By the 22d section of the general railroad law, every company formed thereunder is required, before • constructing its road through any county, to file in the clerk’s office a map of the route intended to be adopted in such county, and to give written notice of the route so designated to all actual occupants of the land over which it is to pass.
It cannot therefore be objected that, in the present case,
The real question presented on this appeal is whether the adjudication of the commissioners is in fact an alteration of the route. Gutting out and transplanting a portion of the line of the road, and leaving it disconnected at each end from any other portion of the road, would not be such an alteration of the route as is contemplated by the statute. Taken literally, this is what the decision of the commissioners purports to do. It changes the location of the road through the premises of William and George Hartman, from the route laid down on the map, so as to be “laid in and correspond with” a straight line running from the railroad at Zerfass street to the intersection of Jefferson and Ossian streets. It does not, in terms, connect either end of the piece of road so to loe laid in and correspond with the straight line described, with the residue of the railroad; nor does it appear whether or not this straight line could be adopted as part of the line of the road. But assuming that the decision can be so interpreted as to embrace in the route of .the road, as changed, the whole of this straight line from Zerfass to the intersection of Ossian and Jefferson streets, there the connection ends. The decision does not direct in what manner the road is to be continued beyond Ossian street. It makes the road terminate there. To thus abridge or interrupt the road was clearly beyond the power of the commissioners.
It is argued that the railroad company may themselves lay out and complete the line from the intersection of Jefferson and Ossian streets, so as to connect at some more southerly
We think, therefore, that the commissioners, if they undertook to make any alteration of the proposed route, should, after having afforded to all occupants of the land to he affected by the alteration an opportunity to he heard, have completed the alteration so as not to break the continuity of the line, or to throw upon the companyffhe responsibility of finishing the work which they, fhe commissioners, had begun. It was their duty, when causing the line of the road to diverge from the route laid out by the company, to provide a suhsti tnted route, consistent with the just rights of all parties and the public, and by which they would he bound. And for the failure of the commissioners thus to complete the performance of the duty imposed upon them by the statute, the judgment of the General Term, reversing their decision, should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
