People v. Fishkill & Beekman Plank Road Co.

27 Barb. 445, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 223
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 27 Barb. 445 (People v. Fishkill & Beekman Plank Road Co.) 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 v. Fishkill & Beekman Plank Road Co., 27 Barb. 445, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 223 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Emott, J.

Some of the questions discussed • upon the present argument have been examined in a former action, brought against these defendants by the town of Fishkill. In that case I came to the conclusion that so much of the act passed April 15, 1854, entitled “An act to release the Fishkill and Beekman Plank Boad Company from the construction of part of their road, and for other purposes,” as discharges the defendants from the condition imposed by their charter, of carrying on their road from the point it had reached to their appointed terminus, was valid, while all the residue was unconstitutional and void. It was argued, in this case, as indeed it was suggested in the other, that the whole act is unconstitutional, as impairing the obligation of contracts. While the opinion expressed in the former suit, to which I have alluded, may not be regarded as an authority upon these points, since the only question necessarily determined in that action was that the town could not maintain such a suit, yet I have seen no reason to change the views then formed, either one way or the other. The contract which this act is supposed to impair, is that made by the com-r pany with the supervisor and commissioner of highways of the town of Fishkill, by which these officers granted the use of certain highways to the defendants, and they, as compen-* sation for these privileges, agreed to keep such roads in repair without expense to the town. If the special statute by which this particular company was authorized to abandon, and was released from the duty of repairing, any or all of this road, be [449]*449unconstitutional for this reason, the general act applicable to all such companies is equally so. It can make no difference that it is general and not special; and I do not see how the fact that corporations which avail themselves of its provisions are required to leave the roads which they abandon in a certain state of repair, affects the question. That may make the general law more just and wise, but it none the less enables those companies to relieve themselves of obligations which would otherwise be continuing. In truth, wherever public highways have been taken by agreement with the public officers, any abandonment which any law authorizes puts an end to the obligations which the company assumed by such agreements. In this view of the argreement it may be proper for me, without discussing the question at length, briefly to indicate the conclusions to which I have come, so far as I have considered this part of the case. I do not consider the objection well founded. In making the agreement of July, 1851, with the defendants, giving them a right to occupy and use the highway, these officers were not acting in their own right or dealing with their own property, either as individuals or as public officers. Nor were these highways, or the right of way and passage to which the contract related, the property of the town of Fishkill. The supervisor and commissioners were simply agents designated to represent, and authorized to bind, the people in respect to the public right of way and passage over this road. Whether ‘they are to be considered as representing the people of the whole state, or of any portion of it, is immaterial. They derived their authoriiy not from their office nor from the town, but from the action of the legislature, who,, by statute, gave them power to make the contract. In conferring this authority, the legislature acted for the people, and could have exercised the power and made the agreement, or granted the right of way, themselves. The legislature could also revoke or resume this authority at any time, or confer it upon other officers. So also, it is very clear to me that they may, either by their direct [450]*450action, or by authority conferred upon and exercised by any designated agents, modify of rescind these contracts, with the assent of the other party. This power must reside somewhere. It would be an absurd conclusion that a contract made on behalf of the people by a particular officer designated for that purpose, was irrevocable and past all human control or ■ alteration. The people cannot act, or become bound in any agreement, except by the intervention of their representatives, the legislature. Ho direct action of the whole joeople, as such, is possible or permissible in our form of government; and practically for all purposes of making, and equally for all purposes of unmaking, contracts, the legislature are the people. When, therefore, the plank road company on the one hand, and the legislature on the other, consent to modify or rescind an agreement which the same legislature had authorized certain agents originally to make on behalf of the people, with the company, the change is made by the consent of both parties to the contract..

It is also contended that this contract was originally void, as exceeding the power of the supervisor and commissioners, or if not void in toto, according to the view taken by the defendants’ counsel, that the condition upon which the lieensé to take the highway is given is void, and the grant absolute. It is not necessary now to determine whether eitjrer, and if so, which of these views is correct. With my present impresr sions, I am not inclined to accede to either. Upon an examination of this question on a former occasion, to which I have already adverted, I came to the conclusion that this agreement was valid, and that compensation for the privilege of using a highway could be made in this way. The question was not very fully discussed on that argument, and the cage of Palmer v. Fort Plain and Cooperstown Plank Road Co., (1 Kern. 376,) was not adverted to. That case is now cited as establishing the invalidity of any agreement for the use of a highway, by a plank road, which fixes the compensation to be paid in any .other way than in money. But the qqse does pot decide this, [451]*451The agreement which was there condemned as exceeding the powers of these officers, was one by which they had endeavored to bind the company in regard to the location of their gates; and the question presented was whether the company were bound by such an agreement. The objection came from the company, and not the public, and the court held that the power to fix, or to alter, the location of gates, was not conferred on these public officers, and could not be exercised or restricted by such an agreement. I do not understand that it follows from what was there decided, that under the statute in question the supervisor and commissioners could not agree with a plank road company to give the use of a highway without compensation, where none really was due or should be paid for it, or at a nominal compensation, or a com>pensation consisting of an agreement to keep the road in repair for a definite period, or forever. This would be an agrees ment relating wholly to the use of the road and the amount of compensation to be paid for it, either directly to the town through its officers, or indirectly by expending it upon the road. The other was an agreement, where a permission to use a highway was connected with a stipulation, relating to a totally different matter, the location of toll gates, and which could not be considered as fixing or ascertaining a compensation to be paid in any form, direct or indirect. The two cases are not, it seems to me, parallel.

I have therefore come to the conclusion that the defendants acquired the right to take and use the highway upon which their road was built, in a legal and valid manner.

So far as regards that portion' of their contemplated road which they never built or commenced, the statute passed for . their special relief, April 15, 1854,

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Bluebook (online)
27 Barb. 445, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fishkill-beekman-plank-road-co-nysupct-1857.