15 Wend. 569 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
By the Court,
By an act passed 22d April, 1823,Session Laws of 1823, p. 254, the canal commissioners were authorized to “ cause a survey to be made by one of the
It does not appear that the defendant, in this case, was expressly authorized by the acting canal commissioner to enter upon and take the stone from the plaintiff’s quarry ; he was, however, the chief engineer upon the canal, and had the supervision of the work, and direction as to the materials to be used in its construction. The authority given by the statute for the purposes specified is to the canal commissioners; the. defendant, therefore, must protect himself, if at all, under the authority of one of these officers.. It by no means, however, necessarily follows, from this view of the law, that every act done by the subordinate agents is to be specially authorized. Regarding the nature and extent of the improvement, and the variety of labor and material connected therewith in its successful prosecution, such a construction of the statute would be unreasonable, as it would have greatly embarrassed the
It was said, on the argument, that if the engineer should be deemed to have possessed authority under the commissioner to authorize an entry upon the plaintiff’s quarry and carry away materials for the locks, still it did not appear that he had exercised his judgment in the matter, because he supposed at the time the quarry belonged to the state. I do not perceive how this can essentially vary the case: J So far as the convenience or necessity of taking the stone from any particular place entered into the mind of the engineer or commissioner, in giving the direction, and one or both undoubtedly ought to have been taken into consideration, the title to, or ownership of, the premises, could not materially affect their judgment in the matter. The case presented for the exercise of their judgment turned not upon the title, but upon the locality and fitness of the material, togetbér with the facility with which it could be quarried. Whether taken from the lands of the state, or of an-individual, could not be a material consideration. We are bound to presume that the engineer examined with sufficient diligence the. several quarters in the vicinity of the locks, and satisfied himself that the one selected was, under all the circumstances, the most proper from which to procure the materials; and also that the commissioner concurred with him, as he was frequently present while
The plaintiff is undoubtedly entitled to compensation; and it is difficult to conceive why the appraisers should have rejected his application. A reasonable construction of the act of 1817, §3, Sess. Laws of 1817, p. 302, and of 1827, §1, Sess. Laws of 1827, 398,1 am of opinion, would have justified the appraisers in entertaining his claim, and doing justice in the case. See 4 Wendell, 650, 1. The good faith of the state is pledged to him ; and if there is any defect in the prescribed
New trial granted.