neither does it appear to what extent the highway was traveled: but it must have been considerable, as it constituted the shortest and.most direct route between the village (now city) of Watertown and the village of Black River and was & part of the principal thoroughfare easterly to the village of Carthage. It has recently been adopted by the proper authorities for the building of a State road extending from Watertown to the village last mentioned and is designated as route 27 in section 120, article 6, chapter 330, Laws of 190-8. The “good road” has now been completed with “ macadam ” pavement from Watertown to Carthage.

The statute of 1873, under which it was assumed to discontinue the highway and which included the bridge and the -approach for some distance on each side of the river, provides: “ The commissioners of highways of the towns of Rutland and LeRay * * * are hereby authorized to discontinue any bridge or highway now existing or claimed to exist in said towns, below the village of Black River within one mile therefrom, -and, in lieu thereof, to lay out, in the manner provided by law, a highway about one mile in length along or near the bank of Black river in the town of LeRay, connecting the bridge at the village of Black River, to the line of the old plank road leading to the city of Watertown, and the expense of such new highway shall be borne equally by said towns of Rutland and LeRay.”

Besides discontinuing the road in question, a new highway was laid out in the town of LeRay, as provided in the statute. For the land taken for the new highway, damages seem to have been assessed and p,aid to the owners.

While the riewr road remains open, it is practically unused —■ so little that grass is growing in the roadbed.

It does not appear from the evidence presented nor by recital in the order of discontinuance that any step in the proceedings was taken as prescribed by the General Highway Law as it then existed. There was no written application by [85]*85a person liable to be assessed for highway labor (1 R. S. 513, § 54); no summoning of freeholders to certify in regard to the propriety of discontinuance (1 R. S. 502, § 2) nor evidence or finding that the old road had become unnecessary (id., § 2) ; nor does notice appear to have been given to the persons living on said highway. Laws of 1873, chap. 69.

The portion of said road so attempted to be discontinued in the town of LeRay was fenced on one side and bounded by a forest on the other. A temporary fence was built across it by Mr. Henry Huntington near to his house, and the portion so fenced in was used by him for pasturage.

The bridge that had crossed the river from time out of memory fell or was carried away by a flood in the spring of 1873. A new bridge was built on the same site by popular subscription in 1891 or 1892, but was.carried away before completion. Soon thereafter (1893) the present bridge was built on - the same site by “ the Town of Rutland and popular subscription,” and was at once used by the public in connection with the abandoned road.

The last-mentioned bridge has now become weak and has been condemned. ¡Nevertheless, since its erection it has been anu still is much used by teams and vehicles, including auto mobiles.

In 1896 the town board of the town of LeRay by resolution caused a post with a sign-board thereon to be placed at the intersection of the road in question on the LeRay side of the river and the new road previously laid out, with a hand pointing in the direction of the bridge, with the inscription, This is not a highway.”

From the time of said discontinuance order, road warrants for performance of highway labor were issued by the highway commissioners to the overseer of the road district which before had included such discontinued portion of the road in LeRay, omitting any reference thereto; and the highway commissioners have assumed to ignore its existence as a part of the highway system of the town.

nevertheless, in the year 1908, Frank Walts, who was then highway commissioner of LeRay, caused a large boulder that had rolled down into and obstructed the road about fifty [86]*86feet from the bridge, to be blasted in pieces and removed; and Perley Huntington, living on the farm adjoining said discontinued road for nineteen years, has been employed by the commissioners of LeRay to cut the brush alongside the road and to stone and repair the roadbed. He and others residing in the road district to which the discontinued part formerly belonged have been permitted to work out their highway taxes on such discontinued portion.

The first question then is, Did the proceedings mentioned work a discontinuance of the highway? The statute of 1873 attempted no express repeal of the General Highway Law as then existing; its purpose apparently was to confer a power on the highway commissioners of the two towns in a proceeding not provided for by'any statute; but with respect to the general procedure, application by a person liable to be assessed for highway labor, the certificate of freeholders that the highway had become unnecessary, compensation to persons damaged by the discontinuance and notice to such persons as live upon the highway, the law apparently remained as before and for aught that I can see should have been observed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Town of Pelham v. City of Mount Vernon
278 A.D. 79 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 Misc. 82, 128 N.Y.S. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-town-of-rutland-nysupct-1910.