102 A.D. 371 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The proposed highway to which this proceeding relates is less than three rods.in width, being twenty-one feet eleven inches wide on the south end and forty-three feet six inches wide on the north end. Its length is about one hundred and seventy feet; and it will constitute an extension or continuation of a public highway already in use, the widest part of which is fifty feet in width.
This application is made under section 90 of the Highway Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 568, as amd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 508). That section is entitled “ Limitations upon laying out highways.” It begins with a series of conditional prohibitions. Thus, it provides that no highway shall be laid out less than three rods in width, nor through an orchard, or garden, or vineyard of certain specified ages, nor through buildings, or trade or manufacturing fixtures or erections, or yards or in closures necessary to the use and en joyment
It will be observed that a proceeding under section 90 of the Highway Law differs from an ordinary proceeding under sections 82 to 89, inclusive, as amended,
That power is now questioned, however, under the last two sén- . tences of the section, which were added by chapter 508 of the Laws of 1895, and are as follows: “In case the highway to be laid out shall constitute an extension or continuation of a public highway already in use, and shall not, as to such new portion, exceed half a mile in length, the commissioners may lay out such extension or continuation, of a width of less than thrée rods, provided, however, that it be not less than the widest part of the highway of which it is an extension or continuation. In such case the commissioners shall specify in their certificate, the precise width of the new portion of such highway, and shall certify that such width is as great at least as the widest part of the highway of which it is a continuation or extension.”
The figures which I have given .at the beginning of this opinion show that the proposed highway falls precisely within the terms of these provisions. It is to be an extension or continuation of a public highway already in use; the new portion does not exceed half a mile in length ; the extension or continuation is to be less than three rods wide, and the new portion is to be less than the widest part of the highway of which it is an extension or continuation. It is contended that the prohibition contained in the last two sentences of section 90, above quoted, was intended to operate not only upon the general power of the commissioners of highways of a town in laying out new highways, but also to limit the power of the County Court and of this court and to forbid the laying out of any extension such as is referred to in these sentences except in accordance with the limitation therein prescribed, no matter whether the laying out of such extension received the approval of the courts or not.
It does not seem to me that this is a fair or true construction of the amendment. I think that the two sentences added to section 90 in 1895 are to be considered with the prohibition at the beginning of that section to the effect that no highway shall be laid out less than three rods in width, unless ordered by the County Court, etc., and as qualifying the same. That prohibition is a limitation upon the power which the commissioners of highways would other
If these views are correct the opposition to the motion is not well founded and the application should be granted.
Woodward, Jenks; Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
. Motion to confirm order of the "County Court of Orange county granted.
See Laws of 1894, chap. 334; Laws of 1897, chap. 344; Laws of 1899, chap. 703; Laws of 1901, chap. 441, and Laws of 1904, chap. 353.— [Rep.