136 N.E. 311 | NY | 1922
The complaint in this action alleged that plaintiff was seized in fee and entitled to the immediate possession of all that certain strip of land in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York, sixty-six feet more or less in width, along or near the shore of the Hudson river, extending from Spuyten Duyvil creek on the north to the southerly line of Seventy-second street on the south, shown on the map of the route or roadway of the Hudson River Railway Company filed by said company in the office of the register of the county of New York, September 2d 1847, and occupied by a double track with turnouts, etc.; that the defendant was in occupation of said land and wrongfully and unlawfully withholds possession thereof from the plaintiff. The relief sought was a judgment for the immediate possession of the premises in question.
At Trial Term, at the close of the evidence, the defendant moved for a direction of a verdict, which was granted by the trial justice. Upon appeal to the Appellate Division the judgment entered upon the verdict directed at the Trial Term was unanimously affirmed. By permission *117 of the Appellate Division plaintiff appeals to this court.
The relief prayed for in the complaint as stated was possession of the property. Upon the trial the procedure adopted partook primarily of the nature of an action to try the title to real estate. Numerous deeds, muniments of title, maps and documents relating to land within or adjacent to the roadbed of defendant's road were received in evidence. The trial justice declined to pass upon the question of title to the land in controversy. The views entertained by him as to the disposition of the action rendered the question of title immaterial. A reference to the grounds urged by counsel for defendant for a direction of a verdict will present the basis not only of the decision of the trial justice but of the Appellate Division. Four several propositions were advanced by counsel for defendant:
(a) That the evidence established plaintiff had not seizin or possession of the premises described in the complaint nor of any portion thereof within twenty years prior to the commencement of this action of a nature or quality to enable it to maintain the action.
(b) That the evidence established that defendant had proved ownership and right of possession in itself of said premises by written muniments of title and by adverse possession accompanied by actual occupation, which right of possession under such ownership had not been defeated or impaired as to the portions of the premises described in the complaint affected by street opening proceedings in evidence.
The motion so far as based on the foregoing stated grounds was denied.
(c) That so far as premises described in the complaint are occupied by public streets or avenues, the plaintiff is permanently enjoined from removing or attempting to remove any of the tracks, etc., located therein, and that it had been adjudged in an action between plaintiff *118 and defendant's predecessor in title that under its charter and an ordinance of the city of New York, approved May 6, 1847, defendant was entitled to use and occupy such portion of said streets and avenues for railroad purposes.
(d) Upon evidentiary facts (stated at too great length to admit of repetition, some of which will be considered hereafter) by reason of which defendant asserted that plaintiff was equitably estopped from maintaining the action. For the reasons urged "c" and "d," the trial justice directed a verdict for defendant.
The Appellate Division approved the reasons adopted by the trial justice and further held that as to property held by the city under the Dongan charter, occupied by defendant, the latter had good title by adverse possession.
In 1686 Governor Dongan granted to the city of New York, at that time a municipal corporation, "all the waste, vacant, unpatented and unappropriated lands lying and being within the City of New York and on Manhattan's Island aforesaid extending and reaching to low water mark in, by and through all parts of the said City of New York and Manhattan's Island aforesaid." Such grant was thereafter confirmed by the Montgomerie charter of 1732.
By chapter 115 of the Laws of 1807 commissioners were appointed to lay out streets and avenues in the city of New York. Maps were to be made and filed as therein provided, and it was declared that the plans and surveys "in respect to the laying out of streets and roads within the boundaries aforesaid, and the maps of the same, so to be made by them, or any two of them, as aforesaid, shall be final and conclusive, as well in respect to the said mayor, aldermen and commonalty as in respect to the owners and occupants of lands, tenements and hereditaments within the boundaries aforesaid, and in respect to all other persons whomsoever."
The statute further provided:
"BE IT THEREFORE FURTHER ENACTED, That it shall and may be lawful for the commissioners of the land *119 office, and they are hereby directed to issue letters patent, granting to the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York, and their successors for ever, all the right and title of the people of this state, to the lands covered with water, along the easterly shore of the North or Hudson river, contiguous to and adjoining the lands of the said mayor, aldermen and commonalty, within the said city of New York, at and from low water mark, and running four hundred feet into the said river from Bestaver's Killetje or river, to the distance of four miles to north along the easterly shore of the said North or Hudson river * * *."
The commissioners appointed under the statute of 1807 were required to cause three separate maps of such streets and roads to be laid out by them as aforesaid and of the shores bounding the lands by them surveyed to be made and filed. They proceeded with the duty imposed upon them, laid out streets and avenues, delineated the same upon the maps, and included streets some of which were in whole or in part under water.
Pursuant to the provision of the statute of 1807, the commissioners of the land office on December 26, 1807, by letters patent in the name of the People of the State of New York, granted to the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York the lands and right specified in the act of 1807, and indicated upon the maps made by the commissioners. By chapter 58, Laws of 1826, the commissioners of the land office were directed to grant to the city of New York lands covered with water along the easterly shore of the North or Hudson's river, contiguous to and adjoining the lands of the city of New York, at and from low-water mark, and running four hundred feet into the said river, from a point on the easterly shore of said river, four miles north from Bestaver's Killitje, and extending therefrom north along the easterly shore of said river to Spuyten Duyvil creek. "PROVIDED ALWAYS, that the proprietor or proprietors *120 of the lands adjacent, shall have the pre-emptive right in all grants made by the corporation of the said city, of any lands under water granted to the said corporation by this act." A like clause was also embodied in the statute of 1807. Pursuant to the statute of 1826 the commissioners of the land office on March 26, 1826, by letters patent in the name of the People granted to the city of New York the lands and premises generally described in the statute.
February 22, 1844, an ordinance was adopted by the common council of the city of New York and approved. The ordinance provided that power and authority to convey any interest in lands under water or elsewhere in said city should be vested in the sinking fund commissioners. Thereafter such action was ratified by the legislature (Laws of 1845, chapter 225).
Various other statutes are cited in the briefs of counsel to which reference is not deemed essential. The foregoing statement we consider ample for the purposes of this appeal, as the same in a general way disclosed the status of the city in 1846 when the Hudson River Railroad Company was organized by chapter 216, Laws of 1846, for a period of fifty years with authority to construct and maintain a line of railroad along the east shore of the Hudson river between the cities of New York and Albany. The statute provided that the line of the railroad might be located "on any of the streets or avenues of the city of New York, westerly of and including the Eighth avenue and on or westerly of Hudson-street, provided the assent of the corporation of said city be first obtained for such location."
Early in 1847, the Hudson River Railroad Company applied to the common council of the city for the consent contemplated by the statute of 1846 and a determination of the route of the railroad company upon Manhattan Island. The common council appointed a committee to consider the application. A report was thereafter made *121 by the committee to the common council which indicated that two routes had been considered, one along Eighth avenue and one along the river front, that hearings had been afforded the public, etc., and thereafter the committee reported in favor of the route along the river front. The report of the committee was adopted by the common council and approved by the mayor of the city May 6th, 1847. The route prescribed, so far as material, reads: "Permission is hereby granted to the Hudson River Rail Road Company to construct a double track of rails with suitable turnouts along the line of the Hudson River from Spuyten Duyvil Creek to near Sixty-Eighth street, occupying so much of the Twelfth avenue as lies along the shore, thence * * *." The consent embodied provisions as to the duty of the railroad company relating to paving and repair of streets through which its tracks should be laid, to conform to the direction of the street commissioner in laying rail track; to construct bridges across streets intersected by the railroad when necessary or required, etc., and to file a map showing the intended grade of the railroad and its location.
Work of construction having been completed by the Hudson River Railroad Company in 1851, operation of the road by that corporation commenced and continued down to 1869 when the company, pursuant to statutes relating thereto, consolidated with the New York Central Railroad Company, the charter term of existence of the last named company having been fixed at five hundred years. Subsequently, a consolidation was perfected between the New York Central Railroad Company and several railroad companies operating in other states, since which consolidation defendant has continued the operation of a railroad from the city of New York to its terminal in a western state.
For the purposes of this case and to clarify our views we shall assume, without deciding, that the grant to the city of New York by Governor Dongan in 1686 embraced *122
and described lands running along the easterly shore of the Hudson river, and that the legislature by the statutes of 1807 and 1826 recognized that fact when it provided by the language employed in the statutes for grants of additional lands extending into the river, particularly in view of the general law in force at that time prohibiting a grant of land under water to other than the owner of the adjoining upland, that so far as pre-emptive rights referred to in the statutes of 1807-1826, we decided in Mayor, etc., of the City of New York v. Hart
(
Chronologically, we reach the year 1846, when by chapter 216 of the Laws of 1846 the Hudson River Railroad Company obtained its charter as a corporate body. The phraseology of that statute enlarges the general presumption that the legislative body of 1846 had knowledge of the existing legislation relating to the city of New York and in particular the statute of 1807 appointing commissioners to lay out and plat upon maps the streets and avenues of said city. The commissioners performed the duty assigned them and one of the maps made by them was filed in the office of the secretary of state and thereby the streets and avenues so laid out and platted under legislative sanction became highways devoted to a public purpose. Amongst said streets so laid out was Twelfth avenue.
In 1846 the legislature was clothed with power to authorize the railroad company to construct its roadbed upon or through the streets of the city, irrespective of consent by the municipal authorities. Such power was not exercised. On the contrary, the statute specifically *123 limited the streets or avenues upon which the route of the proposed road should be constructed to that portion of the city westerly of and including the Eighth avenue, which embraces the premises in question here involved. Further, it provided that as a prerequisite to the use or occupancy of any such streets the consent of the city thereto should be obtained.
That such requirement was an exercise of prudence cannot be questioned when the conditions existing at that period are considered. In 1846 the population of the city was approximately five hundred thousand spread over the area between the Hudson and East rivers south of Fifty-first street and Battery Park on the south. The city was an active seaport city bounded upon three sides by navigable waters and through the Hudson river in direct communication with the Erie canal. With a population as stated, business and residences confined to a limited area and future anticipated extension and growth in population, the proposition to locate the roadbed of a steam railroad upon the streets of the city above and below Sixty-eighth street was one which required serious consideration notwithstanding that the city welcomed the advent of the Hudson River Railroad Company.
Application having been made by the railroad company for consent of the city, the committee appointed to consider the same held meetings to which the public were invited. At such meetings a diversity of opinion existed as to the route to be selected; finally, after report was made by the committee, the common council by resolution granted consent to the railroad company toconstruct its road along the Hudson river from Spuyten Duyvilcreek to near Sixty-eighth street and to occupy Twelfth avenue aslies along the shore between said points.
The consent thus granted did not partake or operate as a grant of the land described therein. Had the common council directly or indirectly attempted to make a grant of such lands, its action would have been ultra *124 vires as the legislature had theretofore conferred upon the sinking fund commissioners exclusive authority to grant land under water or elsewhere in said city.
I have characterized the consent of the city as prerequisite to the right of the railroad company to locate its roadway upon the streets or avenues of the city in view of the requirement in its charter and the evident fact that in the event of a refusal on the part of the city to consent to such occupation of its streets, in the absence of further legislation, the railroad company would be excluded therefrom. The consent of the city to occupy its streets having been obtained became a component part of the franchise granted the railroad company under the act of 1846 and inseparable therefrom so long as the charter of said company or the consolidated company remains unrepealed by the legislature. Unless a forfeiture of the charter of the railroad company is decreed by the legislature or by judicial determination the consent of the city is irrevocable by the municipality.
The railroad company entered upon the lands of the city and constructed, maintained and operated its road thereon under a franchise, an integral part of which was the consent of the city, and has since occupied such streets under such franchise. Under such circumstances it could not acquire title to the streets by adverse possession or a prescriptive right therein. Neither is the city estopped from asserting a claim of ownership of said streets traversed by the railroad company, notwithstanding it is denied a right to the possession of the same for the reason stated.
Stress has been placed upon our decision in the case of N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co. v. City of New York (
So far as the subject of litigation is land once belonging to the city not within the limits of a street or avenue, we think it is enough to say that the evidence establishes the defendant's title either to the fee as the result of adverse possession or to a perpetual easement by virtue of prescription. Choice between the two forms of title is unnecessary for the determination of the controversy now before us.
For the reason herein stated the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO, POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *126