Leona Heyert, Respondent,
v.
Orange and Rockland Utilities, Inc., Appellant.
Court of Appeals of the State of New York.
Cameron F. MacRae, David H. Moses and Carl D. Hobelman for appellant.
Jesse I. Etelson for respondent.
Nixon, Hargrave, Devans & Doyle for Rochester Gas and Electric Corporation, amicus curiæ.
G. Wallace Bates, Saul Scheier and Robert Luce Donohue for New York Telephone Company, amicus curiæ.
Morrell S. Lockhart, Theodore J. Carlson and M. Wade Kimsey for Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation, amicus curiæ.
Edward F. Huber and Norman C. Frost for New York State Electric & Gas Corporation, amicus curiæ.
Edward M. Barrett, Edward J. Walsh, Jr., and Ira L. Freilicher for Long Lsland Lighting Company, amicus curiæ.
Judges FULD, BURKE and SCILEPPI concur with Judge VAN VOORHIS; Judge KEATING concurs in a separate opinion; Chief Judge DESMOND dissents and votes to reverse in an opinion in which Judge BERGAN concurs.
*356VAN VOORHIS, J.
Plaintiff, who owns property on East Willow Tree Road in the Town of Ramapo, Rockland County, sued to compel the defendant to remove a gas main installed beneath the highway and maintained under a franchise granted by the Town Board. Defendant moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, or, in the alternative, for an order fixing plaintiff's damages, if any, and requiring plaintiff to convey an easement to defendant.
The Appellate Division and Special Term held that plaintiff is entitled to damages for the reason that there has been an unauthorized taking or use of her property for a purpose which is not a highway or street use under the public easement existing *357 by virtue of the use of the roadway as a public street, and that plaintiff is entitled to compensation on the same basis as in any case of partial taking through the exercise of the power of eminent domain. Defendant argues that the installation of a local gas main is within the scope of the easement of the town to use the land for public highway purposes.
The facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff has the underlying title to real property extending to the center of East Willow Tree Road. This highway was acquired by the town by user under what is now section 189 of the Highway Law, which dates back at least to section 3 of chapter 43 of the Laws of 1817, which was founded upon the common-law doctrine of dedication to the public by a grant, presumed to have been made, which has become conclusive by acquiescence on the part of the owner in public use as a highway coupled with improvement and maintenance by the public authorities during a period of time analogous to that of the limitation applicable to private persons claiming title through adverse possession (James v. Sammis,
*358The grant by the town to the utility corporation was made in 1928, and, in terms, purports to authorize the corporate predecessor of appellant "to lay and maintain pipes and mains with necessary connections for the purpose of conducting and distributing gas in and through all public streets, alleys, rights of way and avenues of the Town of Ramapo". The record does not disclose when East Willow Tree Road was first used, but, if the town had perfected its easement for highway purposes by 1928, when the franchise was granted, the road must have been maintained as a highway by the town at least since 1908. Prior to the grant of the franchise this section of the town was exclusively rural, and, to a considerable extent, it still is rural. No until 1962 did defendant or its predecessor commence to lay its mains in this highway. Special Term and the Appellate Division have held that the easement acquired by the town for highway purposes did not include the right to lay gas mains and that, consequently, the town could not grant to the utility a right which it did not possess.
The cases are in point which deal with the scope of written grants of rights of way, or of easements for highway purposes, since, as has been mentioned, highways by user are acquired through the presumption of a lost grant for highway purposes under the language of the statute.
As recently as 1959 we held in Holden v. City of New York (7 N Y 2d 840, 841) that "The reservation of a mere `right of way' under the decisions included only the right of passage over the surface of the land (Thompson v. Orange & Rockland Elec. Co.,
The contention of appellant is unsound that in the case of East Willow Tree Road in the Town of Ramapo an easement for highway purposes, perfected before 1928, included the right to lay gas mains underground on any theory that in rural areas an easement for highway purposes comprises only the right to pass over the surface of the land whereas in villages or other populous sections it includes overhead and underground construction for utility mains and services to private consumers. This tenuous distinction between rural and more populous *359 highways was discarded in Osborne v. Auburn Tel. Co. (
The only basis on which this order could be reversed would be that the law on this subject, unequivocally reiterated as recently as 1959 in Holden v. City of New York (7 N Y 2d 840, supra) and in 1955 in Ferguson v. Producers Gas Co. (
The principle of stare decisis rests more lightly on the shoulders of judges and lawyers today than formerly. Justice HOLMES' aphorism that it is revolting to have no better reason for a rule than that so it was decided in the reign of George II *360 needs to be regarded in context. Although he did not hesitate to alter precedent where the course of the industrial revolution had made departure necessary on account of matters of grave social consequence, he was too sound a jurist to undervalue the importance of promoting certainty, stability and predictability in the law (Hertz v. Woodman,
This court has often emphasized the importance of enforcing law as it finds it in decisions (Sternleib v. Normandie Nat. Securities Corp.,
Stare decisis is, to be sure, not a rule of law, but a matter of judicial policy, and does not have the same force in each kind of case, so that "adherence to or deviation from that general policy may depend on the kind of case involved, especially *361 the nature of the decision to be rendered, and the result that may follow from the overruling of a precedent." (20 Am. Jur. 2d, Courts, § 192, pp. 528-529.) We would not deny that there are instances, such as the personal injury case of Woods v. Lancet (
In the field of commercial law the courts have been slower in deviating from precedent (United States v. Flannery,
That language is reminiscent of Eels v. American Tel. & Tel. Co. (
Whatever changes in a developing industrialized civilization might have called for a change in the rule were present and considered in Eels, as they were again in Thompson v. Orange & Rockland Elec. Co. (
Although courts are not compelled to follow so-called rules of property, "the doctrine of stare decisis is more strictly followed where property rights, especially rights in real property, are concerned and where rights have become vested in reliance on the precedents. Conversely, a court is less reluctant to deviate from *363 an established precedent where no rule of property or vested right is affected." (20 Am. Jur. 2d, Courts, § 196, pp. 531-532.)
Argument can be made for and against the interpretation of highway and right-of-way easements as including, in the absence of further words, passage merely over the surface of the land. Many a town highway is donated through dedication by abutting owners, and the equivalent of many dollars is thus obtained for public use from private owners who might hesitate to do so if they were aware that, without mentioning them, they were also conveying pole and wire easements for telephone and power, and for conduits below ground, as well as for mains for sewer, water and gas for the service of private consumers. Whatever the rule might be if this were a case of first impression, it is certain that thousands of deeds conveying rights of way between private parties and instruments of dedication of public highways have been made on this rule, which has existed since the common law began in this State and which received its most recent expression unequivocally in this court in 1959. It has ripened into a rule of property which cannot be changed retrospectively without altering the substance of prior land grants. The long succession of decisions on this subject fits the classic definition of a rule of property as stated in United States v. Standard Oil Co. (
It is said that the compensation to be paid in condemnation of an easement for gas mains would be nominal, citing Matter of City of New York (Braddock Ave.) (
Even apart from stare decisis, an argument of considerable weight is made to support the merits of the existing rule. Installation of subsurface gas lines under a roadway owned in fee by the adjacent owner and subject only to a right-of-way easement is in essence a partial taking which, in many ways, may cause only nominal damage but in some instances may result in serious consequential damage to the adjacent land.
In the old cases (Matter of Bloomfield & Rochester Natural Gas-light Co. v. Calkins,
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs, and the question certified answered in the affirmative.
KEATING, J. (concurring).
I agree that the order appealed from should be affirmed only because I feel constrained by the numerous decisions of this court which make the rule to be followed unmistakably clear (see Thompson v. Orange & Rockland Elec. Co.,
Chief Judge DESMOND (dissenting).
It is absurd to grant plaintiff an injunction or a condemnation award, and we should forthrightly say so. This is not a situation where a landowner gives a limited easement only (as in Holden v. City of New York, 7 N Y 2d 840) or where some use, novel at the time, is made of land dedicated for highway uses only (as in Matter of Bloomfield & Rochester Natural Gas-light Co. v. Calkins,
Even if we were to theorize that this ancient easement does not include the laying of gas pipes under the roadway, we still should dismiss the suit on the ground that this right of plaintiff cannot possibly have more than a nominal value. No court could or would say that plaintiff's property, incumbered by half of a public highway for generations, is now worth substantially less because hidden under the pavement there will be a gas main to serve plaintiff and her neighbors.
We may judicially notice that generally in rural areas titles run to the center of the highways. Is it to be the law that any time gas pipes or electric conduits are put under such a road the owners on both sides would be entitled to damages?
To say that plaintiff is entitled to an injunction or damages because there are gas service pipes under the road in front of her house would be like saying that when the few horse-drawn vehicles gave place to automobiles in great numbers, she could have had relief in the courts because of the added burden not anticipated when the strip was dedicated to public highway uses.
There should be a reversal and dismissal of the complaint, with costs.
Order affirmed, etc.
