In re the Water Commissioners

3 Edw. Ch. 552
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 5, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Edw. Ch. 552 (In re the Water Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Water Commissioners, 3 Edw. Ch. 552 (N.Y. 1842).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor :

This matter is before me on a motion to confirm the report of appraisers of two pieces of land on opposite sides of the Harlem river, proposed to be taken by the water commissioners for the purpose of the aqueduct.

The confirmation is opposed on behalf of Mr. Lawrence, the owner.

One object and the principal one in requiring these lands is, to get at materials (earth and stone) to be used in constructing the aqueduct bridge over the Harlem river ; and another, to have a site for a small dwelling house, to be built for the keeper of the bridge or aqueduct, when the same shall be completed. For the latter purpose a much smaller portion of the land than is now proposed to be taken would suffice.

The objection (taken for the first time on the hearing of this motion) that there had been no disagreement, between the water commissioners and the owner, to warrant the appointment of appraisers, is too late. It should have been made at the time of the application for appraisers. Omitting then to raise the question and suffering the proceedings to go on, is a waiver. And from what now appears, it is very evident there would have been a disagreement about the price or compensation, if, in fact, there was none, had any negotiation for a voluntary surrender of the land been attempted.

The next and more important question is, whether the water commissioners have a right to take the fee or entire ownership of land, when the principal object is to obtain earth and stone to be used as materials in the construction of their works 1 In behalf of the owner, it is contended that the commissioners have no authority or right, by law, to acquire anything more for such purpose than a temporary use of the land, paying for the materials they may take and for such damages to the land itself as may be occasioned by the excavation, &c.

Whether this be so, depends upon the extent of their powers as conferred by the act of the 2d of May, 1834, entitled, “An act to provide for-supplying the city of New York with pure and wholesome water.” By the 12th and 13th sections of the [554]*554act, they are authorized “ to enter upon any land or water for the purpose of making surveys; and to agree with the owner of any property which may be required for the purposes of the act, as to the amount of compensation to be paid to such owner.” And “ in case of disagreement between the commissioners and the owner of any property which may be required for the said purposes, or affected by any operation connected therewith, as to the amount of compensation to be paid to such owner, &c.” then the vice-chancellor is to appoint appraisers to examine the property and to estimate the value or damage to be paid therefor. Here, then, is full authority granted to the commissioners to enter upon and take any land or water that it may become necessary to have for 'the successful accomplishment of thei i undertaking.

There is no limit to their power to take any properly they may think proper to require for the purpose or in respect to the permanency of the use they may make of it or of the title they may wish to have transferred; and in a case between them and Mrs. Beekman, 1 have lately decided that they are to exercise their own judgment in regard to what property they will take and the necessity or expediency of taking it, and so long" as they shall appear to act in good faith and within the scope of their powers, I am bound to appoint appraisers of any particular piece of property they may designate- as being requisite for the completion or management of the aqueduct. And upon the same principle, they must be allowed to determine how far these operations or any thing connected with them will require the permanent use of lands and the consequent change of the entire ownership or the usufruct for a time only. The only restriction upon or limit to their power is as regards the purpose for which private property may be taken. The purpose must be such as conforms to the plan adopted of supplying the city with water. That plan is to furnish the supply from the Croton river, by m’eans of a covered aqueduct, such aqueduct to be brought over the Harlem river upon a high bridge so called or by a tunnel under the bed of that river, as finally settled by a recent act of the legislature. It is for no other purpose that property can be compulsorily taken by the water commissioners nor can they depart from the plan of the work just mentioned in any of their proceedings. They [555]*555cannot, for example, take property against the will of the owner to be applied to the purpose of supplying the city with water from any other source than the Croton or in any other way or manner than by means of a covered aqueduct. Their authority is confined to this definite object, but, in the exercise of that authority, they are unlimited in their discretion and judgment as to the particular parcels of private property they may think proper to take and in their determination to take the fee or the usufruct of the land for temporary purposes, as they may deem best. And there can be no danger to the landholder, especially iu Westchester county, from an improper exercise of judgment or discretion in this respect or from any abuse of the powers of the commissioners.

We have now in force an amendatory act of the legislature, passed in May 1836, declaring that lands situated in Westchester county which may happen to be taken by virtue of the original act, shall be held and appropriated only for the use and purpose of introducing water into the city of New-York and for purposes necessarily incident thereto, and for no other uses or purposes whatsoever; and if otherwise used or if not required for the aqueduct purposes, then the lands so improperly used or not so required shall revert to the former owner, upon just and equitable terms prescribed in the act. This takes away all inducement to the acquisition of more than can be necessary, but it, nevertheless, leaves the authority of the commissioners unimpaired ; and 1 have no doubt whatever of their statutory right to require the fee or entire ownership of land to be transferred to the corporation, even where the sole object is to obtain materials to be used in the construction of the work they have in charge, subject however to the reversionary right declared by the amendatory statute, whenever such right shall afterwards accrue. The case of Jermain v. Waggener, 1 Hill, 279, has been cited to show that the water commissioners, having by agreement or by a previous compulsory proceeding taken lands from the same individual for the purposes of the aqueduct, they are functus officio, as regards the taking of any other or more land from the same owner. The case cited is not an authority at all applicable to the present, on this question. It merely decides that canal commissioners having adopted a plan for raising the waters of a lake [556]*556by means of a dam to the height necessary for the canal, which plan they were required to adopt preliminary to the . . . , j commencement or the work, and having built the dam accord¡ngly, they could not afterwards depart from the plan thus adopted and authorize an individual to raise the waters of the lake .by means of another dam as a substitute for, a. part of the work they were to construct, so as to exempt him from liability in an action on the case for overflowing the lands of the plaintiff. And the court say that the powers of the commissioners were quasi judicial and having once passed upon the plan, their powers were at an end. But the case in hand is very different.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Edw. Ch. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-water-commissioners-nychanct-1842.