McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission

88 Misc. 601, 151 N.Y.S. 451
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 601 (McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission) 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
McCutcheon v. Terminal Station Commission, 88 Misc. 601, 151 N.Y.S. 451 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

Since rendering the original opinion in the above entitled case, the court’s attention has been called to certain statutes of the state having an important bearing upon the question whether Front street, so called, is to be deemed a public highway as contended by the counsel for the plaintiff in this action. These statutes and the decisions relating to them were [603]*603not cited by counsel for any of the parties to this action upon the agreement, or are their briefs submitted, and the court’s attention was not directed to them. We deem them, however, of sufficient importance to justify a supplementary opinion discussing their bearing upon the case, not only that counsel may be advised of their import, but that in case of an appeal the appellate court may have the matter fully before it.

As stated in our original opinion, Front street, so called, as laid out on the map filed by the Holland Land Company, showed a street sixty-six feet wide. The trustees of the village of Buffalo acting under the statute as highway commissioners declared said street or highway, by resolution passed March 20, 1830, abandoned and closed.

The village trustees followed this action by a resolution that the abutting property owners, to whom the Holland Land Company had'executed deeds ‘conveying the lands between their property and the Buffalo river, should be entitled to receive said deeds on their executing to the trustees their bond, conditioned to construct a road two rods in width along Big Buffalo Creek in front of their lands at such times as they shall occupy their lots with buildings.”

We called attention to the fact that there is no evidence that such bond was given, or that such road was ever opened or constructed. It would appear that as early as December, 1837, the space in question had been covered by wharves and docks, for reference is made to the existence of such wharves and docks in a resolution of that date. We expressed the opinion that a public street could not be legally laid out pursuant to any resolution such as was adopted imposing a condition on property owners for the receipt of deeds from the Holland Land Company/

There remains, however, a further objection to the [604]*604legality or validity of any such action on the part of the municipal or village authorities, or the owners of the lands. By section 2 of chapter 198 of the Laws of 1826, being an act to amend “An Act to regulate highways, ” it was provided as follows: “That it shall be lawful for the commissioner of highways to lay out public roads not less than three rods in width. Provided, that this section shall not extend to those counties where the commissioners are now authorized by law to lay out roads less than three rods wide.”

This statute remained in force and unchanged until 1897, when, by an amendment to the Highway Law in reference to the use and dedication of highways, it was provided: “A highway so laid out must not be less than two rods in width.” See Highway Law, § 80, as amd. by Laws of 1897, chap. 204.

This later act is not by way of amendment to the statute of 1826, but probably is to be deemed as a substitute for and to supersede it.

Nevertheless, the act of 1897 could not operate in any way to modify or alter the status of Front street, so called. Whether it is to be deemed a public highway or not is to be determined by the law as it existed prior to the passage of the act of 1897 reducing the width of highways which may be laid out from three to two rods. Front street, so called, is but thirty-three feet, or two rods in width. Consequently it was beyond the power of the authorities of the village of Buffalo, acting as highway commissioners, either to legally lay out a street of that width, or to accept a legal dedication of such a street when laid out by the owners of the land over which it passed.

In the case of Ricketson v. Village of Saranac Lake, 73 Misc. Rep. 52; affd., 151 App. Div. 911, a strip of land eleven feet wide was deeded “to be used as a highway. ’ ’ The plaintiff claimed to be the owner in fee [605]*605of this strip, and brought an action against the village to compel a determination of a claim to real estate. The village answered and alleged that the strip in question had been for more than twenty years a public highway and street, and had been so worked and maintained as such public highway and street with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff and his grantors.

Referring to the statute as it now exists, the court said: Prior to the amendment of 1897 the general provisions of section 90 of the Highway Law required highways to be three rods in width.

‘ ‘ This ‘ street ’ therefore, could not have been a highway by dedication because there was no power in the public authorities to accept the same, either expressly or by implication. If, therefore, it was the intention of Vosburgh and Banker to create a public highway, such intention was entirely ineffectual, as its consummation was expressly prohibited by statute.”

The Court of Appeals held the same view in Smith v. Smythe, 197 N. Y. 457, where streets fourteen feet in width had been laid out through a park and houses built on each side of the streets.

We have stated there is no evidence that the owners of the property over which the so-called Front street runs ever opened it or dedicated it as a street. In the light of the statute of 1826, the presumption is they did not do what the statute forbade being done, and that whatever has been done by the owners was entirely for the purpose of constructing and maintaining docks, or simply to open a private passage for their own individual benefit, as distinguished from a public highway.

If the authorities were unable to accept a dedication of a street less than three rods in width, they certainly had no authority to expend a dollar of public moneys in their maintenance, as it did not become a legal street or highway.

[606]*606It was accordingly held in Smith v. Smythe, that as the land through which the fourteen-foot streets ran belonged to a private corporation, and the fourteen-foot streets were not public highways, village authorities could not appropriate public funds to the lighting of such streets without violating the provisions of the state Constitution prohibiting the application of public funds to private purposes, and that, in face of a statute authorizing it to be done.

It is suggested in the opinion in Ricketson v. Village of Saranac Lake, 73 Misc. Rep. 56, that the public may possibly acquire an easement which will constitute a road a public highway, and intimates that a highway may arise from twenty years ’ user of lands less than two rods in width. P. 56. However, this suggestion was not necessary to the disposition of that' case, and to that extent was obiter. That question is not decided in Smith v. Smythe, 197 N. Y. 461.

If public authorities are forbidden to accept the dedication of a street less than two or three rods in width, and burden the municipality with the cost and liability of their proper maintenance, it is difficult to see how upon sound logic such an illegal street may become a legal highway by public user and mere lapse of time.

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Related

City of New York v. People
204 Misc. 76 (New York Supreme Court, 1953)
People v. Sutherland
168 N.E. 838 (New York Court of Appeals, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 601, 151 N.Y.S. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccutcheon-v-terminal-station-commission-nysupct-1915.