Ward v. Davis

3 Sandf. 502
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedApril 1, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Sandf. 502 (Ward v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Davis, 3 Sandf. 502 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

By the Court. Duer, J.

Upon the pleadings and proofs in [510]*510this case, we are asked to restrain the defendants by a perpetual injunction, from erecting any building-or obstruction of any kind upon the terrace at Hew Brighton, designating by the name of terrace, not only the highway or avenue running along the bank, which is the northern boundary of the village, but the whole of the bank itself, extending from the avenue to high water mark; and this relief is asked upon the ground, that long previous to the filing of the bill, and to the acquisition by the defendants of the title under which they claim, the whole terrace, using the term in its widest sense, had been irrevocably dedicated to the use of the public, or, which we regard as equivalent, to the use of the inhabitants of Hew Brighton.

To enable us to determine whether the plaintiff is entitled to this relief, we have deemed it necessary to examine with care the allegations in the bill, since it is upon their relevancy and truth, that our power to grant, either the specific relief which is sought, or any other, must depend. We must act upon the case as stated in the bill, and established by the proofs; not upon a case which, although it may possibly be sustained by the evidence, the bill has failed to state, and the defendants have not been required to answer. It would be a laborious, and we think quite unnecessary process, to draw out and examine in detail, the various averments and allegations in the bill. It is sufficient to say, that after an attentive consideration and careful analysis of its contents, we have arrived at the conclusion, that the only dedication of the terrace and bank, which the bill sets forth, is a dedication made by the directors of the Hew Brighton association, with the knowledge and assent of the defendant Davis, as mortgagee; and that the only authentic and legal proof of the proceedings of the directors to which the bill refers, is the resolution adopted by the board on the fourteenth day of July, 1836, which the bill avers was passed for the purpose of carrying into effect the original determination of the associates, that the terrace down to high water mark should be kept open and unincumbered for the' common use and benefit of the residents of Hew Brighton. It is upon the basis of this resolution, and upon this basis alone, that a decree in favor of the plaintiff, if such a decree can be made, must be founded; and this is virtually con[511]*511fessed in the final prayer of the bill, which is, that the defendants “ may be perpetually enjoined from making any building or erection on the said terrace or bank thereof, or doing any other act or thing in relation to the said terrace contrary to the terms of the said resolution, and of the representation in this behalf above set forth.”

It is true the representations made by Davis and other directors, which are largely set forth in the bill, and to the proof of which the testimony of the witnesses was mainly directed, are here connected with the terms of the resolution, but it was very distinctly and very properly admitted, by the able counsel for the plaintiff, that these representations furnished of themselves no substantive ground of relief, and could be properly referred to, not as creating or constituting a dedication, but merely as evidence of an existing fact. For oiu-selves, we exceedingly doubt, both upon principle and upon the authorities cited upon the argument, whether the evidence given of the representations made by individual directors, in other words, of their declarations and assurances, ought not to be wholly rejected, and we are very clear in the opinion, that if admitted at all, it can only be received so far as it tends, not to contradict or vary, but to confirm, and perhaps explain the proceedings of the board.

The representations made by the directors individually, relate to the intentions and acts of the directors as a body, and of these intentions and acts the resolution of the board is, not only the highest and best, but we apprehend, the only legal proof; at any rate, all the other evidence in the cause bearing upon the fact of dedication, must be regarded as secondary and subordinate, and no construction inconsistent with the terms of the resolution can therefore be given to it. It is not to be denied that other acts and proceedings of the directors as a body, independent of the resolution of the board, are stated and relied on in the bill, but whatever effect might have been given to these acts and proceedings, if standing alone, it is certain that it is in connexion with the resolution that they must now be considered, and in subordination to its terms that they must now be construed, since in reality, it is this consistent interpretation that the bill, as framed, not merely requires, but compels us to adopt. Had the plaintiff [512]*512intended to rely upon the adoption and filing by the association of the map of Hew Brighton, and the publication of an engraved view, in both of which the terrace and bank are represented as open and unincumbered, as conclusive proof of their absolute and final dedication to public use, and not simply as evidence illustrating the intentions of the directors, as set forth in their resolution, this subsequent resolution, if its terms are inconsistent with such a dedication, would not have been referred to at all, or if referred to, instead of being stated as the very foundation of the relief that is prayed, the right of the directors to adopt it would have been expressly denied.

As the bill is framed, the plaintiff not merely admits, but insists, that the resolution was duly and legally passed, and has never been repealed; and it is upon the allegation, that its terms have been violated, and in order to prevent their future violation, that a perpetual injunction is demanded. Such being the frame and prayer of the bill, if we are satisfied that the resolution of the board was in fact adopted, we have no right to disregard it, but are bound to give to the other acts and proceedings of the directors such a construction as may reconcile them with its terms. Hor in this view of the case is it very material to inquire whether the resolution, as originally passed, was after-wards repealed or reconsidered ; for if reconsidered, it still remains as evidence that at the time of its passage, the directors claimed the right to make such a disposition of the bank as in their judgment the interests of the association might require. It is, therefore, evidence that there had been no previous dedication inconsistent with the exercise of this right, and its validity as such evidence is necessarily admitted by the bill.

We «ball not consider the controverted question of fact, whether the resolution was reconsidered and never finally passed, but for the purposes of this opinion, shall assume that the averments in the bill are sustained by the proofs, and consequently that the resolution was not only duly passed, but was never repealed, and remained in force, at least, during the lifetime of the association.

Upon this hypothesis, the questions to be considered are, First, whether it was competent for the directors to pass such a [513]*513resolution, or more generally, had they any legal right to make an absolute or conditional dedication bf the Tjank to the use of the inhabitants of LTew Brighton? and second, supposing the legal right of the directors to be established or admitted, do the terms of the resolution, taken in connexion with other facts in the case, create such a dedication as can entitle the plaintiff to the relief that is sought?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Sandf. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-davis-nysuperctnyc-1850.