Palmer v. . Fort Plain and Cooperstown Plank Road Co.

11 N.Y. 376
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 11 N.Y. 376 (Palmer v. . Fort Plain and Cooperstown Plank Road Co.) 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
Palmer v. . Fort Plain and Cooperstown Plank Road Co., 11 N.Y. 376 (N.Y. 1854).

Opinion

Selden, J.

The most important, among the numerous questions- this case presents, is, whether the supervisor and commissioners of highways of the town of Otsego had power to enter into the agreement which lies at the foundation of the suit. By section 26 of the act to provide for the incorporation of plank road companies, passed May 7,1847, these officers are authorized to agree with such companies “ upon the compensation and damages to be paid by said company, for taking and using any of the highways of the town ;" and by section 1 of the act in relation to plank road companies, passed November 24, 1847, such companies are authorized to “ procure by agreement,” from the same officers, “ the right to take and use any part of any public highway necessary for the construction,” &c.

At first view, it might seem, that the power to procure by agreement” the right to use the necessary lands, must include the power to agree upon the terms upon which such right should be acquired. But there are many things to be considered before this conclusion is adopted as applicable to the present case. By a careful scrutiny, it will be seen, that section 1 of the act of November, 1847, was not designed either to repeal or "modify section 26 of the previous act. Under the first act, a plank road company, notwithstanding it might have agreed with the officers of a town upon the compensation to be paid for the use of any of the highways of such town, and might also have obtained by agreement the rght to all private lands along the line of its road, was ‘still required to apply to the board of supervisors for leave to lay out and construct its road, and thus to subject itself to all the delay and expense attending the appointment and action of commissioners to lay out the road. The officers of towns, although authorized to agree upon the amount of compensation for the use of- highways, *378 were not authorized to grant the right to such use. Section T of the act of November, 1847, was plainly intended to remedy this inconvenience, and to relieve plank road companies from the unnecessary burden. The two sections, therefore, are to be taken together, in determining the extent of the powers conferred upon the supervisor and commissioners. Section 1 of the last act gives the power to grant the right to use the highways of the town, and section 26 of the former, to agree upon the amount of compensation. The two sections, when united, specifically confer these powers and no other.

It is a general rule that public officers, acting under a statutory authority, must confine themselves strictly within the powers conferred by the act. This rule has been recognized and applied by the supreme court at general term, in the second district, in a case in principle not unlike the present. (See Webb v. Albertson, 4 Barb. S. C. R. 51.) It seems that the village of Greenport upon Long Island lies within the limits, and is a part of one of the towns' in the county of Suffolk. Some of the inhabitants of the village, being desirous to have one of the streets therein extended and opened, applied to the commissioners of highways of the town, who alone had power to make the improvement. The commissioners consented to do it, but took a bond from the applicants, to indemnify the town against the expenses ; and the action was upon this bond. Upon demurrer it was held, that the action would not lie; that the commissioners were authorized to lay out and open the road, if in their judgment the public convenience required it; but not, as the learned judge who delivered the opinion expresses it, “to be tampering with parties, and making conditions.” Much of the reasoning in that case is applicable to this. There are other objections to the .existence of the power exercised by the supervisor and commissioners of highways in this case, growing out of the provisions of the plank road acts themselves. The power to agree, that no gate shall be located within a given distance of a certain point, involves the power to agree where the gate shall be located. I can see no ground for distinguishing between *379 these different exercises of power. But section 37 of the first plank road act provides, that the commissioners of highways of any town, whenever they, or a majority of them shall be of the opinion that the location of such gate is unjust to the public interest,” &c. may apply to the county court for an order to change the location. This is a power which may be exercised from time to time. Changes may occur in the highways of the town, rendering such an application necessary. If, however, the location of the gate is fixed by contract between the company and the town, this remedy is cut off. Because, if the plank road company is bound by such a contract, the town must be bound also.

But there is a still stronger objection to the condition, annexed by the supervisor and commissioners in this case to their grant. It interferes with and changes the tenure by which the plank road company hold the right to the use of the highway as prescribed by statute. Sections 28 and 30 of the original act provide, that whenever the proceedings by the company, to acquire the right to use any lands or highways for the purpose of their road, shall be perfected, the company may enter upon and take and hold such lands, so long as the same shall be used for the purposes of such a roadand section 3 of the act of November, 1847, provides, that whenever any such company shall have procured by agreement, under the provisions of that act, the right to take and use the parts of any public highway, “ it shall possess the same rights and privileges,” &c. &c. as if the right had been acquired by the proceedings prescribed by the previous act. There is, therefore, a direct conflict between the condition annexed to the grant in this case, and the provisions of the plank road acts. The latter say, that whenever the company shall have acquired the right to use a highway, they may continue such use so long as its road shall continue. This condition says, that the right shall cease, if the condition is disregarded. I can see no answer to this objection.

But conceding the agreement to be valid, the case presents the question, whether a bare naked condition, contained in a deed, unaccompanied by any words importing an undertaking to abide *380 by or perform it, can be enforced as a covenant. If this action can be sustained, the validity of the agreement being admitted, then every condition inserted by the grantor in a deed creates a covenant on the part of the grantee, as •well as a condition because it is'impossible for an instrument to be more bald of any language importing an agreement to perform a condition, than the present. It is a little surprising that the cases on this subject, are not more numerous. The question seems to have rarely arisen, especially in modern times. It seems, however, to be settled by the older authorities. Littleton, in his work upon tenures, in treating of estates upon condition, says : “ Also, if the words were such; provided always that the aforesaid B. do pay, or cause to be paid, to the aforesaid A. such a rent, &c.; or these :• so that the said B. do pay, or cause to be paid, to the said A. such a rent, &c.; in these cases, without more saying, the feoffee hath but

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-fort-plain-and-cooperstown-plank-road-co-ny-1854.