36 A.D. 492 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
A preliminary question needs to be determined before we approach the main questions presented by this appeal. It is claimed by the respondents that the appeals should be dismissed, for the. reason that the statute expressly prohibits any appeal except as is provided by the act in terms, and as to the appeals for which provision is made, none has been taken ; consequently, that there is nothing before this court for review. It is true that by the terms of the act an appeal is permitted, first, from the determination of the commis- . sioners as to the necessity for the opening of a drain (§§ 7, 8), which provide that if no appeal be taken, the action of the commissioners shall be final. If an appeal be taken, the court shall entelan order in relation to such determination and either reverse, affirm or modify, which order shall be final and conclusive in relation to all matters involved in the appeal. Second,, after the award of damages, the assessment for the improvement, and the hearing of grievances thereon, the commissioners shall make a final determination and from such determination an appeal lies to the County Court, and the court after a hearing shall enter an order confirming
This is-a proceeding taken pursuant to chapter 384, Laws’of 1895,: and has for'its object the'draining of certain agricultural lands, situ?
The act under which the proceeding is taken by. its. 1st section defines the term “ drain,” and authorizes any person owning agricultural lands to institute proceedings to drain his lands over the lands of another by presenting to the County Court, or if the lands lie- in more than one county, to the Supreme Court,, a petition askings for . the. appointment of three commissioners. Section 2 requires a notice to-be annexed to the petition of the time and place where' it will be presented to the court, and the petition and notice must be served upon the person to be affected at least eight days prior to its presentation. It then provides how the petition and notice shall be served.. Section 3 provides for the appearance of infants and incompetents. Section 4 for the appearance of other parties and the service of. papers after such appearance, which is conformed te similar proceedings in the Supreme Court. Section 5 provides for the appointment of commissioners, who must consist of three freeholders of the county in which the land is situate, not interested, and residing in the vicinity of the lands affected. These commissioners are to hear the parties and determine, first, whether the land shall be drained or protected; second, whether it is necessary in order to drain the lands that a drain shall be opened through the lands of another ; third, the amount of damage, if any, sustained by such owner by reason of the opening of such drain ; fourth;take such other and further steps as the act requires. Section 6 provides for the oath and organization of the commissioners. Section.Y provides for giving notice of meetings, viewing the premises, taking the proofs of the parties, which are required to be reduced to writing, and, after the testimony is closed, determine whether it is necessary that a drain shall be opened through lands of one other than the petitioner. Within thirty days after the hearing they, shall file their determination, the testimony taken and the proceedings had, and cause notice to be given of such fact- by publication in a newspaper. . Section 8 provides for an appeal from such determination, and upon such appeal the court may reverse, affirm or modify, and the order shall be final of the matters involved in the appeal.
It is’ claimed by the appellants that the effect of this legislation, both constitutional and statutory, is to authorize the .appropriation of the land of one owner and apply it to the private use of another. If such be its necessary construction, then both the Constitution and the statute are void. All of the authorities of all jurisdictions agree that no necessity,- however great, can authorize the Legislature to take the property of one man and give it to another with or without compensation, and organic law which grants the exercise of such power is void by the provisions of the Federal Constitution, as depriving the citizen of his property without due process of law.
In Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations,(6th ed.) -the learned author: states: “ The reason of the case and the settled practice-of-free govern
The changed conditions of society and the necessities which arise therefrom not only increase occasion for a modification and extension of the authority of eminent domain, but at the same time in many cases they dispense with the necessity for its exercise where it was formerly held to exist. It is quite evident that authority to drain lands for a mere private- purpose would not be upheld, and yet might be as to the same lands under changed conditions which showed a necessity therefor, in which the public, or some part thereof, had a more or less direct interest. While it is true that, prior to the present amendment to the Constitution, the courts of this State have not recognized as sound the doctrine which we have quoted from in other jurisdictions, yet the amendment in this respect has operated to change the fundamental law and has brought us in harmony with these decisions, so far as they affect the pending question. Under its operation we may no longer assert that drainage of swamp lands may not be had unless it be justified as a measure to preserve the public health, but we become bound to justify it, and not only to justify it, but to accept it, as it is the voice of sovereign authority. If it were paramount law for the citizen as it is for the State, all debate as to its validity wbuld be at an end. We may, therefore, uphold it upon any ground that has been regarded as sufficient for that pm’pose, so long as we do.not infringe upon the prerogative of the Federal Constitution. That it may be so justified is asserted in the cases we have cited, and in a vast number of others in other jurisdictions, hiof are we limited in this attempt by authority wholly outside of this State, as the right has been recognized by
■ In respect to the right of drainage, limitation was not placed upon the right until the Ryers Case (supra), and this went upon the ground that the Constitution did not authorize an extension of the-power beyond the single purpose. But such limitation is not made absolute and controlling in the Federal courts. Mr. Justice Peck- p ham, writing for the court in Fallbrook Irrigation Dist. v. Bradley (supra), said: ‘‘ It is obvious,, however, that what is a public use frequently and largely' depends upon" the facts and circumstances-, surrounding the particular subject-matter in regard to which the character of the use is questioned.” In Hagar v. Reclamation. District No. 108 (111 U. S. 701) the Supreme Court upheld an act of the Legislature of California, afithorizing the reclamation of swamp lands, as not being inconsistent With any provision of the. Federal Constitution.. In speaking of this case in th& Fallbrook case, Mr.' Justice Peokham said : “ The power does not rest simply upon the ’ ground that the reclamation must be necessary .for the public health.. That indeed is one ground for interposition by the State, but not the only one. Statutes authorizing drainage of swamp lands' have frequently been upheld independently of any effect upon the public health, as reasonable regulations for the general advantage of those who are treated for this purpose as owners of a common property Head v. Amoskeag Manufacturing Co., 113 U. S. 9, 22; Wurtz v. Hoagland, 114 id. 606, 611; Cooley ón.Taxation, 61Y, 2d ed. . If it be ! essential or material for the prosperity-of the community,'and if the improvement be one in which all the landowners have, to a certain extent, a common interest, and the improvement cannot be accomplished without the concurrence of all or nearly all of Such owners by reason of the peculiar natural condition of the tract sought to be reclaimed, then'such reclamation may be made and the land rendered useful to all and at their joint expense. In snchcáse.the absórbate right of each individual owner of land must yield to a certain; extent or be modified by corresponding rights on the .part of other-owners for what is declared upon the - whole to be for the public ; benefit.” Quite similar, and pertinent to this question, is -the argm- ■ jnent found in Horfleet v. Cromwell (supra). It is not at all cer-v
In addition to those considerations, it is to be borne in mind that ' e the 14th amendment to the Federal Constitution was not passed as a declaration of rights which aimed at the correction of abuses existing in the several States and arising out of legislation, constitutional or statutory. No claim was ever made, so far as we are aware, that any necessity existed for such amendment in order that the liberties of the citizen, either in his person or property, might be protected from legislation then existing. In part, at least, it was passed as a further declaration of rights, made necessary to supply some omissions which were thought to be insufficiently expressed, upon which subject, before that time, there had been no expression. Prior to its adoption there was no declaration as to what constituted, a citizen; there was no constitutional definition upon the subject. By the first words of the amendment this was set' at rest, and a person born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to its jurisdiction, was declared to be a citizen of the United States, and of the State wherein he resides. This was made, not because citizenship did not exist; it existed before and continued thereafter. The amendment but confirmed it, and in clear terms defined in what it consisted. The history of the adoption of the amendment makes clear the fact that its entire substance was primarily for the purpose of enabling those persons who had just become freemen to remain secure in the possession of ail their rights. (Neal v. Delaware, 103 U. S. 370, 386.) It was rendered necessary by conditions which existed at the close of the war of the rebellion, and is a part of the legislation of the reconstruction period following it. Its purpose
It was said by Judge Gray in People v. Sickles (156 N. Y. 541, 547): “ It is not beyond the legislative power.to regulate what shall be the due process of the law, by which the citizen may be put upon his trial concerning his liberty, or his property ; provided that the statute destroys none of those safeguards to individual freedom and
As applied to the present conditions, we feel quite confident in asserting that it was not within the fair purport of the' 14th amendment to the Federal Constitution that it should operate in destruction of the principle expressed in the State Constitution respecting the private right of way, either as to it or to any other subject-matter upon which such principle can similarly operate. Upon the contrary, we think the true construction to be that these powers which are granted in. State Constitutions, and which were in usual and uniform exercise when the amendment took effect, and which are not clearly within its provisions, remained unaffected. Otherwise it must be asserted that the State, by its ratification of the amendment, deliberately intended to destroy in part its fundamental law from which its citizens derived a privilege of much practical value, and which had been a part of its Constitution and policy for many years prior to the ratification of this amendment.
It is not necessary that we should further pursue the discussion of this subject. The examination leads us to say that there is much reason in the claim that the constitutional provision does not con
It is manifest, however, that such rule can have no application to-the right of drainage by an individual, or to the forcing of a private-right of way. 27o such authority could be conferred upon the person seeking to force the right of way, either for water or travel. While the public advantage derived from the exercise of this right-in favor of a private individual is sufficient to save the provision of the State Constitution authorizing it from condemnation as-violating the 14th article of the Federal Constitution, that no one-shall be deprived of his property without due process of law, still it is not sufficiently direct and is too far coupled with a-private interest to justify resort to taxation, as in effect it would authorize a tax for the benefit of a private person. Where the right-is exercised' of necessity, and the public use is no greater than that derived from the private road or the draining of the land of a single-owner, or a small quantity of land, we think that no principle authorizing the exercise of the power of taxation can be made to-apply to such a case. We are not to be understood as asserting by this conclusion that the power of taxation can in no case be exercised, in connection with authority to drain lands conferred by this article-of the Constitution. On the contrary, we think that such right may be upheld in a proper case. It was so upheld in Hagar v. Reclamation District No. 108 (111 U. S. 701) where Mr. Justice Field, in writing for the court, said: £? It is not open to doubt that it is in the-power of the State to require local improvements to be made which, are essential to the health and prosperity of any community within its borders. * * * It may possibly be that in some portions of' the country there are overflowed lands of so large an extent that the-expense of their reclamation should properly be borne by the State.
The principle of the case we have cited was applied, and the doctrine somewhat extended, in the Fallbrook Case (supra). Therein it was asserted, as we have seen, that the right of the State to authorize the drainage of swamp and low lands was a settled principle of "law authorizing the exercise of the power of eminent domain and of taxation. Upon this principle the court held that power not only •existed to reclaim low lands, but to irrigate arid lands. The application of the principle accomplished the same resultin' both cases,. i.- e., the reclamation of land, and both are made to rest upon the .ground of public benefit and utility. The limitation placed upon this right is that it must be in some sense founded upon a necessity,, .and result in bringing into existence considerable -tracts of land which may" be profitably cultivated for any purpose which will make, -the land reasonably remunerative. (Id, p. 160.) The application •of these principles Would seem to authorize the exercise of the power •of eminent domain and of taxation in a case where a considerable tract of land maybe reclaimed, as thereby the public good'would "be conserved, and it might authorize its application to- a.small tract-where the necessity was urgenriand á considerable body of the peo-■. pie would be favorably affected thereby.- It is not difficult to •imagine that along the Atlantic coast, or in contiguity to wnter•courses flowing through a nearly level country, exist large tracts of. uncultivable land, which may form the large part of a township.
The California cases, where these questions have arisen, which we have cited, involved- enormously large tracts of land, and it is-evident that their disposition was in part controlled by the fact that'the reclamation of these waste places. and deserts would result in making the land profitable and the country inhabitable, coming in time to be more or less densely populated. This in every sense and from every point of view inures to the public good. The same principle applies to these places already densely populated as compared with the newer States. The tracts of land to be reclaimed! may not be so great in extent, but the necessity affects or may affect as great a number of people, or more. These people may need! places of habitation or the products of the land for their comfort- and prosperity, which may be denied in whole or in part if the-improvement cannot be made, so that in either class of cases we think the principle applies.
These questions are for solution by the Legislature, subject to-supervision by the courts. If we are correct in these views, it follows that-this act may not be upheld. Under its provisions the authority to tax may be exercised in favor of a single person for the improvement of a single acre of agricultural land, a result Which we' feel certain was not within the contemplation of the framers of the constitutional provision.
There are other special and particular provisions of the act which ■ we also regard as obnoxious to the Constitution. Attempt has been made to correct these by subsequent legislation, which we think was ineffectual for the purpose. It is not profitable, however, that we discuss these questions, as our decision is made to rest upon the broader ground.
All concurred, except Goodrich, P. J., who concurred in result.
Orders and judgments reversed, with ten dollars. costs and dis^- . hursements, and proceedings vacated and set aside, with- ten dollars •costs.