41 Barb. 130 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1863
The amendment of the act incorporating the village of Plattsburgh, passed April 12, 1848, (Laws of 1848, ch. 291,) provides that “ all streets, roads and alleys within the said village which have been toorked and improved by the trustees of the village or the commissioners of highways of the town of Plattsburgh, and are noto used as such, shall be deemed public highways.” This was a special legislative enactment that all the streets, roads and alleys in that village should be thenceforth public
There is another view of this case, which from its several trials, its long continuance in the court, the importance to the parties that it should be finally determined, and that the law which controls the case should all be so settled as to prevent, if we may, much more litigation, may make it proper to look at another question of law which arises in the case; and which was discussed by the learned judge who wrote what is called the prevailing opinion on the former review. A contingency may happen, to make it necessary. If thé plaintiff should fail to prove, on a future trial, that this alley was made a public highway by official compliance by the defendant with the conditions of that special act of the legislature, I do not see that he would be estopped from proving that said alley was still a public highway; made so by either of the other -modes, to wit, at common law, or under the general statutes. If the alley in question was a highway at the time of the passage of the act of 1848, then it required no evidence on the
There is but one question more that I deem it necessary to notice. It has been argued before us that the alley in question was, until it was extended somewhere about the year 1841 or 1842, a “cul de sac;” that it was closed, by its termination at the west end against the unimproved lands of the Briucherhoof estate; and that up to the period last named, it could not therefore be a public highway. If, on the trial, this question is reached, under this last view of the law of the case, then it is important that this question of a cul de sac should also be examined and passed upon. The evidence on the last trial, as Well as on the former, establishes the
Potter, Bockes and James, Justices.]