67 N.Y.S. 439 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The pipe which the defendant threatens to disconnect or tear up had never been used by the plaintiff. It was being put down when this action was commenced, and the purpose of the action is to determine whether the plaintiff has the right to lay and maintain it over the route claimed by it. Requiring the plaintiff to wait until
Upon the facts as they appear in the record before us, it is by no means clear that the plaintiff has that right. On the contrary, it would rather seem that it is not entitled to appropriate the route claimed to the laying down of its pipes.
The only claim that it makes to a right of way over the defendant’s land and along the broken road mentioned is through the conveyance made by Wiswall to the Hathorns in April, 1896. It is claimed that by such deed a right of way is given, but that this deed does not assume to locate it over any specified route, and that because the defendant has refused to -designate a route, the plaintiff is justified in designating the route claimed in the complaint herein.
But, in my judgment, the language in that conveyance clearly indicates an intent to locate snch right of way at the corner where such lands come to within about twenty-five feet of the broken road. Such road leads on to the bridge across the Coesa creek, and the conveyance first recites that the premises which had been conveyed to the Hathorns by the prior deed of October 12, 1889, were about twenty-five feet distant from such bridge. It then proceeds to convey to them a right of way “ over the.spaee between said lands, the bridge and broken road,, and to and over said road to said Coesa avenue.” The “space” there referred to is clearly the strip of adjacent land between the Hathorn line and the broken road as it enters upon the bridge, being about twenty-five feet in width. A glance at the map used by defendant upon this motion makes the construction plain. At that point a road twenty-five feet long would connect the broken road with the Hathorns’ land, and enable them to drive from their
It must be borne in mind that the plaintiff has but one right of way under the deed in question. It cannot have one road for men and teams and another over which to lay pipes for the transportation of gas. If the route over which it claims to lay the pipes in question is the plaintiff’s at all, it is its to drive and travel over. It may open up a roadway of- reasonable width over that route, and it can have no other. But suppose that the deed does not at all define the route of the right of way given, and that plaintiff is not at all hampered with it in locating that route, is it entitled to appropriate the one which it has taken % In my judgment it is not. In selecting a route reasonable regard for the interests and convenience of
As bearing upon this question, the language of the reservation, if it be deemed such, in the deed to Cole and others must be considered. The right of way reserved is “ over the broken road as it now exists.” No reservation is made of a right of way to the broken road, but only'of one along and upon it. At least the language used does not reserve any, and Cole might claim that by strict right the Hathorns must acquire from him the right of way to such road. But concede that access to the road as well as a right of way over it was intended, then surely the reservation must be construed strictly in favor of Cole, and the burden which is thus imposed upon the-lands so granted, to him must not be enlarged beyond that which will do him the least possible injury and at the same time afford a reasonable right of access and egress to the Hathorns. And it would seem that Wiswall had this in mind when he referred to the “ space ” of twenty-five feet in width over which the right of way was granted. And so also should the Hathorns and their grantees be held to ’a large consideration for the interests and convenience of Cole and his grantees, when they claim by force of such reservation to fix a route across their lands for a right of way to such broken road.'
I am of the opinion that an injunction which secures to the plaintiff the right to lay and maintain its pipes over the route it has. selected should not be granted until after full investigation and consideration of all the facts a final judgment decrees that it is justly entitled to it.
In reaching this conclusion I have not considered the question, whether a right of way, given as this is claimed to have been given,, carries with it the right to lay and maintain pipes over whatever route may be fixed for the same, nor whether the conveyance to theHathorns of April, 1896, conveyed any right of way which is operative as against Cole and his grantees. Those are questions by no means free from doubt, but it seems unnecessary to now decide the
All concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.