Milhau v. Sharp

15 Barb. 193, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 50
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 15 Barb. 193 (Milhau v. Sharp) 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
Milhau v. Sharp, 15 Barb. 193, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 50 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinion

Edwards, P. J.

The plaintiffs in this case allege that the • street in the city ofHew-York, known and designated as Broadway, is an ancient street, which was opened about one hundred and fifty years ago, by the then owners of the lands over and through which the street passes, for their own convenience, and was by them allowed to be used by citizens and travelers as a common public street or thoroughfare. They further allege that they are, each of them, owners in fee of certain lots of great Value situated upon the street, and that they believe they are owners in fee of all the lands in front of their lots to the center of the street, subject only to the easement or right of way over the same; and they also allege that they are tax payers to a large amount by reason of their ownership of this and other property in the city. They then state that previous to the presenting of their complaint, the boards of aldermen and assistant aldermen of the city, in opposition to the veto of the mayor, and in violation of the injunction of the highest local court' in this city, passed a resolution by which they authorized and granted permission to the defendants to lay a double track for a railway in Broadway and Whitehall or State-street, from the south ferry to Eifty-ninth-street, and thereafter to continue the same, from time to time, along the Bloomingdale road to Manhattanville, There were certain conditions attached to this grant, to which it is not now necessary to allude, and there are certain allegations contained in the complaint as to the circumstances under which the authority and permission were granted, which it will be necessary to consider hereafter. The plaintiffs then insist and contend that the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city, have no right by virtue of their corporate powers, either as [207]*207established by their charter, or conferred upon them by the legislature, to authorize the railroad in question. They further insist that, owing to the peculiar situation of Broadway, both in reference to its width, and its use for general purposes as a street, the proposed railway track, if permitted to be used as the defendants intend to use it, will become a nuisance. They also contend that the right to use the street in the manner proposed, can only be acquired by an express authority, delegated by the sovereign power of the state, by virtue of the right of eminent domain, and that it would be necessary as a condition precedent to the exercise of such authority, to make compensation to the owners of the adj oining property. And, finally, they contend that the grant to the defendants has been corruptly and illegally made. Upon these grounds they pray for an injunction to prevent the grant from being carried into effect.

I conceive that the question as to the general power of the corporation to authorize the laying of a railway track in the city has already been settled in the case of Drake v. The Hudson River Railroad Company, (7 Barb. 528.) As I have always understood that case, there were two questions distinctly passed upon, and decided by the court. First, that a railway in a city is not per se a nuisance or a purpresture; and, second, that the corporation of the city of New-York has the power and right to authorize the use of its streets for that purpose. It was contended upon the argument that the case before us is distinguishable from that, because in that case the legislature had; by its charter to the railroad company, authorized it to carry its road into the city. But it will be observed that this authority is made to depend entirely upon the assent of the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city. The corporate right, as an artificial existence to receive the benefit of the assent or permission thus given, is all that was granted by the state. The right to use the streets of the city came entirely from the corporation of the city. So in the case of Plant v. The Long Island Railroad Company, (10 Barb. 26,) it whs held that the corporation of the city of Brooklyn, whose powers do not differ essentially from those vested in the corporation of this city, had the right to an[208]*208thorize a railroad company to tunnel a public street for the purpose of laying a railway track. And in the case of Adams v. The Saratoga and Washington Railroad Company, (11 Barb. 414,) a similar power was recognized in the village of Whitehall. (See also Chapman v. The Albany, and Schenectady Railroad Company, 10 Barb. 360.) In each of these cases the recipient of the right or thing granted w8® a body corporate, created by an act of the legislature, but in every case the right or thing granted was given by the city or village corporation, by virtue of its general powers over its streets.

The next ground upon which the plaintiffs claim'that the laying and using of the railway track in question will be illegal is, that it will be a nuisance. As has been already seen, it was settled in the cases above cited, that a railway in a city is not necessarily a nuisance. But no one can doubt that, under certain circumstances, it might become so. If, for example, a railway with a double track should be laid down in some of the narrow streets of this city, which are, even now, inadequate to the public wants for ordinary business purposes, it is apparent that the public use would necessarily be impaired, if not entirely obstructed. The plaintiffs contend that this case is also an exception to the general rule. But I do not think that the facts presented in the papers before us warrant such a conclusion. And it seems to me that no one will seriously deny that the track in question might be used, or rather I will say, that there is no certainty that it would not be used, in such a way as materially to impair and obstruct the public right of passage and re-passage through and over the street. But such a possibility would not be sufficient to authorize the interference of the court at this time.

The next ground upon which the plaintiffs claim that they are entitled to the interference of the court is, that they are owners of the fee to the center of the street, subject only to the public right of way, and that the street cannot be taken for the railway until compensation is first made to them. The grounds on which they claim the ownership of the fee are, that they are seised in fee of the lots adjoining the street, and they contend [209]*209¿hat, from this fact, the law implies their ownership ad medium filum vice : and that the burden of proving the contrary, rests upon the defendants. The defendants on the other hand, have introduced an affidavit of a distinguished member of the bar, who, it appears, has been employed by the corporation, and for some time past has been engaged in preparing a digest of the ancient records, in reference to the title of the corporation to the streets of'the city. This affidavit is, to a considerable extent, argumentative, and consists of a statement of facts with inferences and conclusions ; but the facts stated are sworn to be true upon information and belief. Assuming all the facts stated, to be true, still I am not prepared to say that it is shown that the fee of the lands in Broadway, above Wall-street, is vested in the corporation of the city. Neither am I prepared to come to a different conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Barb. 193, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milhau-v-sharp-nysupct-1853.