New York Cement Co. v. Consolidated Rosendale Cement Co.

76 A.D. 285
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 A.D. 285 (New York Cement Co. v. Consolidated Rosendale Cement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Cement Co. v. Consolidated Rosendale Cement Co., 76 A.D. 285 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Parker, P. J.:

The orders from which these appeals are taken are based upon the theory that the defendant company is holding the twelve miles [288]*288of the canal in question under the same title and subject to .'the same liabilities under which the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company held the whole canal. The correctness of this theory depends upon the effect which is to be given to the act of 1899, under the authority of which the sale by such company was made.

I concede, at the outset, that up to the time of the passage of such act, the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company held such canal subject to the right of the public to navigate it under such regulations and for such tolls as were allowed by the act of 1823, and it ■wa§ also under obligation to maintain such eanal in proper condition for such use. Its contract with the State upon its organization under such act of 1823 was to that effect. I also concede, that such company had no right to sell such canal, nor any part thereof that would interfere with its full performance of such obligations, unless authorized to do so by act of the Legislature. Such is the well-settled rule of law. I also concede that if such company had sold to the Cornell Steamboat Company by virtue of an act that merely authorized it to sell and convey its canal, even though no express permission to sell any of its franchises was included therein, the purchaser would by implication take the property and all franchises necessary to enable it to operate it as a canal, and also would be held to have assumed. all the obligations which the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company owed to the State and which were connected therewith. In other words; so far as the use of the property was concerned, it would succeed to the rights which its grantor had, and assume its obligations to maintain the canal as a public way.

But the serious question in this case is, whether under the statute of 1899 any such obligation on the part of the purchaser has been provided for or can be implied. .

It is to be noticed that no permission has in terms been given ■ by that act to the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company to sell Or transfer any of its franchises. If any were necessary to the use of the property by the purchaser they must have been acquired by implication. So, also, there is no direct provision that the property sold should be taken by the purchaser subject to any of the obligations which the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company had assumed towards the State concerning it. There is no expression in the act [289]*289indicating a purpose on the part of the State that, notwithstanding the sale, the public use of the canal shall remain intact. If any such obligation did follow it rests upon implication only. In my judgment no such implication exists. The provisions of the act repel it.

Section 3 begins with the suggestion that the canal is no longer useful for the purposes for which it was constructed; that the canal company can now transport coal from the Pennsylvania mines to the markets of the State more economically by its railroads than it can by the canal. Therefore it in substance enacts that whenever such company desires it may, by vote of its managers, “ lease, sell or discontinue to use or maintain said canal, or any parts thereof, which in their judgment are no longer necessary for said purpose.” The purposes alluded to are the transportation of coal from the mines to the river. Here is a distinct permission to cease to maintain, the canal — that is, to abandon it as a public way. If the company need no longer maintain the canal, if they may cease to use it as such, then the obligation which it assumed in its charter to operate and maintain it as a public way is discharged. The company being released from that obligation, it is no longer impressed upon the property.

So, also, the permission to sell indicates the same purpose on the part of the State. It authorizes the company to sell in parcels. This provision alone repels the idea that the purchaser was to take the property burdened with the obligation to maintain it as a public way. Surely it cannot be supposed that the canal was to be held and operated as a public way from Honesdale to the river by the united action of as many different purchasers as the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company might succeed in finding. It seems absurd to suppose that any purchaser could be found for a part of the canal, if he were compelled to assume all the duties that the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company were obligated to perform concerning it. But, moreover, such “parts” as the company were authorized to sell were those which in the judgment of its managers were no longer necessary for its purposes. Is it to be supposed that the Legislature intended that the purchaser of such a part should be bound to keep it open as a public way ? And that ajl- such pur[290]*290chasers- must unite to keep the. whole line of 110 miles in operation and open: to the public use ? "Were the purchasers obliged to .operate -as; a, canal those parts, which the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company .¡sold -as no longer useful for -that purpose? \ Did the State intend to demand from the purchaser duties which it had concluded .ought no longer to-.be exactéd from the Delaware , and Hudson - Canal .Company ?

It seems to me that the plain and only purpose of the statute was .to .release and discharge the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company ■from its liability to operate and maintain the canal as a. public way, and allow it to sell or dispose of the same, or any parts thereof, as .its managers might desire. The implication claimed by the -respondent does not arise in this case, because, the grantor having been discharged .of its obligation, the- grantee took the property freed from -the same.

Acting under this statute, the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company sold the whole canal to the Cornell Steamboat Company_ That was in -effect an abandonment of it as a public way. It is urged that because it included “ the franchises ” in the conveyance it -cannot be deemed such an abandonment. It is clear that neither party to the conveyance understood that thereafter it was a public way, because the grantee expressly covenants .to perform all the obligations required of the Delaware -and Hudson Canal Company by section 4 of the act when the canal shall cease to be used as .such. Evidently the: Cornell Steamboat Company understood that' it was purchasing the private property of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, and that when purchased -it became its .own private property freed from any of the burdens imposed by its charter upon the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company. Acting upon this understanding, it subsequently sold the canal in several •different parcels to as many different owners. In -all parts, as I -understand the record, except the twelve miles in question, .its .use, ;as. a waterway has been abandoned. It has been filled .up and .destroyed. . As to such twelve miles the defending company evidently purchased it for its own private use. It needed it as -a .means .of transporting its cement to the Hudson river.. Bather .than have it destroyed, it .purchased it,, and at its own expense maintains it .asva private way. It seems clear that such action ,on the part of the [291]*291Delaware and Hudson Canal Company and its grantee was a complete abandonment of the canal under the statute. It had ceased to be a public way when the defendant company purchased it.

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Related

New York Cement Co. v. Consolidated Rosendale Cement Co.
70 N.E. 451 (New York Court of Appeals, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.D. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-cement-co-v-consolidated-rosendale-cement-co-nyappdiv-1902.