People ex rel. Cashman v. Heddon
This text of 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 299 (People ex rel. Cashman v. Heddon) 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.
Opinion
For the relator it is contended that the record does not show that the necessity of the private road in question has been determined by a jury of freeholders, and that laying the road through the orchard of the relator, and taking a portion of the orchard without his consent, was erroneous.
It is a sufficient answer to the first point to say that the record ■does not show that the necessity of the road has not been determined by a jury of freeholders, and that it is to be presumed, from the fact that the trustees acting as commissioners determined that the road .should be laid out, that all the preliminary requirements of the statute essential to the validity of their action had been complied with. Besides the record shows that the proceedings of the jury and the notice of appeal were put in evidence before the referees for the purpose of showing that such proceedings were had in respect to the road in question, and the testimony of several of the witnesses examined before the referees shows that a jury was called in reference to the said road. And we conceive it' to be a perfect answer to both branches of the relator’s contention that the referees could only inquire into the “ fitness or unfitness ” of laying out the road, and their proceedings in respect to that question are all that can now be reviewed. Upon the assumption that the road was shown to be necessary the referees had nothing to do but to affirm the order of the trustees. The question whether the trastees had proceeded without authority of law, or had exceeded their jurisdiction, was not before the referees, and any decision they might have made of those questions would not have validated or invalidated the action of the trustees. If the trustees acted without jurisdiction any order made by them was a nullity affecting no rights and could be reviewed by common-law certiorari and vacated. These views are sustained, we think, by the case of People ex rel. Hubbard v. Harris (63 N. Y., 391) and the authorities cited by Eael, J. (p. 394).
Upon the merits the testimony before the referees warrants their conclusion, that the road is necessary to give Burke access from hi's residence to a public highway, and their decision on that point 'is conclusive. (1 B. S., 519, § 89; Laws 1847, chap. 455, § 8.)
It is urged by the relator’s counsel that the referees erred in deciding that they had no power to pass upon the question of com[301]*301pensation to the owner of the land. There.is nothing in the record showing that they declined to pass upon that question. The cáse is to be heard on the writ and the return "and the papers on which the writ was granted. (Code of Civil Pro., § 2138.) The opinion of the referees, although very properly printed in order to give the appellate court the benefit of the reasons assigned for the judgment, is no part of the record. (Magie v. Baker, 14 N. Y., 435, per Comstock, J., 438.) An alleged error, which appears only in the opinion of the court below and not in the record, is not ground of reversal. (Laning v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 49 N. Y., 521.)
There is much reason too for saying that the referees have nothing to do with the question of damages, except so far as to inquire whether the benefit would equal the expense, and thus consider the question in its bearing upon the necessity of the proposed road. That was the view taken of the question in the case of the Commissioners, etc., v. Meserole (10 Wend., 123), which arose under a special act (Laws 1830, chap. 56), the provisions of which in respect to the powers of commissioners and the reviewing of their orders on appeal were the same, in substance, as those contained in the general road act. Put without passing upon that question it is enough to say that the return does not show that the referees ruled that they had not power to consider the subject of damages.
The order of the referees should be affirmed, with costs, which we fix at fifty dollars.
So ordered.
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39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-cashman-v-heddon-nysupct-1884.