15 N.J. Eq. 64 | New York Court of Chancery | 1862
By a resolution of the common council of the city of Newark, approved on the fourth of October, 1858, the street commissioner was directed to notify the owner of any building, fence, or other encroachment or obstruction, on Bridge street below Ogden street, to remove the same; and in case the owner neglected or refused to re-; .move the same within thirty days from the time of receiving such notice, the street commissioner was directed to cause the same to be removed, as provided by an ordinance of the
The case made by the bill is briefly this :
By an act of the legislature, passed on the twenty-fourth of November, 1790, entitled “ an act for building bridges over the rivers Passaic and Hackensack, and for other purposes therein mentioned,” commissioners were appointed with powers, among other things, to select a site for a bridge over the Passaic river, within certain limits designated in the act, and to erect, or cause to be erected, a bridge over the said river. They were also empowered to lay out a road four rods wide from the court-house, in the then town of Newark, to the place where the bridge was to be built over the Passaic river, thence to the place where the bridge was to be built over the Hackensack river, and thence to Powleshook. The act required a return of the road, thus laid out by the commissioners, to be made and recorded. The commissioners, having located the bridge over the Passaic at the place in the city of Newark now known as the foot of Bridge street, and having also located the bridge over the Hackensack, in pursuance of powers conferred on them by the act, on the nineteenth day of February, 1793, by an indenture of that date, leased the bridges, so to be erected and built, to certain individuals, and contracted with said lessees for the building and keeping in repair of said bridges for the term of ninety-seven years. The lessees, prior to the year 1794, proceeded to erect the bridge over the Passaic river, at the place designated, thirty-two feet in width, and also the
The bill further alleges that, soon after the first building of the bridge over the river Passaic, the proprietors thereof procured title to a strip of land along the south side of the bridge at its western terminus, and extending eastwardly to low water mark in the Passaic river; that about the year 1800, they erected a house there for the accommodation of their keeper, and that, by a deed, dated on the tenth of August, 1842, the proprietors of the bridges conveyed the said strip of land, with the building thereon, to the complainants, and the com
It is not denied that Bridge street, like all the other streets in Newark, is under the control of the city council, and that, in directing obstructions and encroachments upon the street to be removed, they were acting within the legitimate scope of their powers. The only question is, whether the land where the building is erected, and to which the complainants claim title, is or is not a part of Bridge street. The city claims that the street extends to the bridge, as now constructed, its full width of four rods, or sixty-six feet. Within those limits the complainants’ building and the land to which they claim title is situate. The complainants contend that the street extends only to the point where the westerly abutment of the bridge formerly stood, and that the space between that point and the present westerly abutment of the bridge is a causeway of approach having a lawful width of only thirty-two feet, the original width of the bridge itself. It appears, by the defendants’ answer, that the highway, as laid out and returned by the commissioners, did not stop at the pier of the bridge, but was extended across the river. The description in the survey, after arriving at a point in Broad street, is as follows: “ thence north, seventy-nine degrees and fifty minutes east, twelve chains and eighty-six links, to the first pier of the said bridge building over Passaic river; thence across and over the said river north, eighty-
It is objected that a highway cannot be laid across a navigable river. It may be admitted that there is no subsisting highway for horses or carriages in the channel of the river. But it is enough, for all the purposes of this cause, that the survey carries the highway to the river, and wherever the river is found there the highway extends. If the shore is extended into the water by alluvial deposits, or is filled in by the proprietor of the soil, the public easement is, by operation of law, extended from its former terminus over the new made land to the water. The owner of the soil, in whom the unquestioned title is, cannot, by filling in, and thus extending his land toward the water, obstruct the public right of way to the river. The People v. Lambier, 5 Denio 9.
The principle was recognized and adopted by the Court of Appeals of this state in the case of The Morris Canal v. The Inhabitants of Jersey City, 1 Beasley 547.
This would be the result if the unquestioned title to the soil was in the complainants. But it is quite clear, from the evidence, that the complainants have no title whatever to the freehold. They claim title under a deed from the bridge proprietors, dated on the tenth of August, 1842, but not acknowledged until the nineteenth of November, 1844, about fourteen years before the filing of their bill. The bill
It is equally clear that the proprietors acquired no title to tlieir land, either from the lease made to them, by the commissioners, on the nineteenth of February, 1793, or from their act of incorporation, of the seventh of March, 1797. The effect of the contract was simply a grant, by the state to the proprietors, of the right of constructing the bridges, and the franchise of taking tolls thereon for the term of ninety-seven years, and a covenant, on the part of the proprietors, to construct and keep in repair the bridges during the term, and at the expiration thereof to surrender the property into the hands of the state. Bridge Proprietors v. The State, 1 Zab. 384.
All that the bridge proprietors can rightfully claim under the contract, as against the public, would be the right to the unobstructed use of so much of the public highway as may be necessary for the full and unlimited enjoyment of their franchise. They wore required, by the terms of their contract with the commissioners, to build the bridge not less than thirty-two feet in width; and it may be that, in contracting the span of their bridge, and lengthening the causeway to it, they are not bound to build their causeway more than the required width of the bridge, to wit, thirty-two feet, and that they were justified in encroaching upon the highway by the erection of their toll-house without the limits of the thirty-two feet. But they clearly acquire no right by which they can defeat the public easement.
The proprietors were invested with an important public trust, the continuance of a public highway across the river by means of a bridge, which they agreed to erect and
The fact, that the bridge proprietors have contracted the water span of their bridge by supplying what was originally the west end of the bridge within the limits of the city of Newark with a solid embankment of earth, may give rise to
I am clear that the complainants are not entitled to relief, and that their bill must be dismissed.;