133 A. 806 | R.I. | 1926
On August 27, 1923, three commissioners were appointed by the Town Council of Jamestown "to survey, bound and mark out that portion of Narragansett avenue extending westerly from the westerly side of Ocean avenue to the sea". These commissioners reported to the Council with a plat and that no one had suffered damages. After the giving of due notice the Council approved the report by its decree of November 14, 1923. From this decree Gill and other abutting owners appealed to the Superior Court and after hearing without a jury that court in a carefully considered rescript found that the highway had not been properly marked out and quashed the proceedings of the Town Council. To the action of the Superior Court granting the motion to quash, the Town Council took exception and the case is now before us on said exception.
The exception is that the court acted contrary to law in quashing the proceedings of the Town Council. The proceedings relate to the westerly portion of the highway involved inHorgan v. Jamestown,
Narragansett avenue is what was formerly known as the Ferry road, the main highway running almost due east and west across the Island of Conanicut. The first appearance of the road was in 1709 (Appellants' Exhibit A), at which time the proprietors carved out a road "fore rod wide". Subsequent confirmation by the legislature and the road's use at the easterly end are set forth in detail in the Horgan case. For present purposes it is sufficient to say that Narragansett avenue was an ancient highway four rods wide running from sea to sea. On the portion of it here involved there were well defined marks of its southerly boundary, consisting at divers points of the remnants of a stone wall. This wall had extended westerly at least from opposite the southerly end of Ocean avenue to the top of a bank washed at its foot by the sea on the westerly side of the island. By the evidence the wall was definitely and conclusively fixed as the south boundary of the original Ferry road.
In the Horgan case, as before stated, the question involved only the ownership of an accretion to the road at its east end. The vital points in the present case are whether the commission properly carried out its orders, and, second, whether these abutters have any standing to object even if it did not do so. *428
Did the commissioners mark out an existing way westerly from the westerly side of Ocean avenue to the sea? Ocean avenue runs northerly from Narragansett avenue. It does not extend to the south of Narragansett avenue. The commissioners, therefore, in fulfillment of their task necessarily had to and did fix point A where the northerly line of Narragansett avenue intersected the westerly line of Ocean avenue. Their manner of fixing this point was as follows: At that corner is a hedge but no fence and the commissioners selected a point at the hedge which they considered as the intersection of the two streets and directed the engineer to drive a stake into the ground. From this stake westerly a line straight except for slight deviations was drawn following the occupational line, as shown by the fences of abutting owners on the north side of the road. The departure from a straight line was occasioned by the erection of the fences at different times and not always in exact line with each other. These fences had in some instances existed for forty years but the owners of the property within them, of course, acquired no title to any portion of the highway which had been enclosed within the fence. See R.I. cases cited in the Horgan case, at page 538. The commissioners fixed the southerly line of Narragansett avenue by running a line to the sea through monuments placed upon the land in 1914 for the owner of land on the southerly side of Narragansett avenue known as Bungalow Park. These monuments had been placed as markers at the southerly side of the highway, as he believed it to exist, by the same civil engineer who acted for the present committee and with the aid of field notes taken in 1899 by his father, an engineer now dead. These monuments were approximately two feet to the north of the line of the remnants of the old stone wall. The result was a highway 62.7 feet wide at Ocean avenue and Narragansett avenue, 64.3 feet wide at the westerly end at the sea, with intervening widths varying according to occupational lines on the north. Roughly the average width of the way marked out was sixty feet. *429
The same engineer at the trial marked out on a blue print of the plat accompanying the report of the commission the lines of the same road westerly to the sea, using instead of a line through the Bungalow Park markers, one along the northerly face of the remnants of the old south stone wall and running the northerly line parallel thereto and four rods therefrom. (Appellee's Exhibit 9). The results show that the road by the commissioners marked out gave to abutters on both the north and south side of the way more land than they were originally entitled to and created a road to the west which upon its approach to the sea ran in a more northwesterly direction than the original road. The commissioners carried the northerly line of the old highway to a point marked B well into the sea. They left somewhat uncertain whether they intended to stop on the southerly side at the sea at point D or extend the highway into the sea to point E. The legal obstacles to marking out a roadway across the sea on both northerly and southerly sides of the road need not be considered because the layout of the land portion of the road was clearly not the marking out of an existing way. It was an alteration of the old way at the least and this was not the procedure directed by the Council.
It is urged, however, that the way marked out was already within the lines of the original four rod road and that in consequence no damage was done anyone and that the Council could run the lines within the limits of the four rod road according to actual use. This might be correct, if the commissioners had been ordered so to do. Marking out an existing way, however, is not done by running lines different from but within existing lines capable of being definitely fixed. If the lines were outside of existing lines no one would contend that it was the marking out of an existing way. The drawing of the lines by the commission was not an attempt, according to the best obtainable information, to locate the old lines but was the arbitrary creation of new lines. The commission did not use all the evidence at its *430 command in an effort to duplicate the lines of the old way. One of those lines was definitely fixed by the old wall on the terrain and no attempt was made to survey or mark out this line. The northerly line could have been fixed accurately by measurement and running a parallel line four rods to the north. There can be no question of conflict with occupational lines because, as said supra, neither nonuser nor adverse possession can avail to acquire private title within the lines of the original highway. The Council in this proceeding had no power to approve of an abutter's privately holding a portion of the public way. If it is desirable that the lines be changed or altered this can be done by proper procedure. It can not, however, be done under the guise of relocating ancient lines. As said by the trial court, "If the Town Council has power to reduce the width of the highway six feet under the proceeding taken it would have power to reduce it twenty feet and so on ad infinitum. The Town Council has no such power delegated to it."
The question remains whether these abutters have any standing to object to the decree of the Council. It is urged that the laying out of the way so as to give them approximately four feet more of land fronting on the street than they are entitled to does them no damage and hence prevents their right to appeal. The argument is not sound. The legal ancient way was approximately sixty-six feet wide An abutter has rights in the public way, both as a member of the general public and in addition certain special rights by reason of ownership of land adjoining the way.Woodruff v. Paddock,
Among the rights of abutters as members of the general public was the right to the reasonable use of the highway to its full extent. Shutting off the public's right to enjoy the use of the whole way or permanently closing off a part of it *431
under the present procedure created a public nuisance.Commonwealth v. King, 13 Metcalf 115; Ackerman v. True,
The exception of the Town Council of Jamestown is overruled. The case is remitted to the Superior Court for further proceedings.