19 Barb. 179 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855
The penalty sought to he recovered by this action is one in which the plaintiffs, as individuals, have Ho interest; and, therefore, if the action is not brought in their official character, it cannot be sustained; and this question must be determined by the complaint, which also includes the title of the cause. The statutes provide that actions may be brought by commissioners of highways in the name of their office. (2 R. S. 473, §§ 92, 93.) And the supreme court has held that such actions are properly brought in the name of the individuals with the addition of their name of office. (Supervisor of Galway v. Stimson, 4 Hill, 136. Overseers of Pittstown v. Overseers of Plattsburgh, 18 John. 407. Todd v. Birdsall, 1 Cowen, 260.) But when actions are thus brought, the pleading should, by proper averments, show that the claim is made by the officer, and not by the individual. The complaint in this action, tested by the principles laid down in Merritt v. Seaman, (2 Selden, 168;) Ogdensburgh Bank v. Van Rensselaer, (6 Hill, 240;) Delafield v. Kinney, (24 Wend. 345,) and Hunt v. Van Alstyne, (25 Id. 605,) and numerous other cases of like character, is an action in favor of the plaintiffs as individuals, and not one “ in their name of office.” The affix to their names in the title is a mere descriptio persanes. The declaration in Merritt v. Seaman was almost identical with the complaint in this. It wras “ Charles H. Merritt, executor, &c. of John Simpson, <fcc. plaintiff, &c.” In deciding that case, the court of appeals says, “ This is the only part of the declaration that contains any indication that the suit is brought by the plaintiff in any other than his individual character. The promises are all laid to the plaintiff individually, and no mention is made of letters testamentary, either in the declaration or the testimony. This mode of desci'ibing the plaintiff as executor is, upon all the authorities, to be regarded as merely a descriptio persanes, in no respect changing the character of the . pleadings, or the rights of the parties under them.” Justice Cowen, in Hunt v. Van Alstyne, (supra,) said, “The declaration is one by the defendant Hunt in his "own right; calling himself president of a certain company
It was urged “ that the plaintiffs intended to sue in their official character, as was evident from the claim.” I have not the least doubt of that. But we are not interpreting a contract, and searching out the meaning of parties from doubtful and equivocal words. It is the construction of a pleading, which must be construed according to what it says, and not what the pleader intended. • (6 Hill, 240.) The plaintiffs should have averred that they were commissioners ; that as such they complained of the defendant; and the judgment should have been entered in their favor as commissioners, &c. As now entered, the record would -be no bar to another action for the same obstructions, properly brought by the commissioners.
It was urged on the .argument, that if there is an error, the defendant has waived it by not demurring to the complaint. It is true that the defendant might have demurred at the joining of issue in the justice’s court, but he waived no rights by not doing so. It was entirely optional with him whether he
The plaintiffs’ counsel further insisted that, should this court come to the conclusion that this was an action by the plaintiffs in their individual, instead of their representative, capacity, then, under the power given by section 173 of the code, wre should amend the pleadings so as to conform them to the proofs, and not reverse the judgment for such cause. My first impressions were that the court had such power to amend, but a further and more careful consideration of the point has satisfied me that' section 173 has no application to a case like the present. I am doubtful if the power exists in this court to amend the pleadings in any case brought into this court by appeal from an inferior court. In such cases we have to deal with the record just as we find it, (Bellinger v. Ford, 14 Barb. 252,) and the power to amend the record, in my judgment, should be confined to .the court in which the action originated ; and such, I think, was the intention of the makers of the code. But this action originated in a justice’s court. (Brown v. Brown, 2 Seld. 106.) Upon issue joined with plea of title it was discontinued, and reversed in the county court. In actions Commenced under such circumstances the plaintiff is required by statute to complain for the same cause of action only as that on which he relied before the justice; and the defendant is confined to the same defense. {Code, § 60.) This section seems to exclude all amendment, after the action passes from the justice’s court. It has been held that a party might put his pleading into proper form, ( Wendell v. Mitchell, 5 Howard, 424 ; 4 Id. 44; 7 Id. 404;) but the same authorities hold that there can be no change in matters of substance. That would not allow of an amendment changing the character of the party plaintiff. If, therefore, a
The second question presented for consideration is, was the locus in quo a public highway by the act of the commissioners 1 The defendant insists that it was not. 1st. Because the order laying out the road did not show, nor did the plaintiff prove on the trial, that the application therefor was in writing, or made by a person liable to be assessed for highway labor. 2d. Because the statute authorizing the laying out of highways, if applicable to wild and unimproved lands, is unconstitutional, for the reason that it does not provide for compensation to the owners thereof.
The commissioners of highways in the several towns of the state are vested, by statute, with the care and superintendence of existing highways; and they are also vested with the power, in the manner and under the restrictions in said statute provided, to lay out, on actual survey, such new roads as they shall deem necessary. (1 R. S. 501, § 2.) Those restrictions are, that a road shall not be laid out through any orchard or garden, buildings, fixtures, &c., without the consent of the owner ; nor through any inclosed, improved or cultivated land, without the consent of the owner or occupant, unless certified to be necessary by the oath of twelve respectable freeholders of the town. (1 R. S. 513, §§ 57, 58.) The manner, so far as relates to roads through wild and unimproved land, except proceedings on ap
But, with great deference, I am compelled to dissent from the construction given to the highway act, in the case of The People v. Harrington, on the point under consideration. Section 54 is but permissive in its language; it confers upon the citizen, liable to assessment, the power to set the commissioners in motion, when from any cause they shall fail, neglect or refuse to act; while section 55, by its language, implies power in the commissioners to lay out roads, “ either upon application or otherwise,” “ if they shall deem them necessary.” Any other construction would deprive the highway commissioners of all volition in laying out new roads, or altering or discontinuing old ones. Until set in motion by written application from some person liable to highway labor, they would be mere passive instruments, unable to act in the discharge of one branch of their important duties. So such thing was contemplated by the statute. The want of a written application did not, of itself, vitiate the act of the commissioners.
The defendant’s next point is, that the statute under which the commissioners assumed to act, if applicable to wild and uncultivated lands, is unconstitutional. I approach the consideration of this point with great doubt and hesitation. The statute under which the plaintiffs assumed to act was passed more than forty years since, and the power claimed for it has been extensively exercised, during the intermediate period, throughout the state ; and although its constitutionality, in respect to the particular point under consideration, has been often doubted, yet I am not aware that the question has ever before been presented to the courts for adjudication.
The general highway act gives to the commissioners of highways the power to lay out “ such new roads in their respective towns as they may deem necessary and proper.” If, in the exercise of that power, it becomes necessary to take improved or cultivated lands, the act provides for compensation to the owners ; but if wild and unimproved land be required and taken for the same purpose, no mode of compensation whatever is pro
This road now in question was laid out in 1840. The constitution of this state then in force was that adopted in 1821. The seventh section of the seventh article of that instrument declares, “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” It cannot seriously be contended but that the wild and unimproved land of the citizen is now, and always was, as much private property as his inclosed or improved lands ; and if so, the legislature had no more constitutional power to authorize the taking of one for public use, without compensation, than the other. A provision for compensation is a necessary attendant on the due and constitutional exercise of the power of the lawgiver to deprive an individual of his property without his consent. (2 Kent’s Com. 339.) It being a constitutional provision that government has no right to take private property without a just compensation, it would seem necessarily to be implied that the indemnity should, in cases which will admit of it, be previously and equitably ascertained, and ready for payment, concurrently in’point of time with the exercise of the right of eminent domain. In some of the states of this union it has been held that compensation must precede the taking of private property for public use. (Thompson v. Grand, Gulf Banking Co., 3 How. Miss. R. 240.) But, in this state, the court of last resort says: “ It is enough that provision is made for the assessment and payment of damages or compensation; it is not necessary that the damages or compensation should be actually ascertained and paid previous to the appropriation of the property.” (Bloodgood v. The Mohawk and Hudson Rail Road Co., 18 Wend. 9.) In the decision of this last case Chancellor Walworth said, “I hold, that before the legislature can authorize the agents of the state and others to enter upon and occupy, destroy or materially injure the private property of an individual, (except in cases of actual necessity which will not admit of any delay,) an adequate and certain
It is conceded that the legislature is the law-making powrer; that it is one of the organs of the sovereignty of the state, and the proper one to exercise the power of eminent domain. But that body must exercise its rights and powers in subordination to the constitution. That instrument “ is a higher law” to the legislature. The inhibition in the constitution is, “ that private property shall not be taken for public use without a just compensation ;” and any act of the legislature empowering commissioners of highways, or any other officers or persons, to enter upon and take private property for public use, without having provided an adequate and certain remedy whereby the owner may obtain compensation, is not only unconstitutional, but a violation of natural right and justice. (Bradshaw v. Rodgers, 20 John. 103. Vanderbilt v. Adams, 7 Cowen, 349.) My conclusions are, that the defendant’s second point is well taken, and that the general highway act, so far as it authorizes the laying out of roads through wild and unimproved land, no mode for compensation to the owners being provided, is unconstitutional and void.
Upon the argument of this cause, the plaintiffs’ counsel urged upon the consideration of the court a matter not appearing in evidence, but of which it was insisted the court might properly take judicial notice, as it was a part of the public history of the state, viz: “ That prior to the settlement of the county of St. Lawrence, the state of Hew York was the proprietor of all its lands ,and—like the king of England, to whose sovereignty and title to these lands it succeeded—the state, in its exercise of the right of eminent domain, could open highways through its territories. In parting with its title to these lands it could, of course, like any other owner, make such reservations and conditions as it pleased. How it is well known that the township of Lisbon was part of the lands conveyed by the state
But supposing this reservation to exist, and that the plaintiffs had proved that one-twentieth of the land in the town was not then appropriated to highways, can these plaintiffs avail themselves of such reservation 1 As'individuals, most certainly not; as commissioners, doubtful. Covenants in a deed are only operative as between the parties; a stranger can take nothing under it, unless by way of remainder. (Hornbeck v. Westbrook, 9 John. 74. Spencer v. Field, 10 Wend. 91.) The plaintiffs as commissioners of highways are in nowise connected with the state. The reservation did not of itself transfer the right reserved to the town, nor constitute its local officers agents of the state, to designate and locate the part reserved, and neither has that power been given by any statute.
Failing to establish and uphold the act of the commissioners, the plaintiffs insist, that independent of their acts, the road in question was a highway by . dedication. Dedication is the act of appropriating property to public or pious uses, in such a manner as to conclude the owner. To constitute a valid dedication of an easement, no deed or writing is necessary ; neither is there any particular form or ceremony to be observed. All that is re
In my judgment, therefore, the plaintiffs entirely failed to make out a dedication in fact, or by presumption, of the land for this road. The former, however, was a question for the jury, and had they been properly charged by the court upon this branch of the case, their finding would have been conclusive, and no new trial would have been granted on that ground. ,
The county judge was also in error in his refusal to charge as requested by the defendant’s counsel, “ that if the jury were satisfied, from the evidence, that no notice had been given to Jones of the meeting of the commissioners. &c., they should find for the defendant.” This request was proper. Jones had given some evidence tending to show that he was not in fact notified, and that testimony was proper for the consideration of the jury to rebut the presumption created by the recital in the order; and the judge erred in not charging as requested, and submitting the whole evidence to the jury.
My conclusions from the foregoing premises are, 1st. That the action, as it now stands, is one in favor of the plaintiffs in their individual character, and that neither this court, nor the
Hand, Cady, C, L. Allen and James, Justices.]
The judgment of the county court must be reversed.