In the Matter of the Petition of Deering

85 N.Y. 1, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 50
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 85 N.Y. 1 (In the Matter of the Petition of Deering) 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 the Matter of the Petition of Deering, 85 N.Y. 1, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 50 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinions

Rapallo, J.

The principal question-in this case is whether the commissioners of Central park and the departments of public parks and -of public works, as the successors to the powers of such commissioners, were authorized by law to do the work of regulating, grading, curbing, guttering and flagging Tenth avenue north of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, or whether the *6 authority to order this work to be done was vested in the common council. There are various other questions in the case; but if the one stated is determined in favor of the petitioner, it is decisive of this appeal.

There is no question but that the power to order the work was vested in the common council, unless by some statute it was transferred to the commissioners of Central park. The statute relied upon by the respondents as effecting such transfer, is chapter 565 of the Laws of 1865. .Other statutes are referred to for the purpose of fortifying the interpretation of that act claimed by the respondent; but the power of the commissioners of Central park, if it existed, must be found in the act of 1865!"

When that act was passed, Tenth avenue, as it then was and still is located, had been laid out from Twenty-first street to King’s Bridge by commissioners appointed under the act of 1807. This embraces the parts of the avenue upon which the improvements now in question, so far as the petitioner’s land is concerned, were made. It had been opened for that distance by order of the common council, and the report of the com-, missioners of estimate and assessment for such opening had been confirmed in 1838, and the title as far north as One Hundred and Sixtieth street had been thus acquired. Subsequently, and prior to 1850, the avenue had been laid out and opened from One Hundred and Sixtieth street to One Hundred and Hinety-fourth street, and the title had been acquired, in part in like manner and in part by private cession, arid the avenue had been worked and improved from time to time by the common council as one of the avenues of the city, and used by the public as such.

In 1860 an act was passed (Laws of 1860, chap. 201) appointing commissioners to lay out streets, avenues, efc'c., in that part of the city lying north of One Hundred and' Fifty-fifth street, and in that act it was provided that nothing therein should authorize the closing of Tenth avenue. This avenue had.therefore been laid out and opened, and was one of the recognized and established avenues of the city.

*7 While these conimissioners were proceeding with the execu- • tian of their powers the act of 1865 was passed, and it now becomes necessary to examine the provisions of that act, to determine whether it conferred upon the Central park commissioners the power of doing the work in question on Tenth avenue.

By the first section of the act, the commissioners of Central park were vested with exclusive power to lay out streets, roads, squares and public places within that part of the city northward of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street. By the second section they were empowered to make the necessary surveys, and cause maps to be made from time to time, showing the width, location, grades, etc., oí the streets, etc., to be laid out by them, and were directed to file such maps; and by the third section these maps were made conclusive as to the location, width and grades of the streets, etc., exhibited upon them. These complete the provisions as to the laying out of streets, etc. The next section (§ 4) relates to the opening of such streets, etc., and provides that the commissioners, in behalf of the corporation of the city, are authorized to acquire title to all or any of the lands required for the streets, etc., so laid out by them, whenever they shall deem it to the public interest so to do, and for that purpose to make application to the Supreme Court for the appointment of commissioners of estimate and assessment. The proceedings are to conform to the acts relative to opening streets, etc., in the city of Hew York, and those acts are made applicable to the streets so laid out by the Central park commissioners, to the same extent as if such streets had been laid out under the act of 1807.

Sections 5, 6 and 7 relate to the assessment and payment of damages for land taken, and assessments for the expenses of the opening, and section 8 contains the authority claimed for doing the work of regulating, grading and improving the streets, etc. This is the only section under which such authority can be claimed, and it must therefore be carefully examined.

This section (§ 8) declares that “ upon the .confirmation of *8 the report of commissioners of estimate and assessment appointed pursuant to this act, as to the streets, roads, public squares and places so laid out by said commissioners of the Central parle, as herein provided, or as to any portion thereof, or whenever thereafter the commissioners of the Central park shall deem it to the public interest so to do, it shall be lawful for the said commissioners of the Central park, from time to time, to cause such of said streets, roads, squares or places as they may designate for that purpose, to be regulated, graded and improved as streets or as country roads,” etc., amd for that pu/rpose they are vested with the powers exercised by the corporation as to other streets and roads.

This is the grant of power under which it is claimed that the commissioners of Central park were authorized to regulate, grade and improve the then existing Tenth avenue, above One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, and the question is whether section 8 was intended to apply to Tenth avenue, or its language is such that it is capable of being so applied.

It is very clear that the power of the Central park commissioners to do the work of regulating, grading and improving streets, etc., within the district described in the act was limited to streets laid out by them. Tenth avenue, north of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, was not in fact laid out by them for it had been not only laid out, but opened, and adjacent property assessed for such opening, years before the passage of the act of 1865, and the commissioners of the Central park made no change whatever in its location or width. On the map filed by them it appears precisely as it was laid out by the commissioners under the act of 1807' It is contended that by a liberal interpretation of the act of 1865, the adoption of this avenue by the Central park commissioners may be treated as a laying out thereof by them, and that this construction should be put upon it, for the purpose of carrying out the supposed intention of the legislature to place all that part of the city lying north of One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street under the control of the commissioners of the Central park. But in the effort to give this construction to the act, and thus to *9 extend the power of the commissioners to do the work in question to this avenue, we are encountered with the difficulty that section 8 is so framed that the power to do the work is restricted not only to new streets, etc., laid out by the commissioners of the Central park, but to streets opened

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.Y. 1, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-petition-of-deering-ny-1881.