28 A.D.2d 1086 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1967
Memorandum: Defendants appeal from a judgment of Wyoming Special Term which enjoined them from maintaining electric wires over a three-rod roadway owned by plaintiffs. In 1948 the lands now owned by the respective parties herein were held by a single owner who then conveyed two parcels thereof to defendants’ predecessor in title. The parcels were separated by a three-rod roadway which ran west from Cattaraugus Road to the railroad running along the west side of both parcels. The north parcel extends from the railroad to Cattaraugus Road. The south parcel is landlocked and its only access to the northerly parcel and to the public highway is over the three-rod roadway. Defendants’ deed granted an easment to them for a right of way for ingress and egress over the above described 49.5 feet wide roadway. Defendants have constructed a lumber factory on the landlocked parcel south of the roadway and have extended wires at right angles to and over it from their north parcel to transmit electricity to the lumber factory. The wires are 37 feet above the roadway which is also crossed by wires of the New York State Electric and Gas Company’s transmission line running at approximately the same height along the west side of Cattaraugus Road which exists by virtue of an easement granted to the utility company by plaintiffs and defendants. It is apparent from the location and character of the property affected and the use to be made of it that the right of way for ingress and egress gave the appellants the right to travel over, along and