Mark v. Village of West Troy

27 N.Y.S. 543, 83 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 162, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 323, 76 Hun 162
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 N.Y.S. 543 (Mark v. Village of West Troy) 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
Mark v. Village of West Troy, 27 N.Y.S. 543, 83 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 162, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 323, 76 Hun 162 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

PUTNAM, J.

We think that the legal propositions asserted by the learned counsel for the appellant, are generally correct. The [544]*544making a survey and map of the village of West Troy by the former owners of the land, laying out lots and streets thereon, filing said map with the county clerk, and selling lots with reference thereto, if followed by a public use of said streets or other acceptance thereof, constituted a dedication; and it is true mat a dedication once made and accepted cannot be revoked; also, generally, where a street thus dedicated extends to the shore of a river, and such shore is shifted by natural accretion or otherwise, the street will be extended over such accretion to the new shore. If, then, the evidence shows that there was an absolute, unqualified dedication of Canal street to the river shore, and an acceptance of such dedication by the public or the village of West Troy, we are not prepared to say that plaintiffs, or their grantors, by filling in the river east of Canal street, would deprive the public of access to the shore, unless other facts appear in the case which had the effect of limiting the dedication. It is always a question of fact whether or not a public highway has been created by dedication, (Flack v. Village of Green Island, 122 N. Y. 107, 25 N. E. 267;) and, to effect a dedication, the intent of the owner of the land must clearly appear. The owner’s acts and declarations should be unqualified and decisive, manifesting a positive and unmistakable intent to permanently abandon his property to the specific public use. If they be equivocal, or do not clearly and plainly indicate the intention to permanently abandon the property to the use of the public, they are insufficient to establish a case of dedication, (Holdane v. Trustees, 21 N. Y. 474-477; State v. Green, 41 Iowa, 693; City of Columbus v. Dahn, 36 Ind. 330; Bridge Co. v. Bachman, 66 N. Y. 261;). and a dedication, before acceptance by the public, may be revolted or modified, (Holdane v. Trustees, supra; Lee v. Village of Sandy Hill, 40 N. Y. 442, 443; City of Cohoes v. President, etc., Delaware & H. Canal Co., 134 N. Y. 397, 432, 31 N. E. 887.) A dedication of a highway is, in effect, a gift of a right of way over land to the public, which only becomes operative by acceptance. Until accepted, the donor may change his mind at any time, and withdraw his offer. When accepted, the title of the public to the highway becomes absolute.

The real questions in this case are of fact, and are whether the dedication under consideration, made by filing the map in 1828, which described Canal street as extending to the river, had the effect of extending said street over the other land of the dedicators under water east of the river shore; whether such dedication was limited by the reservation contained in the partition deed of 1829, and hence subject to the rights of the owners to the ferry landing at the foot of Canal street, then being used as such. If the effect of filing the map was to give to the public a right to the use of Canal street to the river, and over the water lots of the owners, whether the fact that the latter at once, and before any acceptance of Canal street by public user, took possession of, and have ever since occupied, the premises in question, effected a revocation or modification of said dedication. On March '7, 1828, George Tibbits and others, as trustees for certain cestuis que trustent, being the own[545]*545ers of the lands embracing the premises in question and a portion' of the village of West Troy, laid out the same into lots and streets, and made and filed a map thereof. In said map, Canal street is described as extending to the river. The defendant claims that the making and filing of the map, and the subsequent use of Canal street by the public, effected a dedication thereof to the river. The trustees, at the time 'of filing said map, were the owners, by grant from the state, of lands in the river under water east of and adjoining the foot of Canal street. After the making of said map, and on October 12, 1829, all the parties interested in said premises mutually executed a partition deed of said farm, duly dividing said property according to their respective rights. Each grant in said partition deed had the following clause:

“Excepting and reserving out of this release all right of ferrying, or establishing or maintaining a ferry or ferries across the river Hudson, it being understood and expressly agreed by and between the said parties that the-right of ferriage is to remain vested in them, the said Philip Schuyler, GeorgeTibbits, Richard P. Hart, and Nathan Warren, as such trustees, as aforesaid, until further partition is made by said proprietors of West Troy of" the residue of said trust estate.”

The trustees also retained the title of lot ¡No. 40, which adjoined’ the foot of Canal street. The title was so retained for the purpose-of maintaining a ferry. At that time the Troy and West Troy ferry boats landed at the foot of Canal street. The said trustees,on September 19, 1835, conveyed to John P. Cushman and Ebenezer Wiswall said lot ¡No. 40—

“And also all the exclusive right and privilege of keeping and maintaining a: ferry and ferries across the river Hudson from any and every part of said village of West Troy, and the right and privilege of approach to said ferries as now used and vested in the said trustees, in trust, as aforesaid, for the' said parties of the first part, their heirs or assigns, and also all the said exclusive right and privilege of keeping and maintaining a ferry or ferries across the said river which have been reserved to said trustees.”

Thereupon said Cushman and Wiswall became the owners of said—

“Ferry, then being operated and maintained, and the property belonging and’ appertaining to said ferry, the landing of which was then at the foot of said" Canal street, as it then existed, and the exclusive right of ferriage not only at that particular landing, but also the exclusive right of ferriage all along the said shore of said Hudson river fronting on said village of West Troy. The said grantees and their successors filled in with earth, to the depth of several feet, from the then foot of Canal street and of lot No. 40 easterly to where said ferry landing now-is, a distance of upward of two hundred feet, at their own costs and expense. The ownership of said ferry landing and the lands pertaining to it changed from time to time, by reason of sales- and conveyances and transfers of undivided parts thereof, but at all times the said ferry was being maintained, and the possession thereof and of the property pertaining thereto held, by the owners thereof.”

It appears, therefore, that, from a time prior to the filing of said map, the owners of the said land conducted a ferry business from Troy to West Troy, landing the boats at the foot of Canal street. The right to conduct said business was reserved to the trustees-in the deed of 1829, and conveyed by them to Cushman and Wis-wall by the deed of 1835.

[546]*546The learned trial judge made, among others, the following findings :

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.Y.S. 543, 83 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 162, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 323, 76 Hun 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-v-village-of-west-troy-nysupct-1894.