In re the Trustees of the New York & Brooklyn Bridge

72 N.Y. 527
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 72 N.Y. 527 (In re the Trustees of the New York & Brooklyn Bridge) 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 the Trustees of the New York & Brooklyn Bridge, 72 N.Y. 527 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Church, Ch. J.

This is a proceeding to condemn land by the bridge company, to be used as a public street, in lieu of Frankfort street, which had, to a certain extent, been [529]*529appropriated in constructing approaches to the bridge. In this case the Legislature itself has declared the necessity for taking the land for the use specified in the act (chap. 165, Laws of 1877), and it is not disputed that such use is a public one, and hence there can be no question of power urged against the application. (People ex rel. Herrick v. Smith, 21 N. Y., 595.) The only point presented for our consideration is to determine the quantity of land authorized by the act to be taken, and this depends upon the construction to be given to it. The material portion of the act relating to this question authorizes the bridge company to take “a strip of land adjoining the southerly line of said bridge, as the same is located, extending from Pearl to Cliff street, in the city of New York, of the same width as Frankfort street, between those streets, and not less than fifty-two feet and six inches in width, and also a triangular piece of land bounded by Cliff street, Frankfort street, and a straight line drawn in continuation of the southerly line of said strip of land to the southerly side of Frankfort street, near Jacob street.”

The width between Pearl and Cliff street determines the extent of the second or triangular piece, as the southerly line of the former is to be continued in a straight line, until it intersects Frankfort street. It seems that Frankfort street was only thirty-five feet wide, and the defendant claims that the new street can be no wider, and that the words “ of the same width as Frankfort street ” are controlling; while the petitioners insist that the words “ and not less than fifty-two feet and six inches in width ” are controlling, and that the new street must be of that width, although Frankfort street had less width. The rules for the construction of statutes are substantially the same as for the construction of contracts and other written instruments. The intention is to be deduced from a view of the whole statute, and that intention when ascertained will always prevail over the literal sense of the terms. (1 Kent Com., 462.) Statutes should be read according to the natural and most obvious import of the language, without resorting to artificial or forced constructions, [530]*530for the purpose of either limiting or extending their operation. (Waller v. Harris, 20 Wend., 561.) If practicable, effect must be given to all the language employed, and inconsistent expressions are to be harmonized to reach the real intent of the Legislature.

I am unable to concur with the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court below, in the construction of this statute, that the words “of the same width as Frankfort street ” are controlling, and that the act confers no authority to take land beyond that width. The most, certain, and if not the only certain, description in the act is the requirement that the street Shall not be less than fifty-two feet and six inches wide, and yet the construction claimed would reject these words and expunge them from the statute. The measurement was fixed by the Legislature with mathematical precision, to the fraction of a? foot, in unambiguous language, as to which there is no room for construction. I am not aware of any principle which will justify a court in rejecting such a material portion of a statute, and thus thwarting the plain and manifest intent of the Legislature. If either description must be rejected, that which is uncertain must yield to that which is certain.

The actual width of Franklin street may have been involved in doubt for many reasons. The act assumes that it is uncertain or unknown to the Legislature. The new street must be fifty-two feet and six inches wide, and wider, if Frankfort street is wider. From this it is plainly inferable that the Legislature was ignorant of the precise width of that street, and that they fixed the minimum width of the new street for that reason; and yet it is proposed to strike out what is unmistakably expressed and perfectly certain, for that which, from its nature, is uncertain, and which the Legislature treated as uncertain and unknown.

The witness called to prove the width of Frankfort street speaks of it as “about thirty-five feet.” Besides the clause requiring the new street to be fifty-two and a half feet is in the nature of a proviso, which always prevails over [531]*531the general purview. (Potter’s Dwar., 118, etc.) But there is no occasion for expunging any portion of this statute. The expressions are inapt, and taken literally incongruous, but are capable of a construction which will give effect to all of them in accordance with what seems to me the real purpose of the Legislature. That purpose was, that the new street should be at least fifty-two feet and six inches wide, and wider if the old street was wider. The words, “ of the same width,” should be construed as though the words used were “ as wide as.” The statute would then declare that the new street should be as wide as the old street, but not less than the width specified. If these words had been used no one would have supposed that the new street could be less than the feet and inches specified, and in substance they are equivalent words. The meaning of the statute could scarcely have been more plain, if it had declared, in words, that the new street shall be fifty-two feet and six inches wide,, unless the old street is wider than that, in which case it shall be as wide as the old street. This reading is so patent to my mind that no other construction is admissible within any known rules of interpretation.

It is urged that thirty-five feet was sufficient for the new street, and that it must be presumed that the Legislature intended to provide for a street of the same width only of the old street. We are not justified in speculating about the necessity of a street wider than thirty-five feet, but we know that that width makes a very narrow street, and one scarcely sufficient for public use, and it may well be that the Legislature in making a new street deemed it proper to require one more commodious and more in conformity with those of modem structure, and we cannot say that a street somewhat wider than the old one was not absolutely needed in the uexv location under the massive walls of the approaches to the bridge, and at all events vague and doubtful presumptions must yield to positive expressions. It is claimed that other portions of the description support the construction contended for by the defendant. The act calls for land in a [532]*532triangular form, and to run the line until it strikes Frankfort street on the fifty-two feet and six inches basis, stopping at J acob street, would take a piece inform quadrilateral, or if continued beyond Jacob street to Frankfort street, would take two pieces of land. It matters not how many pieces of land are taken, or how many owners there are of the land described. The description in the act is necessarily a triangle, with three sides specified, viz.: Cliff and Frankfort street, and the continued southerly line. These lines describe a triangle, and the form is properly designated as triangular. The circumstance that it takes one piece of land only belonging to the defendant, and clips a trifle from the block west of Jacob street, does not tend to show that the land described in the act is not triangular in form.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.Y. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-trustees-of-the-new-york-brooklyn-bridge-ny-1878.