132 N.Y.S. 926 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
By chapter 142 of the Laws of 1909 the city of Buffalo was authorized to acquire for park purposes, in accordance with the procedure for the acquisition of lands provided in its charter (Laws of 1891, chap. 105, tit. 20,. as amd. by Laws of 1900, chap. 571), the lands in the city bordering on Lake Erie, and bounded easterly by the westerly blue line of the Erie canal; on the south by the* northerly line of Georgia street; on the north by the southerly line of Jersey street, and westerly by the shore line of the lake, “ as shown by a survey and map of the South Village of Black Bock filed in the office of the Secretary of State,” and which map was made in 1816 by Lemuel Foster. The act vested in the city plenary power to take in fee all the lands within the designated boundaries, including riparian rights and lands under water.
The lands comprised a strip about 4,000 feet in length, with an area of seventy-five acres, and was part of the mile strip originally reaching from Buffalo river to Lake Ontario. The right of way of the Falls branch of the New York Central Bailroad Company occupied a. strip of this tract, 100 feet in width, its entire length; and this 100-foot strip was excepted by specific description in the enabling act referred to from the authority of the city to take. This entire tract of land at one time belonged to the State- of New York, but it had from time to time given deeds to grantees of lots until the tract comprised over seventy distinct parcels aside from the title to that which still remains in the State, At the close of section 1 of the act is found this clause: “Nothing herein contained shall affect any estate,, right, title or interest which the People of the State of New York have in and to any of the lands and premises above described.”
This proceeding was commenced in the spring of 1909-, and commissioners were appointed by the Special Term of this court to ascertain the compensation to be paid to the several owners whose lands were to be acquired by the city. The value of the entire property to be taken was placed by the commissioners at $944,740. They viewed the premises, received a large volume of evidence as to the ownership of the various claimants and of the value of the several lots sought to be condemned. No
The commissioners made an elaborate report, in which are considered with great care the questions of fact, and also, with much learning, the legal propositions involved, so that we do not deem it essential to discuss anew the questions of fact or of law to which they have given such painstaking and satisfactory attention. Several reasons are assigned by the appellants for the reversal of the order which were not before the commissioners, and these we will consider.
First. It is contended that the proceeding is illegal ab initio for the reason that the common council of the city “did not adopt the notice of intention after the report of the assessors had been confirmed, as required by the charter,” in the language of the counsel for the New York Central Railroad Company.
Section 417 of the city charter (Laws of 1891, chap. 105, as amd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 805, and Laws of 1900, chap. 571) vests the city with the power to take lands for public park sand other enumerated public purposes. Section 418 of the charter is as follows: “When it shall be intended to take any lands for any of said purposes or objects, the board of aldermen shall require the board of assessors to ascertain and certify the district that will be benefited thereby and will be assessed therefor, and the common council shall not adopt any resolution declaring its intention to take such lands until the report of the assessors has been received and confirmed. The common council shall thereupon, by resolution, declare such intent, and describe the lands intended to be taken, and shall at the same time declare whether the expense of the same shall be paid by general or local fund, or in part by a local fund, and, if wholly or partly by a local fund, define the district that will be assessed therefor.” Provision is then made for the publication of the resolution. The proceeding was set in motion April 12, 1909, by a resolution of the board of aldermen directed to the board of assessors to ascertain and certify the district to be benefited by and assessed for the acquisition of the lands in fee for park purposes, and the description of the lands contained in chapter 142 of the Laws of 1909,
The point made is that this resolution of intention should have been made by the common council, as prescribed in section 418 of. the charter. I think there was a reasonable compliance with the -procedure defined. The board of aldermen required the assessors to certify, etc.3 and their report was transmitted to the board of aldermen, who both confirmed it and passed the resolution of declaration of its intention. This may have been unnecessary and possibly the formal resolution should have. been the product of the board of councilmen. That body, however, by concurring in the resolution adopted it, and it had the same force and effect as if it had originated in and been adopted by the board of councilmen.
On the 1st of June, 1909, the board of aldermen adopted a resolution that the city “ has determined * * * and does hereby determine, to take and appropriate the * * * lands and premises in fee simple for park purposes,” describing the area to be acquired; and on the third of that month the. board of councilmen concurred in the adoption of this resolution which was subsequently approved by the mayor.
The mode of procedure seems to have been consistent throughout. The board of aldermen took the initiative and confirmed the report of the assessors and kept hold of the matter by adopting the necessary resolutions, but each of them was formally concurred in by the board of councilmen.
The common council is the legislative body of the city, consisting of the board of aldermen and the board of councilmen. (Charter, § 4.) The body is not required to act in joint session
Second. It is urged that the proceeding is invalid because the lands described in the act, the report of the commissioners, the order of confirmation and in the notice of intention are not identical. To state the proposition concretely: The notice of intention adopted by the common council does not contain the clause in the act that the lands owned by the People of the State are not to be affected by its provisions. The report of the commissioners does not include the property owned by the State, assigning the following reason therefor: “In fixing the value of the property the Commissioners do not include the entire property sought to be taken by the City, for the reason that, in the opinion of the Commissioners, the title to some pieces under water, within the description of the property sought to be condemned, is in the State of New York.” The order confirming the report of the commissioners, after the description of the premises to be taken and designating them as shown on map “X” forming a part of their report, adds: “ excepting therefrom all parcels, the title and fee to which are hereby determined to be in the State of New York.”
There is no claim made that the commissioners did not include in their report the ascertainment of compensation to all the lands which could be taken by the city in pursuance of the act. The lands owned by the State were especially
Third. It is claimed that the commissioners exceeded their authority in determining questions of title in their report; and the objection might be -effective, except for the course taken at the hearing before the commissioners with the assent -of all the parties. The order directed the commissioners “ to ascertain the just compensation ” to be made to the parties owning or interested in the lands to be taken, and this order was in conformity with the city charter provisions in the -sections in title XX, entitled “Of Eminent'Domain” (§§ 421, 424, 426, 430-436), which practice corresponds to that prescribed in the Condemnation Law (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 3351 et seq.j Id. § 3369.)
Early in the hearings before the commissioners it developed that the question of the effect of the constant recession of the shore line by the attrition of the waters of the lake with the contiguous lands and beach would be an important one in
The appellants are too late in raising the question that the commissioners transcended the authority vested in them in deciding all the conflicting claims of title. They joined in endowing the tribunal with distinct authority to determine these claims. They cannot now disown their own offspring. It is not a matter of jurisdiction-in the usual meaning of that tefm. The Supreme Court did possess the power to pass' upon the varying titles, but did not transmit it to the commissioners. The parties elected to do that and they constituted the tribunal to that extent. (City of Geneva v. Henson, 195 N. Y. 447, 456 et seq.; People ex rel. Brewster v. “ Old Guard,” 87 App. Div. 478, 484 et seq.)
Fourth. The claim of the New York Central Railroad Company that it is a littoral owner by virtue of its right of way, to the exclusion of the owners of the uplands, was denied by the commissioners; and the authorities cited in their satisfactory
Fifth. The individual appellants claim that their predecessors in title acquired tracts of land from the State many years ago which are now under water, and the title to these parcels is now vested in their respective claimants. The question of fact passed upon by the commissioners was whether the- disappearance of this land by the pushing back of the shore line was due to the gradual, constant encroaching of the waters of the lake eating away, eroding the beach, or whether it was attributable to the sudden action of the water, or the removal of the sand on the beach by human agencies. The subject was a somewhat difficult one and not susceptible of accurate demonstration either way, but the commissioners held that the recession of the shore line was in consequence of the gradual encroachment of the waters of the lake' which submerged the contiguous lands of the owners many years ago; and this mat* ter is treated in the report under the head of “Erosion,” and the evidence sustains the conclusions reached.
The report and order should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Order and report affirmed, with costs and disbursements to each respondent appearing on a separate brief against, the appellants, to he adjusted before Spring, J., on two days notice.