People ex rel. Wells v. Brown

54 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 459, 14 N.Y. St. Rep. 457
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 54 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 459 (People ex rel. Wells v. Brown) 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
People ex rel. Wells v. Brown, 54 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 459, 14 N.Y. St. Rep. 457 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Fish, J.:

The Special Term ordered a peremptory mandamus to the appellant, commanding him as commissioner of highways of the town of JBolton, to proceed according to law to the opening and working of a highway in said town which had been laid out by an order of the referees appointed by the county judge of said county, on the 2d of November, 1883. There had been no jury of freeholders called, nor any certificate of twelve freeholders of the town certifying said highway to be necessary.

On the 8th of June, 1883, the relator and six other residents and freeholders of the town of Bolton presented a written petition to Alonzo Lane, the commissioner of highways of the town, praying for the laying out of the highway in question. Tie petitioners described themselves as residents and freeholders liable to be assessed for highway labor in said town, and that the real estate of said [461]*461town, as then assessed by the last assessment-roll of the town, was at an average price of less than.five dollars per acre. The proposed highway commenced in the center of the highway leading from the residence of A. A. Anderson to Edgecomb. pond, and south fourteen degrees and thirty minutes east sixty links from a maple tree cornered and marked; and from that point the route of the proposed highway was described by courses and distances, and ending in the center of the highway leading from Federal hill to Caleb Wells, and at a point where Rufus Randall’s east line crosses said highway. The petition then stated that said survey was intended for the center of the proposed highway, and named the persons over whose improved and cultivated lands the same would pass. The said Alonzo Lane then, assuming to act as sole commissioner of highways of said town, proceeded to hear and consider the application, and on the twenty-fourth of June made a formal order by which he ordered and determined that said highway be not laid out. Thereupon the relator appealed to the county judge of Warren county, who appointed the referees who laid out the road or highway in question, by an order dated November 2?> 1883. The order of the referees described the route by the same courses and distances as in the petition of Caleb Wells, the relator, commencing and ending at the same points, but omitted to state that the route so described was to be the center of the road, as was stated in the petition.

The defendant Brown has since been elected commissioner of highways of the town, in the place of Lane, and Brown'Jias been substituted as defendant in these proceedings. The appellant now insists that the order laying out the highways was invalid .because of divers omissions and irregularities, so that the same was never legally laid out. First. As the proposed highway passed over inclosed, cultivated and improved lands, it could not rightfully be laid out without .the consent of the owners or occupants, unless twelve reputable freeholders of the town certified it to be necessary. According to the provisions of the Revised Statutes prior to 1880, the certificate of the freeholders was a condition precedent to any proceeding in such a case. (See § 58 of tit. 1, chap. 16, part 1, R. S., p. 514.) It is claimed that the provisions of chapter 114 of the Laws of 1880, have had the effect to dispense with the above requirement as to a jury of freeholders in the town of Bolton.

[462]*462The title of the act last named, does not seem to contemplate such a change in the law. It in terms exempts certain towns from the provisions of chapter 431 of the Laws of 1875. Chapter 431 of the Laws of 1875, did not in anywise allude to or affect the requirement of section 58 of the Revised Statutes above cited, but related solely to the mode of obtaining a jury in those cases where a jury was necessary, and the duties of the town commissioners after the jury had done their work; so that so far as the act of 1880 exempted the town of Bolton from the provisions of the act of 1875, it did nothing more than to leave the town of Bolton, in that regard, the same as if the act of 1875 had not been passed. The act of 1880 exempted from the provisions of the act of 1875, all the towns of the State whose real estate is assessed as shown by the last assessment-rolls at an average price of less than five dollars per acre. It appears by the petition and papers in the proceedings to lay out the road in question, and was not controverted, that the town of Bolton comes within the last named proposition. Its real estate was assessed by the last roll at an average price of less than five dollars per acre. But the act ®f 1880 went farther and was more comprehensive than the reading of its title would, at first impression, indicate.

Section 2 goes on to provide that the commissioners of highways in the towns so exempted (that is, such towns as have been assessed upon their real estate at an average of less than five dollars per acre) shall thereafter upon the written petition of six freeholders of such town, and within thirty days from the date of such petition, proceed to lay out the road designated in the petition, etc., and thereupon the proceedings of said commissioners shall be deemed lawful, and any road so laid out shall become a highway and remain open to the public travel. This act has not been repealed or affected by any subsequent legislation, and is the law applicable to'the town of Bolton. It is quite clear that the legislature intended to dispense with the jury in that class of towns and to substitute the petition of at least six freeholders in the place of the jury. Under the Revised Statutes, any person liable to be assessed for highway labor, could apply to the commissioners of highways to lay out a new road, and upon the action of a jury of twelve freeholders, .certifying to the necessity of the road, it was the duty of the commissioners to act upon the same.

[463]*463By the act of 1880, at least six freeholders must petition for the purpose of setting the commissioners in motion, but no jury is required. It cannot within reason be held that it was the intention of the legislature to make it more difficult to initiate such a proceeding in a town where the real estate was low-priced and of small value, than sufficed in a town where greater value was involved.

Second. By section 63 of title 1, chapter 16, part 1, R. S., pp. 514, 515, it is provided that if the commissioners of highways shall determine to lay out the road applied for, they shall make out and subscribe a certificate of such determination, “ describing the road so laid out particularly by routes and bounds, and by its courses and distances, and shall deposit the same with the town clerk; ” and by a provision of section 55, they shall cause a survey to be made of such road, and shall incorporate such survey in the order to be signed by them.

The order of the referees in this case described the courses and distances of the proposed road from termini to termini, commenced at a definite point quite capable of identification, and ran definite courses and distances to the center of a highway leading from Federal Hill to Caleb Wells. The order did not state that the prescribed route was to be the center of the proposed road, nor state the width contemplated, but it described the highway laid out in accordance with the application of Caleb Wells before referred to, and which application did state the proposed course so adopted by the referees to be intended for the center of said proposed road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 459, 14 N.Y. St. Rep. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-wells-v-brown-nysupct-1888.