43 N.J. Eq. 351 | New York Court of Chancery | 1887
Three hundred and ninety-five feet of a highway in Jersey City, known as Green street, have been vacated by the proper authority of that city. The general direction of Green street is from north to south, extending from Harsimus Cove on the north, to the basin of the Morris canal on the south. The part
The complainants own lands on both sides of Green street, but none on that part of it which has been vacated. Their lands lie over five hundred feet to the north of the place where the street has been vacated, with a cross street intervening between their lands and the place vacated. Their lands are improved. Their bill describes their improvements on the west side of the street as “planing mills, lumber sheds, and other buildings for box manufacturing and woodworking and storing lumber;” and, on the east side of the street, as “ a brick building, for office and business purposes.” The complainants’ title- originated in two deeds made by a corporation known as the Associates of the Jersey Company, the first bearing date May 20th, 1844, and the second April 2d, 1845. Long prior to the date of these deeds, and as early as 1804, Green street, although then under the tidewaters of the Hudson river, both in front of the lands now owned by the complainants, and at the point where it has been vacated, was, in legal theory at least, a public highway. The Associates of the Jersey Company were, by their charter, made competent to take title to certain lands in fee, and to grant and dispose of the same at their pleasure, and they were also granted important municipal powers. They were given power to make and lay out streets. This power, it has been decided, embraced not only the upland which they were authorized to acquire, but also land under water. Jersey City v. Morris Canal Co., 1 Beas. 545. They exercised the power of laying out streets by making a map on which the streets they intended to establish were laid down. This map was subsequently filed. It is known as the Mangin map. Green street appears upon it. It is one of the streets laid out by the Associates. The streets laid down on this map became at once, on the adoption of the map, in consequence of the dual character in which the Associates acted, public highways. Mr. Justice Whelpley, speaking for the court of errors
The private right thus claimed is the sole foundation of this action. It has no other. Indeed, it can have no other. For injuries resulting from the violation or destruction of public rights, in cases where no private individual right is injuriously affected, no private action can be maintained. Such wrongs can only be redressed by a suit on behalf of the public, either by indictment, or an information by the attorney-general. The established rule on this subject is too familiar to require the citation of authorities. The public right in that part of this ■.street, which has been vacated, has been surrendered. That sur
The complainants, to entitle themselves to the writ they ask, must have demonstrated that, on the undisputed facts of this case, and according to the established law of this state, they have such right, in that part of Green street which has been vacated as they claim. The rule upon this subject is jurisdictional. It is a limitation upon the power of the court, which the court cannot transcend. Citizens’ Coach Co. v. Camden Horse R. R. Co., 2 Stew. Eq. 299; Hart v. Leonard, 15 Stew. Eq. 416. The point in dispute, it will be perceived, presents a pure question of legal title, which may be stated as follows: What right did the deeds, made by the Associates, grant to the complainants’' original predecessors in title, in Green street, not in front of the lands conveyed, nor in that part of Green street extending both north and south of the lands conveyed to the two next adjacent, cross streets, but in that part of Green street which lay entirely beyond the two next adjacent cross streets ? As to the fee of the street in front of the lands conveyed, the law is settled. A
The precise question, then, which this case presents is this: Is it settled, as a matter of law in this state, that if any part of a public street, is at any time subsequent to the date of a conveyance of land abutting on' it, abandoned or surrendered, that the-grantee named in such conveyance takes, by implied grant or covenant, a private right of way over that part of the street in which the public right has been extinguished ? I know of no-case, decided by a superior court in this state, which so declares the law. None was cited on the argument of this motion. The question is one on which the courts of our sister states are at variance. The opinion in Booraem v. North Hudson County JR.. JR. Co., supra, says: “ There is some controversy whether the private right of way in grantees, holding by such conveyances, is-merged in the public right when the dedication is consummated by public acceptance, or whether it is merely suspended thereby, and will revive if the public right is afterwards abandoned.” There are sevei’al adjudications mode by courts, distinguished for
The case mainly relied on by the complainants, in vindication of the right on which they found their claim to an injunction, is Clark v. City of Elizabeth, 11 Vr. 178. The disputed question in that case was whether Clark, the plaintiff, was entitled to compensation for the land which the city authorities were about to take for a street. Clark, in 1869, conveyed certain of his lands and described them as abutting on a. street called Bayway. Bay way, at the date of the conveyance, had not been opened as a street in front of the land conveyed, but had been previously laid out as a street by commissioners having authority for that purpose, and so designated on a map made by them. "When the city, in 1870, proceeded to appropriate the land for street purposes, Clark claimed compensation. The lands he conveyed in 1869 were not only described as abutting on Bay way, but a direct reference was made, in the description of them, to the commissioners’ map. The question which the case presented for judgment was, whether or not Clark had not, by his deed, so effectually dedicated his lands, within the lines of the street, to public use, as to to extinguish all right to compensation ? Both the supreme court and the court of errors and appeals decided that he had. The distinguished chancellor, who wrote the opinion of the court of errors and appeals, says in substance, arguendo, to demonstrate that Clark had no right to be compen
But, if we adopt the rule laid down in this opinion as a correct statement of the law on this subject, we are still without an authority vindicating the legal right set- up by the complainants in this case. The right of way, which by this rule is accorded to a grantee, is limited to the land of his grantor in the site of the street at the date of his conveyance. That is its utmost extent. His grantor, it is certain, could not, even by an express grant, give him a right in the lands of another person, nor in lands previously granted out by him to another person; much less would it be possible to effect such a result by means of a presumption or implication. The complainants’ title originated, as has already been stated, in 1844 and 1845. Prior to that date, and as early as 1838, the proofs show that the defendants’ predecessors in title — the New Jersey Railroad and- Transportation Company — were in possession of that part of Green street which has been vacated, and wex-e using it for railroad pux-poses, and that they and the defendants have continued to so use it, without interruption or disturbance, froxn that time to the present. At the time the complainants’ predecessors in title acquired title to the lands which the complainants now hold, the locus in quo was located very near the eastern terminus of the defendants’ x-ailroad, opposite the city of New Yox’k, and where, it was obvious, that it would be necessary, as the business of the railroad increased, that the railroad corporation should provide itself, from time to time, with additional terminal facilities to enable it to dischax-ge its duties properly to the public. There are now on the locus in quo thirty-three different railroad tx-acks, and a train movexnent of some kind, over some part of it, every
The only reported case decided by our courts bearing a close ■resemblance to the one under consideration is that of Pruden v. Morris and Essex Railroad Company, reported first in 4 C. E. Gr. 386, and on appeal in 5 C. E. Gr. 531. The complainant in that case acquired title to lands abutting on Dickerson street, in the village of Dover, in 1837 and 1839. His grantor had ■dedicated the land in Dickerson street to public use as a highway -as early as 1831. The defendants, in constructing their railroad through Dover,, laid a single track, in 1847, longitudinally over Dickerson street. The street was vacated in 1848, and in the .same year the defendants obtained a deed from the successors in title of the complainant’s grantor, purporting to convey the fee •of the street to them. The defendants, in 1867, attempted to lay a second track, longitudinally, over the land which, prior to the vacation, had constituted Dickerson street, but not upon that
On the ground that the legal right on which the complainants-rest their claim to an injunction is, as a matter of law, wholly unsettled, they must be refused the writ they ask. When the gravamen of the complainant’s case is, as it is here, that the defendant has been guilty of unconscientious conduct in depriving him of the enjoyment of his legal rights, to his irreparable injury, it is a condition precedent to the complainant’s right to bring his adversary into a court of conscience, that his adversary’s unconscientious conduct shall be either admitted, or shall have been established against him by a judgment at law. Outcalt v. Helme, 15 Stew. Eq. 665.
It should be said in addition, I think, that if an exactly opposite conclusion had been reached as to the character of the right which .constitutes the foundation of the complainants’ action, it would still have been the duty of the court to deny the writ they ask. The change which the defendants propose to make in their road is one in which the public have a very deep interest. It will make travel both on the railroad and the highways of Jersey City more expeditious than it is at present, and it will give greater security to human life by removing dangers which now exist, and which imperil it, to a greater or less extent, every day in the year. That the change is proper and necessary, to the end that life and property may be made more secure, and to promote the best interests of Jersey City, is a question which has been finally concluded by the judgment of that municipal body, to
The injury against which the complainants ask to be protected is one arising entirely from inconvenience. The only harm which it is possible for them to suffer from the closing of Green street is, that, in going from their improvements on Green street to the ferry across the Hudson river, and to some other places, the distance which they will be compelled to travel will be increased between eight and nine hundred feet. Green street, it will be remembered, is to be closed only at a single point, and for a distance of only three hundred and ninety-five feet; all the r-est of it is to remain a highway. The next parallel street to the west is distant only four hundred feet from Green street, so that a person, by going from Green street to the next parallel street, thus making a detour from a direct line of about four hundred feet, and then passing along .that street to a point beyond the railroad, and then down a cross street another distance of abnnt four hun
Both on the ground that the legal right on which the complainants’ action rests is not clear, and that the injury against which they ask to be protected is too insignificant to entitle-them to an injunction, their application must be denied, with costs.