Smith v. Town of Sandy Creek

12 Misc. 2d 916, 176 N.Y.S.2d 204, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2960
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 Misc. 2d 916 (Smith v. Town of Sandy Creek) 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
Smith v. Town of Sandy Creek, 12 Misc. 2d 916, 176 N.Y.S.2d 204, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2960 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

Feane Del Yecchiq, J.

This is an action for a judgment declaring that plaintiffs are the owners in fee of a certain disputed area in the town of Sandy Creek, New York, free from any right of way thereon claimed by the defendant.

The land in question is located on the cast shore of Lake Ontario and has come to plaintiffs through a warranty deed executed November 8, 1950 by J. Bonald Munroe. Defendant town does not question the fee title of plaintiffs or of their predecessors but claims that the land is subject to a right of way for road and/or highway purposes which is 49.5 feet wide and extends a distance of more than half a mile from its easterly terminus at what was originally known as Eoberts Corners at the intersection of two roads, running in a generally westerly direction to a bridge crossing a creek and continuing about 800 feet across sand to the high water line of Lake Ontario, for a more particular description, of which reference is made to an instrument known as 6 4 Alteration of an old road on lot 55 from [918]*918Roberts Corners westerly to the lake ” filed in the office of the clerk of the Town of Sandy Creek on September 28,1883.

Two questions are presented by this action: (1) Was a right of way created across the land claimed by plaintiffs, and (2) If a right of way existed, had it been abandoned prior to the commencement of this action?

As to the first question, the court is satisfied that a highway across the land now owned by plaintiffs was validly established prior to their acquisition of title in November, 1950.

Cases decided in this jurisdiction generally recognize four methods by which a public highway may be created. These include:

1. appropriate proceedings as provided by law,
2. prescriptive use by the public for more than the statutory period,
3. dedication through offer followed by implied acceptance, and
4. dedication through offer together with actual acceptance.

(City of Cohoes v. Delaware & Hudson Canal Co., 134 N. Y. 397; 1 Warren’s Weed on New York Real Property [4th ed.], pp. 101-102, and cases there cited.) It is the last of the above methods which is pertinent to the present action.

Defendant put in evidence a certified copy of an order and survey filed in the office of the town clerk of the Town of Sandy Creek September 28,1883, which reads in part as follows: All the Commissioners (of Highways of the Town of Sandy Creek) having met and deliberated on the subject embraced in this order, it is ordered and determined by the said Commissioners upon the application and by the consent of one through whose land the alterations hereinafter described is to be made that the highway leading from the house of J. Roberts to the shore of Lake Ontario in said Town be altered according to the following survey which the Commissioners have caused to be made thereof ’ ’. Then followed a course description of a highway as set forth in paragraph 5 of the complaint. The highway, which is more than one half mile long and three rods wide, lies across land presently owned by the plaintiffs.

At the trial plaintiffs’ counsel asserted that the reference points contained in the description were not sufficiently identifiable to permit an accurate location of the highway. However, the defendant introduced testimony by an assistant county engineer of the County of Oswego to the effect that he had, on three occasions, laid out the described highway on the basis of the [919]*919order and survey of 1883. This testimony was supported by a detailed explanation of the manner in which the surveyors arrived at their determinations. There was also evidence by a long-time resident of the area who was able to fix one of the important reference points in the description as being in the immediate vicinity of the highway claimed by defendant. Furthermore, Exhibits 21 and 22 are conveyances executed in 1908 and 1909 describing premises having 17 rods and 12 rods respectively along the center of the disputed highway starting from the center of the bridge and running westerly toward the lake. In view of the above testimony and the references contained in the recorded deeds, the court is satisfied that the highway described in the order and survey of September 28, 1883 can be accurately located across the property of the plaintiffs.

The order and survey above referred to constitute evidence both of dedication and of acceptance of the highway, which has not been overcome by any proof offered by plaintiffs. The fact that there has not been presented a formal dedication of the highway by the owner of the servient estate is not significant. Dedication may be accomplished without a deed or writing by the donor. (Cook v. Harris, 61 N. Y. 448, 453; Auslander v. Strain, 81 N. Y. S. 2d 425, 426.)

Here, the recitation in the order that the establishment of the highway was 6 ‘ upon the application and with the consent of one through whose land the alterations hereinafter described is to be made ’ ’ is evidence, unrefuted by plaintiffs, of dedication by the then owner of the area in question.

So also is there proof of acceptance of the described highway by the defendant. Acceptance is a question of fact and in that issue intention of the acceptor, evidenced by acts and conduct, is necessarily involved. (Flack v. Village of Green Is., 122 N. Y. 107, 113, 115.) Acceptance maybe shown by means of the official town records. (Goldrich v. Franklin Gardens Corp., 282 App. Div. 698, 699.) “‘Where a plot is made and recorded, the requisite intention is generally indisputable. ’ (Dillon on Mun. Corp., § 636) ”. (People v. Brooklyn & Queens Tr. Corp., 273 N. Y. 394, 401.) Filing of the order establishing a highway in the office of the town clerk is an acceptance of the highway (Highway Law, § 278) and this order is not rendered void by a failure also to file therewith a formal release by the owner of the subject property. (Engleman v. Longhorst, 120 N. Y. 332, 336.) Use of a portion of a highway by a municipality after the filing of an instrument describing the same is evidence of an acceptance of the highway in its entirety. (Village of Pleasantville v. Siciliano, 141 Misc. 283.) Here, the recording of the order and survey of [920]*9201883 in the town clerk’s office coupled with maintenance of the eastern end of the described road and of the bridge adjacent thereto — which did not connect with any public highway except the western portion of the road in question that leads to the lake — clearly indicates an intention by the town to accept the dedicated area for highway purposes.

The cases cited by plaintiffs are clearly distinguishable. In Goulding v. Town of Tonawanda (282 App. Div. 321), Goldrich v. Franklin Gardens Corp. (282 App. Div. 698) and Cheney Hammer Co. v. Collins (196 N. Y. S. 25) there was no evidence that the dedication was accepted or that the portion of the road involved was ever used. In Speir v. Town of New Utrecht (121 N. Y. 420) People v. Sutherland, (252 N. Y. 86) and La France v. Town of Altamont (277 App. Div.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Misc. 2d 916, 176 N.Y.S.2d 204, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-town-of-sandy-creek-nysupct-1958.