147 N.Y.S. 209 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1914
These actions were tried together, and upon the same evidence. The first action is virtually in ejectment, but equitable relief is demanded. The complaint alleges four causes of action. The first .based upon an alleged encroachment of the wall of the pumping station. The second upon the concrete platform and other constructions adjacent to the. pumping station. The third and fourth upon the retaining wall upon the east side of the tracks of .the railroad right of way, and of • alleged repeated trespasses on the premises, and the tearing down of the
The second action is for an injunction restraining the railroad company from removing the retaining wall, and from interfering with the bridge of the city across the railroad tracks.
The rights of the parties depend largely on the boundary lines of their respective properties, and these, in turn, on the location of the center line of the original right of way granted the railroad company by the Buffalo Waterworks Company, in 1853.
Prior to 1852, the predecessor of both parties, The Buffalo Waterworks Company, was the owner, and in possession of lots 28, 29, 30 and 31 of the south village of Black Bock, now city of Buffalo.
On December 24, 1853, the waterworks company, by deed, granted and conveyed to the Buffalo and Lockport Railroad Company a strip of land thirty-two feet wide, being sixteen feet on each side of a center line of the said road, as laid down on the map of the said road on file in the office of the clerk of the county of Erie, extending through lots 28-31.
The map to which reference is made cannot be found, and the location of said center line must be ascertained by other facts and data. The railroad company contends that the true center line is the present monumented line between its two railroad tracks as ' now laid down on the ground. The city contends that the true center line of the thirty-two-foot strip lies from one and a half to two feet farther to the west than at present monumented.
If the ¿ontention of the city is correct, the result is that the pumping station hereinafter referred to is just so much the more over unto the right of way off the railroad company, and-the retaining wall, here
One of the questions presented for the consideration of the court is as to what right or title the railroad company acquired or has in the twelve-foot strip lying on the easterly side of its original right of way. This strip was conveyed to the railroad company by the city of Buffalo by deed dated June 18, 1885, and recorded in the Erie county clerk’s office in Liber 560 of Deeds at page 208. The evidence shows that simultaneously with the execution of this deed and as a consideration for it the railroad company, by warranty deed, conveyed to the city a strip of land on the westerly side of its right of way. In other words, the railroad company and the city exchanged properties, and each party went into possession of the parcel conveyed to it. Upon the parcel conveyed by the railroad .to the city, the city erected certain substantial structures for. the storage and handling of coal used in the operation of the pumping station of its public waterworks system. This parcel with the structures thereon, are in use by the city for such purposes at the present time, and are necessary for the operation of its water supply system. There has -been, and is now, no offer or intention on the part of the .city to in-any way surrender to, the railroad the property thus acquired.
.At the time- of" the conveyance by -the-.-city. -to., the railroad company of the twelve-foot strip, water-mains leading from the pumping station to the streets above • crossed not only the original right of way of the rail
It is contended, however, by the city, in these litigations, that the deed of conveyance of the twelve-foot strip to the railroad is absolutely void, and the railroad company thereby acquired and has no title to it, for the reason that the strip conveyed was already held for and devoted to a public use, and under the. provisions of the charter of the city then in force the city had no power or authority to alienate or convey property so held and owned, and the deed given in 1885 was insufficient to vest in the railroad any title or interest in the strip undertaken to be exchanged.
Chapter 672 of the Laws of 1881, amending the charter of the city of Buffalo, appears to be the provisions of statute which govern the disposition ■ of lands by the city. The amendment provides in substance that when the city has failed to appropriate any lands acquired by it for public use, or any part thereof, or shall have abandoned such use, the common
We shall assume, for the purposes of this discussion, that in executing the deed in question the city and its officials exceeded the powers and authority conferred upon them, and that the method provided in the statute was the only way by which the city could alienate the land conveyed. It does not follow, however, that ■ under the circumstances of this case the city may repudiate the transaction at this time, and insist on its rights as though no such exchange had ever taken place. We think the railroad company may invoke against the city, for its protection against such a repudiation, the doctrine of an equitable estoppel in pais. An equitable estoppel in pais has been defined as ‘ ‘ the effect of the voluntary conduct of a party, whereby he is absolutely precluded, both in law and in equity, from asserting rights which might .have otherwise existed, either of property, or contract,- or of remedy, as against another, person who' has in good faith- relied upon such' conduct, and has been led thereby to change his condition for the
But it is urged by the city that although the doctrine of an equitable estoppel may be available to an individual, it cannot be asserted against a municipal corporation such as the city of Buffalo. There are, indeed, numerous cases holding in substance that where the officers of' a municipal corporation fail to pursue the strict requirements of statutory enactments in contracting for the municipality, it is not bound, nor is it bound by any of its officers’ acts in ratification of an illegal contract, and that a person dealing with a municipal body is bound to see that •the provisions of the statute under which it is acting are fully complied with, and, if this is not done, subsequent acts of the municipal officers cannot make the contract effective.
The whole subject as to what extent the doctrine of equitable estoppel may be invoked against municipalities has been discussed at great length by Judge Dillon in his work on Municipal Corporations. He calls attention to the many conflicting decisions of various states on the subject, but at section 1194 of his work he summarizes the matter and expresses the author’s views and suggestions as to the true doctrine. He says: “ The author cannot assent to the doctrine that as respects public rights, municipal corporations are impliedly within ordinary limitation actions. It is unsafe to recognize such a principle. But there is no danger in recognizing the principle of an estoppel in pais as ■ applicable to exceptional cases, since this leaves the court to decide the question, not by mere lapse of time, but upon all the circumstances of the case to hold the public estopped or not, as right and justice may require. ’ ’
He then proceeds to cite numerous cases of estoppel in pais, saying that the acts relied on must be of such a character as to amount to a fraud, if the city were permitted to claim otherwise.
It would indeed be tantamount to a fraud on the part of the city in this case for it to retain the property acquired by it, and at the same time seek to regain possession of that which it had parted with as the consideration for that it received and retains. .It is so shocking to one’s ideas of justice that no court of equity can entertain the proposition. This is a court of equity, and he who seeks equity must do equity.
I am constrained to hold that the city of Buffalo is equitably estopped from now repudiating its grant to the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company of the twelve-foot strip described in its deed of June 18, 1885.
At the same time, I am of the opinion that the deed to the railroad company should not be construed to in any way impair the right of the city to maintain its tunnels, pipes and mains underground running from the pumping station across the strip, or to interfere with the city laying new or additional mains or pipes beneath the surface across this strip when it becomes necessary so to do.
As matter of fact, the railroad company has never questioned this right, and upon this trial by brief of counsel and in oral argument disclaims any purpose or intention to deny this privilege to the city, and states it is willing that any decree which may be entered shall expressly provide for the recognition and preservation of such a right to the city — the railroad company simply claiming that, subject to such rights or easements, it shall be deemed the owner of the property conveyed to it, which would give it the right to lay and operate a track or tracks on and over the strip in question.
It may well be said that the equitable estoppel, which we think must be recognized in this case, does not go to the extent of depriving the city of the right to maintain tunnels and mains underneath the surface
The evidence further discloses that the Buffalo Waterworks Company contracted-with the Buffalo and Lockport Railroad Company, the predecessor in title of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, to grant a right of way through lots 28, 29, 30 and 31, in the south village of Black Rock, upon condition that the railroad company ‘ should at its own cost and charge, construct, build and maintain a wall and certain other works and improvements * * * for the protection and improvement of ” the premises of the waterworks company. On December 24, 1853, by a deed containing a preamble reciting the foregoing facts, and further that the wall had been constructed, as well as the railroad, the waterworks company did “ concede, grant, release and assure ” to the railroad company “ the said right of way for a double track for its aforesaid road, as the same is now laid out over and constructed by the party of the
As we have determined the location of this center line, the retaining wall so built falls within the lines of the thirty-two foot right of way granted by the waterworks company. At the time this deed was given and the railroad built, the easterly wall of the old pumping station was located some distance westerly of the westerly retaining wall. In 1872, it was proposed to build a new pumping station, and the city obtained from the railroad company verbal permission to build its easterly wall on top of this westerly retaining wall. It was so built in 1873, and is substantially the same as the location of the present easterly wall of the new pumping station, except that the easterly wall of the present pumping station and coal house extends 132 feet farther to the north, on top of an extension of the retaining wall built by the city. •This new pumping station was built in 1905.
The deed from the waterworks company simply conveyed a right of way. It did not Vest the fee of the land in the railroad, but did give to the railroad the right to operate double tracks over the thirty-two foot strip. The right to occupy the subsurface for any purpose not inconsistent with the operation of the railroad on the surface remained. The city conténds •that inasmuch as the deed was simply that of a right of way for a double track it had a right to utilize any portion of the thirty-two feet not actually occupied by the railroad for those purposes,' and inas
On the other hand, the railroad company argues that, inasmuch as the permission given to build on the. retaining wall was a mere license, such a license can only be granted by deed and not by parol (White v. Manhattan, R. Co., 139 N. Y. 19-24), and it is therefore terminable at any time, And no adverse possession is created thereby. St. Vincent’s Female Orphan Asylum v. City of Troy, 76 N. Y. 108-113 ; Wiseman v. Lucksinger, 84 id. 3 ; Cronkhite v. Cronkhite, 94 id. 323 ; Eckerson v. Crippen, 110 id. 585 ; Stephens v. New York, O. & W. R. Co., 175 id. 80.
Notwithstanding that the railroad company contends this is the law of the case, its counsel expressly
We think that under the circumstances of the case, where the railroad company has permitted the city to erect expensive buildings which encroach on their railroad lands, and where the removal of the wall would involve large financial loss to the city, and . doubtless would in a disastrous degree impair the value and usefulness of a pumping station erected at the cost of many thousands of dollars, without conferring any ■ substantial benefit on the railroad company itself, and where these structures have continued to exist for a great many years, equity will not require the removal of the pumping station wall. The same rule of equity which operates as an equitable estoppel against the city repudiating its grant of the twelve-foot strip will also prevent the railroad company from revoking the license to the city to maintain its pumping station wall on the top of the retaining wall. If, however, at any time in the future the city should remove the wall in question and rebuild its pumping station, then the railroad company may revoke its license and resume possession of the property Avithin the thirty-two-foot right of way, and obtain the aid of the court to that end.
The discussion and opinions expressed in the foregoing portions of the .opinion dispose of the principal question presented for discussion, and indicate the rights which the court conceives the parties hereto have in the subject-matter of the litigation.
We think the judgment to be entered should be without costs to either party in each action.
In closing, we venture to express the opinion that the differences of the parties to this action should be amicably adjusted. Both are engaged in a public service, and we believe that reasonable concessions by both parties would accomplish more for the good of each than the enforcement by the court of the technical rights of the parties.
We suggest an effort to reach a fair adjustment of their differences.
Judgment accordingly.