17 Barb. 193 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
The act of 1823, (Bess. Laws 1823, p. 128,) was, in legal effect, a contract between the state and the commissioners oppointed by the first section of the act, whereby, in consideration that the commissioners would construct the pier therein described, and erect the bridge specified in the 4th section of the act, and would also construct the sloop lock mentioned in the 9th section, the state would grant to the commissioners, by letters patent to be issued by the commissioners of the land office, the land occupied by the pier and sloop lock, “ subject to such reservation or condition as is mentioned in the act.” Upon receiving the grant the commissioners were required to divide the pier into lots, and sell them at public auction, “ subject to the reservations in the act contained,” and distribute the proceeds in the manner prescribed by the 7th section of the act. The only conditions or reservations mentioned in the act are, that no toll shall ever be exacted from any person passing over the bridges, nor any wharfage or charge from canal boats, &c. using the waters of the basin; that a certain space on the east side of the pier shall be kept open as a passway, and that the state should have the right, upon the repayment within five years of the amount expended, to extinguish the grant. With these qualifications, the title of those who purchased from the commissioners became absolute. It was no part of the conditions upon which the purchasers took their title, that they should keep the bridges, or even the pier itself, in, repair.
As a further consideration for the expenditure to be made by the commissioners, the state agreed to charge tolls upon all boats, &c. entering the basin, regarding it as a. part of the canal, and to pay the tolls so collected to such person as should be authorized by a majority of the owners of the pier to receive the same. It was made the duty of the person receiving these tolls, to pay therefrom the expenses of “attending the sloop lock and draw bridges, and for necessary repairs of the lock and pier, and to distribute the residue among the pier proprietors.”
There is nothing in the act of 1823 which indicates an intention on the part of the legislature to require that the commis
I am aware, that in The People v. Cooper, (6 Hill, 516,) it was held that the pier owners were bound to keep the bridges in question in repair. A reference to the opinion in that case will show that it received but slight considerations at' the hands of the distinguished judge by whom it was pronounced* The
But the learned chief justice thinks that if the obligation to
The chief justice has also added, at the conclusion of his opinion, that when the case of Smith v. The Comptroller (18 Wend. 659) was before the court, the obligation of the pier owners to repair the bridges was not doubted. That case was heard at special term by Mr. Justice Oowen. What his views may have been in respect to this question, I do not know. It was not then before him. The question then in judgment was, whether the pier owners were bound to excavate and cleanse the basin. The opinion delivered in that case will be searched in vain for the slightest intimation that the pier proprietors were obliged to keep the bridges in repair; on the contrary, unless I have wholly misconceived the argument, by which the court was led
I can see no reasonable ground for saying that the act of 1849 was unconstitutional. The basin had been, from the time of its construction, a part of the Brie canal. Tolls had been collected for its use as such. The state had made a special contract with the pier commissioners, by which, for their services in constructing the basin, they were to receive, among other things, the tolls received by the state for boats, &c. passing through the basin. By the act of 1849, the state proposed to purchase of the pier proprietors their interest in these tolls.
I am of opinion, therefore, first, that the duty of keeping the bridges over the basin in repair, was never assumed by the pier owners. And secondly, if prior to the passage of the act of 1849, this question was to be regarded as res judicata, by reason of the decision in The People v. Coooper, then that by the act of 1849, by which the rights of the parties were changed and declared anew, the pier owners were reliéved from this burden. If this be so, it follows that the court below was right in refusing to charge that, by the terms and conditions of the act of 1823, and the several acts amending the same, the pier proprietors were required to maintain the bridge in question, and that such duty was not changed or in any manner affected by the act of 1849.
The remaining question is, whether the canal commissioners were bound to repair. The bridge belongs to the state. It was built under the direction of the canal commissioners, and because they were of the opinion that the public convenience required it. It stands upon the soil of the state, and is as much and as exclusively under the control of the canal commissioners, as any other bridge crossing the Erie canal. So man, without the authority of the commissioners, would have the right to remove or alter, or even repair it. The attempt would be a trespass. I cannot doubt, therefore, that it is the duty of the canal commissioners, representing, as they do, the state, either to remove or to repair it.
The act in relation to bridges over the enlarged Erie car nal, makes it the duty of the canal commissioners to construct and maintain, at the public expense, road and street bridges over the enlarged Erie canal, in all places where such bridges had previously been constructed, if, in théir opinion, the public
Watson, Wright and Harris, Justices.]