94 N.Y.S. 640 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
By section 10 of the Highway Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 568, as amd. by Laws of 1899, chap. 84) it is provided that “if. any highway or bridge shall at any time be damaged or destroyed by the elements or otherwise or become unsafe, the commissioner oí highways of the town in which such highway or bridge may be, may cause the same to be immediately repaired or rebuilt if consentéd -to by the town board * * *.”
This provision of law was considered by this court in the case of Livingston v. Stafford (99 App. Div. 108), in which casé this court held that this act was to enable the commissioner of highways to meet an emergency. At page 110, Mr. Justice Houghton, writing for the court, says: “ Roads and bridges might be damaged or destroyed by flood and storm shortly after the holding of a town meeting, and the delay incident to a vote and the levying and collecting of a tax would put the inhabitants to great inconvenience. To relieve this and to provide a, means for quick restoration of the roadway, the law of 1858
If this court be wrong in the rule laid down in the case cited, nevertheless the town board is not called upon to act until a request has been made by the highway commissioner. Its powers are limited to those specifically granted by the statute. It does not represent the town in the execution of any general duty, if such there be, to keep the highway and bridges in repair. Their only authority in respect of the bridges is to consent or approve of some contract proposed to them by the highway commissioner in those cases in which the highway commissioner is authorized to act under section 10 of the Highway Law (as amd. supra).
. Again, under this section the right given to the highway commissioner upon the consent of the town board implies of necessity the right of the town board to withhold its consent. (See People ex rel. Schwab v. Grant, 126 N. Y. 473.) In that case, Roger, Ch. J., in writing in an analogous case, says: “ A power to grant a privilege to one is inconsistent with the possession on the part of another of an absolute right to exercise such privilege. The requirement that a person must secure leave from some one to entitle Mm to exercise a right, carries with it, by natural implication, a discretion on the part of the other to refuse to grant it, if, in his judgment, it is improper or unwise to give the required consent.” If there be in the town board a right to refuse consent, the court clearly cannot by mandamus direct the discretion which it shall exercise. It seems clear, therefore, that the mandamus against the town board was properly refused.
"We do not agree that the mandamus should be refused as against the highway commissioner either because too much was asked or because the town board was also included in the writ. (People ex rel. Keene v. Supervisors, 142 N. Y. 271, 278.) We are, however, unable to find any clear specific duty in a highway commissioner to proceed to the rebuilding of the bridge without direction therefor,
If we are correct in these views it follows, -that this final order must be affirmed.
All concurred.
Final order affirmed, with costs.
Chap. 103.— [Rep.