18 N.E.2d 157 | NY | 1938
Plaintiff is the owner of the record title to a parcel of real property over which, from 1883 to 1925, ran a public street. In 1883 the defendant erected certain poles, wires, cross-arms, guys, stubs and other fixtures in that street for the purpose of carrying telegraph messages. It acquired no license, consent or permission so to do from the then owner and has not since acquired a license, consent or permission of a subsequent owner. In 1925, without notice to the defendant, proceedings were taken which resulted in the discontinuance of the road as a public highway, but the use of a portion of the road over plaintiff's property was never wholly discontinued. *285
In 1931 the attorney for the then owner notified the defendant of the abandonment of the highway and demanded the removal of its poles and wires.
This action is for a judgment declaring the rights of the parties. On the part of the plaintiff it is claimed that she is the owner in fee of the land on which the poles stand, that no permit was ever given for their erection, that defendant has acquired no prescriptive right to maintain the poles by reason of lapse of time, due to the enactment of chapter 40 of the Laws of 1886, now section
The defendant claims, on the other hand, that its entrance in and upon the highway in 1883 was not unlawful, having been done pursuant to the Post Roads Act, that such act constitutes a grant or franchise which cannot be overridden by a State statute, that the 1886 statute of the State of New York is not a bar to the acquisition of a right by prescription or adverse possession, and that, accordingly, it has now a right by adverse possession and prescription to maintain its line over the land in question and, moreover, that by lapse of time without objections plaintiff is estopped from maintaining an action in trespass or ejectment.
The trial court found that the Post Roads Act did not have the effect of giving a telegraph company the right to maintain a pole line in a public highway without compensation, where the title of the abutting owners runs to the center of the highway. That conclusion is supported by the decision in Eels v. American T. T. Co. (
The only question is whether the effect given to section
This court having held in Eels v. American T. T. Co.
(supra) that the erection of poles and stringing of wires in a highway the fee to which is owned by an abutting owner is unlawful, and the statute clearly stating that no prescriptive right can be acquired or presumption of a grant raised with respect to such a line, it is difficult to see how *287
any contrary conclusion could be reached than has been reached here. The Federal courts have held that the Post Roads Act does not authorize a telegraph company to appropriate private lands or construct its lines over private property without consent (St.Louis v. Western Union Tel. Co.,
The questions presented in this case were decided against the contentions of defendant in Andrews v. Delhi Stamford Tel.Co. (
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, LOUGHRAN, FINCH and RIPPEY, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *288