16 Barb. 131 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1852
The plaintiff brought an action in the supreme court against the defendant, and declared against him for unlawfully and wrongfully entering on his premises; and then and there taking down, removing, breaking and injuring a fence, belonging to the plaintiff, and in his occupation. The defendant denied each allegation in the complaint; and further pleaded, that the premises in question were the property of the state, being a part of the lands appropriated for the Erie canals; and that he had,"by permission of the superintendent of repairs, before that time deposited a quantity of stone upon the said premises; that the plaintiff had wrongfully erected the said fence upon the towing path and around the said stone,; and that, in order to remove-the-said stone the defendant .-had taken
On the trial of the cause, the plaintiff gave general evidence of possession in himself and those under whom he claimed, for near twenty years ; and that the plaintiff had plowed the land in the fall of 1838, but did not plant it, because he could not get timber to fence it, and it lay uninclosed till after the stone were placed upon it; that one of the former owners had a barn on the identical spot where the stone were laid. He then gave evidence of the removal of the fence, and rested. The defendant then proved the map of the Erie canal, which is made presumptive evidence of the title of the state, to all lands designated thereon as such, by which it appeared that the lands in question were the property of the state. The defendant then offered to show that the superintendent gave him a verbal permission to deposit the stone on the exact spot where he placed them, and a written permission to travel on the towing path, to and from his farm, as is shown in the diagram annexed to the case. Whereupon the counsel for the plaintiff objected to the evidence, on the ground that the superintendent had no legal right or power to grant such permission. The justice overruled the objection, and decided that such permission was sufficient to connect the defendant with the title of the state, hi the said lands. To which ruling the plaintiff excepted. The plaintiff then, subject to such objection, admitted the truth of the matters so offered to be proved.
I. The first ground on which the plaintiff claims a new trial
II. The fact of the exclusive possession of the plaintiff seems also to have been conceded and assumed; and the objection to the evidence offered, founded on the want of power in the superintendent to give the permission to deposit the stone on the premises, was overruled. Granting that the plaintiff had peaceable and exclusive possession of the premises, that possession probably gave him a right of action against a wrongdoer. (3 Bur. 1563. 2 John. 22. 4 Id. 211. 7 Barb. 621.) The next question is, whether the superintendent had any power to confer on the defendant the right to deposit the stone on the lands in question. The powers of this officer, (so far as they are defined by the statute,) are prescribed in the sixth article of the ninth title of the ninth chapter of the first part of the revised statutes. (1 R. S. 236, §§ 116, 117, (100, 101.)) The first of these sections declares generally that the duty of these officers is, under the direction of the canal commissioners, to keep in repair such portions of the canal and works connected therewith as shall be committed to their charge; to make all necessary contracts, for that purpose, and faithfully to expend the moneys placed in their hands. This section was amended in one respect by the 11th section of the act of 1847. (Laws
Gridley, Pratt, W. F. Allen and Hubbard, Justices.]