207 A.D. 134 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
All concur.
The following is the opinion of the referee:
Referee:
This is an action brought by plaintiff as a taxpayer of the city of Oswego, N. Y., against the city of Oswego, John Fitzgibbons as mayor, and various individuals constituting its water service commission, to permanently restrain the delivery by defendants to the State of New York of a release of certain claims owned by the city and growing out of several appropriations by the State in the course of its improvement of the Oswego canal and otherwise, and likewise from accepting or recording a certain deed proposed to be given to the city by the Canal Board of the State of New York. The reasons upon which the request for the injunction is founded will be best understood by a brief recital of the facts leading up to the litigation.
In 1911 work was commenced by the State of New York in connection with the building of what is known as dam No. 6 of the Oswego river, the work being incident to the improvement of the Oswego canal as provided by the Barge Canal Act, so called (Laws of 1903, chap. 147, as amd.), and the dam itself being completed in or about January, 1915. In the building of the dam it became necessary and there was destroyed by the State what will be termed the “ Old High Dam,” located for many years at an appreciable distance south of dam No. 6 in question, at the westerly end of which, through the medium of head gates, the city of Oswego and its predecessors in title were the owners and had been in the actual enjoyment, for many years, of power rights of concededly great value. The westerly end of dam No. 6 is located upon uplands appropriated from the Oswego Country Club but, prior to such appropriation and as a result of negotiations entered into by the city when the tentative site of the dam was first made known, an option had been given by the Oswego Country Club to the city of Oswego to purchase a parcel of land having a frontage of 500
At the outset the defendants plead as a bar the judgment in a" certain action brought in the Supreme Court by Charles Carroll against the city of Oswego and others, decided in March, 1918, and the careful examination which the law requires of the record and proceedings therein, including the pleadings, the evidence submitted, the respective contentions of the parties, and the findings and opinion of the court (Oklahoma v. Texas, 256 U. S. 70, 86), justifies the conclusion that certain of the questions at issue in the instant case must be regarded as settled. And this is so whether it is regarded as constituting the same or a different cause of action. (Doty v. Brown, 4 N. Y. 71; Southern Pacific R. R. v. United States, 168 U. S. 1.)
Carroll was a taxpayer and his action in question was directed towards restraining the city, the mayor, and the commissioners of water service from issuing, selling or negotiating bonds in connection with a proposed power house to be constructed by the city for the development of power at dam No. 6 — it being alleged, as in this case, that “ all the water rights and power rights ” created thereby “ belong to and are the property of the State,” the city having no right, title or interest therein, and it being further alleged, amongst other objections, that the city’s scheme of securing surplus waters in consideration of a release of its claims was “ speculative and without adequate assurance of success ” as the State was without power to dispose of the same. Upon the trial the question of the ownership of the bed and westerly bank of the Oswego river was litigated as well as of the waters impounded by the dam; much evidence was given bearing upon certain negotiations between the city and State officials relative to its construction and the destruction of the “ Old High Dam ” and which were almost coincident with the enactment of the Barge Canal Act; and it was expressly found by the referee, amongst other pertinent facts, in dismissing the case upon the merits, that the city had acquired title, subject to the rights of navigation, to the west half of the bed of the river for an appreciable distance above and below the dam; that the State had never formally appropriated any part of the bed westerly of the center thereof at the location in question; that the dam was constructed with openings at its westerly end suitable for the erection of a hydro-electric pla,nt; that reinforcing bars and key ways were placed by the State on the northerly wall of the abut
The action being one of general interest to all the taxpayers of Oswego, these findings, and each of them, are conclusive not only upon the immediate parties thereto, but they are likewise conclusive upon the plaintiff in the present action as being a person in privity with the plaintiff therein. (23 Cyc. 1269; Oklahoma v. Texas, supra; Ashton v. City of Rochester, 133 N. Y. 187; Harmon v. Auditor of Public Accounts, 123 Ill. 122; Sabin v. Sherman, 28 Kan. 289; Gallaher v. City of Moundsville, 34 W. Va. 730; Smith v. Swormstedt, 16 How. [U. S.] 288, 302, 303; Greenberg v. City of Chicago, 256 Ill. 213; Henderson County v. Henderson Bridge Co., 116 Ky. 164, 179.) If, however, the city has the right to use one-half of the surplus waters created by the dam, then the State parts with nothing by its quitclaim, and section 16 of the Barge Canal Act, as added by chapter 494 of the Laws of 1907, manifestly has no application.
Neither can it be said that the proposed agreement constitutes a sale of canal lands within the meaning of section 8 of article 7 of the Constitution. Adequate provision is made for insuring to the State a full and adequate supply and depth of water for all canal purposes, with the right at any time to enter upon the dam and bulkhead for the purpose of making such changes, alterations or improvement in the canal structures as may be necessary for canal uses, and read in the light of such provisions the underlying reason for the constitutional provision against the sale or other disposition of our canals is served. (Sweet v. City of Syracuse, 129 N. Y. 316; People ex rel. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. v. Walsh, 211 id. 90, 96.) By the Barge Canal Act (§ 5, as amd.) it is enacted
It is argued that if the city already has the right to use one-half of the surplus waters created by the dam — the title to the sixty-foot strip alone passing by the quitclaim from the State — there is such an inadequacy of consideration for the release by the city of its claims totaling $4,260,200 as to constitute a waste of public, property. A naked right of user without the means of present enjoyment is not of any great advantage to the possessor and, after all is said, it is the conveyance of the sixty-foot strip in question and the acquiescence of the State, by quitclaim, in the city’s claim to the surplus waters, which makes available to the city an immediate, reasonably assured and continued development of power. And even if it were otherwise, the amount for which a claim is filed is neither determinative of its value nor will the courts in. the absence of a finding of fraud or bad faith, be quick to interfere with the broad discretion which is. properly vested in the officials of a municipality. In the present instance, not only is the element of fraud and bad faith lacking but it is fair to assume, both from the length of the negotiations and the public discussion attending the referendum had in connectibn with the question of bonding for a power house, that the proposed agreement
The complaint is dismissed upon the merits, with costs. Findings may be prepared accordingly.