Thompson v. Orange & Rockland Electric Co.

173 N.E. 224, 254 N.Y. 366, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 1053
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 21, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 224 (Thompson v. Orange & Rockland Electric Co.) 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
Thompson v. Orange & Rockland Electric Co., 173 N.E. 224, 254 N.Y. 366, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 1053 (N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

Pound, J.

In the month of July, 1927, the county of Orange instituted condemnation proceedings under sections 148 and 150 of the Highway Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 25) to take from the plaintiff a strip of land, thirty-five feet wide on the westerly end, about fifty feet wide near the middle and running to a point on the easterly end, in the village of Harriman, containing .464 of an acre of land, for the purpose of changing the fine of an existing highway in the course of construction of a county highway known as Turner’s-Monroe County Highway, No. 46. The description of the land is by metes and bounds. The proceeding was concluded by a final judgment awarding plaintiff $4,500 for the land thus taken. The question is whether the county acquired the fee of such strip of land for highway purposes or an easement merely. If it acquired the fee, the defendant, a public service corporation, furnishing electricity, not only for lighting the streets of the village of Harriman but also for light and power to private consumers, may erect its poles and string its wires in the highway under proper public permits without making additional compensation to plaintiff. If it acquired an easement merely the highway is subject to street uses only and no new burden may be imposed on plaintiff’s land without, further compensation.

In this State a distinction is made between the burdens that may be imposed upon a road, urban or rural, when *369 an easement over land is taken for a right of way for highway purposes and when the fee is acquired. When an easement is taken all uses of the land directly or indirectly conducive to the enjoyment of the public easement which the necessity and convenience of the public may require, either then or in the future, are not deemed to be paid for even though the landowners get practically the full value of their land. Only such uses as appertain directly or indirectly to the right of passage and tend in some way to preserve or make more easy the exercise of such right may be imposed upon the easement. For other uses, public and municipal in their character, the landowner is entitled to additional compensation. Thus the lighting of a highway has been held to be one of the burdens upon the fee which must be borne as an incident to the public right of traveling over the way. (Palmer v. Larchmont Electric Co., 158 N. Y. 231.) So as to sewers and water mains when connected with the use of the streets. But telegraph and telephone wires in no way improve the streets or aid the public in passing over them and are held to be an additional burden upon the fee. (Osborne v. Auburn Telephone Co., 189 N. Y. 393.) The same rule would apply to the distribution of electricity to private owners for light and power purposes. The use of the streets is not improved by the poles and wires placed therein.

If, however, the fee has been transferred to the municipality such municipality may grant the use of the highway for any public or municipal purposes not inconsistent with nor prejudicial to its use for street purposes. (Osborne v. Auburn Telephone Co., supra.) The distribution of electricity for light and power purposes is a public and municipal use but not a street use under these decisions.

No distinction can now be drawn between city streets and country highways in this regard. Farmers generally *370 avail themselves of electric current whenever it is available. The electric light has taken the place of the tallow dip or the kerosene lamp. The electric motor has now been installed in lieu of man, woman or child power on so many farms as to be no longer a novelty. The distinction rests on the interest, if any, which remains in the adjacent landowner after the taking of a right of way for highway purposes.

Article 6 of the Highway Law, entitled State and County Highways,” has its origin in the development of a modern scheme of new or improved highways of sufficient public importance to constitute a part of a properly developed system of improved market roads either at State or county expense. It is broad and comprehensive. Such highways are no longer a matter of local consequence. Town highways are provided for by a separate article (Art. 8).

By section 148 of the Highway Law the board of supervisors “ shall acquire land for the requisite right of way ” for a State or county highway either by purchase (§ 149) or by condemnation. If unable to acquire land by purchase a petition may be presented to the court for the appointment of commissioners to determine “ the compensation to be paid to the owners of the land to be acquired ” (§ 150). When the commissioners file the oath of office “ The title to the lands described in the petition and map filed in the office of the county clerk shall vest in the county for the purpose of a highway forever ” (§ 152). The judgment in the condemnation proceedings herein reads as follows: Ordered, adjudged and decreed that the public use requires the condemnation of the real property described and that said condemnation is necessary and that plaintiff [the county of Orange] is entitled to take and hold the same.” Nothing in the statute or in the proceedings suggests that the county was limited in its powers to the acquisition of an easement or that the land acquired is less than the fee.

*371 It is, however, urged that the law will not by construction effect a grant of a greater interest or estate than is essential for the public use; that the general rule is that when the language of the statute will bear a construction which will leave the fee in the landowner, such construction will be preferred; and, therefore, that we are bound to hold that the fee remains in the landowner (Bradley v. Crane, 201 N. Y. 14, 25), unless it is clear that it has been acquired by the county. The rule is properly applied in eases where the grant is limited to so much of the respective lands of the grantors as may be necessary for the said public road; ” where no specific lands are described in the instrument and where the measure of the grant was the necessity for the road.” When an easement is all that is necessary and is all that is described, conveyed or paid for this rule applies. On the other hand, when the description of the land taken is by metes and bounds and when a consideration of the need to be supplied points to a taking as broad as the language used in the judgment would imply, we should, if necessary, indulge in presumptions to uphold in its entirety rather than defeat or qualify the language of the judgment.

The extent of the appropriation, in the case of a highway, or of a street, whether of a public easement therein, or of the fee, is to be determined by the language used and upon a consideration of the need to be supplied.” (Mott v. Eno, 181 N. Y. 346, 366.) "A fee may be taken although the public use for which the land is to be taken is special and is not of necessity permanent or perpetual.” (Sweet v. Buffalo, N. Y. & P. Ry. Co., 79 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 224, 254 N.Y. 366, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 1053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-orange-rockland-electric-co-ny-1930.