Town of Wheatfield v. Shasley

23 Misc. 100, 51 N.Y.S. 835
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Misc. 100 (Town of Wheatfield v. Shasley) 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
Town of Wheatfield v. Shasley, 23 Misc. 100, 51 N.Y.S. 835 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.

This action is brought under section 105 ¡of the Highway Law (chap. 568, Laws of 1890),. which provides that The commissioners of highways shall serve upon the owner or occupant of land adjoining that part of a highway within their town, in which any obstruction or encroachment may exist, a notice specifying the extent and location of such obstruction or encroachment and directing such owner or occupant to remove the same within a specified time, not more than sixty days after the service of the notice. If such owner or occupant shall refuse to remove such obstruction or encroachment within such time, he shall forfeit tiv the town the sum of $25, and the commissioners may remove such obstruction or encroachment at the expense of the town, which'may be recovered by action of such owner or occupant; or such commissioners may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction to compel such owner or occupant to remove such obstruction or encroachment. . Actions by commissioners of highways as in this act provided, shall be in the name of the town.” , •

The highway nearest Niagara river running through the town of Wheatfield, in Niagara county, between the cities of North Tonawanda and Niagara Falls, is known as the Fiver Eoad. The defendant Witmer owns a farm which extends on both sides of the highway, and he also owns the fee of that part of the highway which thus runs through his farm. The original road became such by public user and ran through this farm several rods nearer the river bank than the highway as now used. The defendant Shasley occupies the farm as Witmer’s tenant. The first record of the original road shows that it was described, recorded and declared a public highway, three rods in width, by the highway commissioners on the 14th of November, 1854, under the statute authorizing such action with respect to highways that have been used as such for upward of twenty years. On the 26th day of September, 1867, the highway commissioners filed with the town clerk an order, purporting to alter the course of this highway at the points in question, and said order "was recorded by the town clerk on February 12, 1868. This [102]*102order is somewhat indefinite. Experienced surveyors, called by the. defendants, claim to be able to locate the center line of the highway from it, and experienced surveyors called by the plaintiff claim that this cannot be done with a sufficient degree of accuracy to be of any assistance in determining the controverted questions involved in this action. It, however, satisfactorily appears, that at about this period of time the property owners along the highway, including the defendant Witmer’s grantors, met and mutually agreed upon'a change of the route of the highway over their lands. Thereupon the defendantWitmer’sgrantors opened up the newroad to a width of substantially four rods, and, upon either side of the graded roadbed at regular intervals and in line across the entire width of the farm, set a row of shade trees, mostly maple, leaving practically three rods for public travel between them. These trees have grown to be large, ornamental and .useful shade trees; the trunks varying in diameter from ten to eighteen inches. The row of trees on the southerly or river side, consisting of twenty-eight, constitutes the alleged obstruction or encroachment which the highway commissioner has, in the form required by the statute hereinbefore quoted, notified the defendants to remove; and for their failure to comply with his order he has instituted this action in the name of the town to obtain a decree compelling them to do so. Fences were erected along the sides of the road nearly four rods apart, about the time the trees were planted, but the fences have been changed and moved so__ that it cannot, be satisfactorily determined whether they were originally erected the same distance from the row of trees on the south as oh the north side. The evidence, with reference to the line of travel, the grading of the carriageway and the work done upon the highway by the town ■ authorities, and the probabilities of the case, all indicate that the center of the highway was considered as being midway between these rows of shade trees, both by the public authorities and by the owner of the fee. The Eevised Statutes made it lawful for the abutting owners to plant shade trees in the highway, and, at .the time that these shade trees were .planted and this road was thus dedicated to the public, chapter 93 of the Laws of 1863 was in force, encouraging the abutting owners to plant shade trees in the highways. This statute was amended by chapter 570 of the Laws of 1874, and both were repealed by chapter 568 of the ^aws of • 1890, but the rights of persons who had planted shade trees before such repeal are preserved by section 181 of the repealing act, as [103]*103construed by the court in Edson v. Howell, 86 Hun, 424. The statute provided that where a road was three rods wide, shade trees might be planted in the highway so that the centers of the trees should be not more than six feet from the exterior boundaries of the road nearest thereto, and, where the highway was more than three rods in width, then the centers of the trees should be not more than eleven feet from such boundaries. The center line of this highway, as located by the surveyors called by the defendant, acting on the record of 1867, which has been referred to, ■ closely approximates the line midway between these two rows of trees. It will be seen, therefore, that whether this is a three-rod road of which there is a record, or a four-rod highway by dedication and user, the trees were lawfully planted.

On the 22d day of December, 1876, the following action was taken by the board of supervisors concerning this highway, to-wit:

“ Resolved, That the highway commissioners of the town of Wheatfield be now authorized and hereby directed to cause a survey of the road (through said town), known as the Military (or, as it is sometimes called, the Niagara River) Road, to be made, the center of said road to conform as nearly as practicable to' the center of said road as now located, and to be reduced to and made of the uniform width of four rods, and shall cause such survey to be recorded in the town clerk’s office, in the town of Wheatfield, and a copy thereof filed in the office of the county clerk of Niagara county, and when such survey is so recorded, it shall be the legal record of said road.”

The surveyor, assisted by the highway commissioners, surveyed this highway as directed by said resolution and such survey was recorded in the town clerk’s office on the 5th day of April, 1877. The evidence conclusively shows that no change was made in the roadbed, line of travel, shade trees or fences, as a result of this survey, and no steps were ever taken by the town authorities to compel a change in the location of the road to conform to such survey, if it was in fact intended thereby to change the location of the highway in any respect.

The plaintiff bases this action upon the foregoing resolution of the board of supervisors, and upon the survey last referred to, and claims that according to this survey the| center of the highway is within about one rod of the southerly row of trees and is about two rods from the northerly row of trees. It is .conceded by all the surveyors called in the case that there is an error in the record of [104]*104this survey with respect to the course over the farm in question and that the center line of the highway cannot be determined from the record of this survey alone.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ivory v. . Town of Deerpark
22 N.E. 1080 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)
Talmage v. . Huntting
29 N.Y. 447 (New York Court of Appeals, 1864)
Edsall v. Howell
33 N.Y.S. 892 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 100, 51 N.Y.S. 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-wheatfield-v-shasley-nysupct-1898.