People Ex Rel. Williams v. Kingman

24 N.Y. 559
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 24 N.Y. 559 (People Ex Rel. Williams v. Kingman) 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
People Ex Rel. Williams v. Kingman, 24 N.Y. 559 (N.Y. 1862).

Opinion

Dekio, J.'

This case depends mainly upon the application to the facts proved of the provision of the Revised Statutes which declares that no public road “ shall be laid out through any buildings, or any fixtures or erections for the purpose of trade or manufactures, or any yards or inclosures necessary to the use or enjoyment thereof, without the consent of the owner.” (1 R. S., p. 514, § 57.) It is claimed that the highway in controversy was laid through a yard appertaining to the saw-mill of Mr. Harrington, and that such yard was necessary to the enjoyment of the mill. The evidence does not disclose that there was any piece of ground distinctly defined by fences1 or otherwise, and used as a mill-yard; but it appeared that there was unoccupied land adjacent to the mill, and belonging to the owner of the mill, upon a portion of which logs drawn there to be sown had often been left. The mill-yard of a saw-mill I understand to be a place appropriated for the deposit of logs to be sown, and for the piling of lumber which has been manufactured from such logs. I do not suppose that it is necessary that it should be inclosed by fences, in order to be protected by the statute; but we can form no clear notion of a yard whose boundaries are not defined in any way, either by an inclosure, by visible marks, or by a definite occupation within certain exterior lines. If a mill be situated in, or adjacent to a field of much larger extent than would be necessary for the mill-yard, no one would pretend that every part of it would be wholly shielded from the action of the authori-. ties intrusted with the -laying out of highways. Nor would every portion of the space upon which logs or lumber had at any time been piled be thus privileged. The facts proved on this trial presented a case for the judgment of some officer or tribunal as to the area which ought to be left undisturbed for the use of the proprietor of the mill, in the bestowal of the logs whicli might be brought to it and the lumber which should be sown from them. Although no definite parcel of *563 ground should have been set apart for these purposes, the public could not, in my opinion, legally run a road in such a manner as to cut off all accommodation of that kind for the use of the mill. The counsel for the plaintiff in error maintains, in effect, that it is a question for the jury, in any collateral action in which the question may arise, whether the just rights of the owner in this particular have been infringed or not; while, on the other side, it is claimed, and the judge has decided, that the referees, whose duty it was to lay out the road, had the exclusive right to determine the question, and that their decision cannot be reviewed in any other proceeding. I am of this latter opinion. There was not here any mill-yard, properly so called, or within the sense of this statute. The proprietor of the mill was also the owner of the land about it, and, before the road was laid, he used such parts of it for the stowage of logs as he thought fit, and this he had a perfect right to do. When the officers authorized to lay out roads came there, they found a mill, but not a mill-yard. They were required, I think, by the spirit of the statute, so to lay the road, if they elected to lay out one on that route, as to leave land enough, between the road and the mill, out of which the owner could form a mill-yard. The extent of the area to be thus left was not a question affecting their jurisdiction, but .it was a matter which the "law had committed to their official discretion. It is possible that a clear abuse of their authority might subject them to an action on the case at the suit of the party injured; but, so far as the public is concerned, the highway thus laid out was a legal highway, and it was the duty of the commissioners to proceed to open it.

It was not necessary for the referees to state, in the order made by them, that they had considered and adjudged that sufficient space had been left between the highway and the river and canal to form a mill-yard. Everything necessary to be determined by .them was embraced in the conclusion mentioned in the paper signed by them, in which they set forth the reversal of the decision of the commissioners, and gave the location of the road as laid out by them.

*564 Upon: the other point, also, I think the judg'rnent of the Supreme Court was right. The channel by which the water was conducted from: the- creek to the saw-mill was not a" building or fixture, within any natural or fair meaning of these terms. Neither was it an erection, within the sense of the statute. That term implies some structure superimposed upon the land; and, under this' act,- it means something which a 'highway-may be laid through,- and which would be rendered useless by that act. The clause was probably introduced in consequence of the decision in Clark v. Phelps (4 Cow., 190), where it was held that a highway cóuld not be laid out through a range óf tenter-bars belonging to a fulling-mill, or through a corn-crib, or the yard of a saw-inill dr a fulling-mill. It was a singularly free interpretation of the then existing statute, which did not contain the inhibition which Was subsequently inserted, and which we are now considering. That provision was, no doubt introduced into the Revised Statutes to establish on a more firm foundation and to define, a wise rule upon that subject; and it should be construed, like other statutes, by the terms made use of. The language is limited to structures of the nature of those involved in the case referred to; and there is nothing in it which can Well Be applied to a water-course, natural or artificial. Highways-aré never laid through streams of water,- but it is, of course, quite common to pass over them by bridges. Where the highway in question Crosses the canal, it must run over it by means of a bridge. It .would be an abuse of terms to say that it was to run .through it. So where it runs along the channel, embracing it in its width, it is not to be understood that the watercourse is to be filled up. If it were certain that the road could not be otherwise opened than by destroying the channel, and thus shutting off the water from the mill of Mr. Harrington, I should be inclined to hold that the case would be within the equity, though it is not within the exact language, of the act; for it could not be admitted, without great absurdity, that, while the law protects the mill itself as a building, and the yard as a necessary appendage, it should be allowed to the *565 officers to render them both valueless by so laying out the road as to destroy the supply of water by .which-the mill was driven. If it is necessary ;to work-the road in its whole width, it must be done by constructing a roadway over the channel in such a manner as not to interrupt the flow of water to the mill. . 1

The remaining question is, whether the highway in question is illegal, and the proceedings to lay it out void, for the reason that it does not connect with any other public highway or navigable water at one of its extremities. This point was not made at the trial; and if the case came here on appeal, it • could not be considered. But the fact relied on is admitted by .the pleadings; and, being thus upon the record, must be disposed of before judgment can be given. It is, moreover, a question of considerable practical importance; and, if it he doubtful, should be put at rest. It arose, for the- first time in this State, in the present Supreme Court, in Wiggins

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-williams-v-kingman-ny-1862.