101 N.Y.S. 163 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
Lead Opinion
The law with respect to public highways and to fresh water rivers is the same and the analogy perfect as concerns the right of ■ soil. The presumption is that the Owners of the land on each side go to the center of the road, and they have the exclusive right to the soil, subject to the right of passage in the public. Being owners of the soil, they have the right to all ordinary remedies for the freehold. They may maintain an action for ejectment for encroachments upon the road, or an assize if disseised of it, or trespass against any person who digs up the soil of it, or cuts down any trees growing on the side of the road and left there for shade or ornament. The freehold and all profits belong to the owners of the adjoining lands. (3 Kent Comm. [14th ed.] *432.)
A man shall be deemed in actual possession of a highway passing through his lands, and may maintain trespass against another for any use of the road except for the purposes of traveling, as for cutting timber, digging in the soil, piling boards, or any other exclusive appropriation of the soil. By laying out a road the public acquire a mere right of traveling, and every other right belongs to the owner as exclusively, and he has the same remedy for enforcing it, as if the highway had.never existed. (1 Cow. Tr. [2d ed.] 371.)
For an appropriation of the soil of a road, trespass lies by the owner of the land through which the road passes. (Gidney v. Earl, 12 Wend. 98.) By the court, Nelson, J.: “The public
A highway, though common to all people, is said to be nothing but an easement on the lands over which it passes. The public have no other fight in it than the right of passage, with the powers and privileges incident to that right, such as digging the soil and using the timber and other materials found within the space of the road, in a reasonable manner, for the purpose of malting and repairing the road and its bridges. The owner of the soil still retains his exclusive right in all The mines, quarries, springs of water, timber and earth, for every purpose not incompatible with the public right' of way. While this rule as to the extent of interest which the public acquires in highways is strictly true as to highways in the country, it must be taken with some limitation as to the streets of a city or large village. There are certain uses, such as the construction 'of sewers and the laying of- gas and water pipes, to which the latter are generally applied. These — called urban servitudes — are the necessary incidents of streets in large cities, and are paramount to
The ownership of the fee and right of possession necessarily carries with it the full use and enjoyment of the soil for every purpose not incompatible with the public use. The abutting owner may, therefore, use the portion of the highway not required for public travel, cultivate the soil, store upon it crops, and as was done by the defendants, store compost or manure for use upon the adjoining land.
This is the view taken of the rights of the public in highways in Massachusetts. In Howard v. Inhabitants of North Bridgewater (16 Pick. 189) the plaintiffs were driving on the highway when by accident the bolt by which the whiffletree was fastened to the crosspiece came out, and the whiffletree fell suddenly upon the horse’s legs, whereupon lie was frightened and broke from the harness, and ran with great violence upon large loose stones which lay in the road and broke his leg. The stones were seven feet eight inches from the cart rut. Per curiam: “From the facts in the case it appears that no negligence is imputable to the plaintiffs; that the injury to their horse was occasioned by the stones in the highway as alleged in the declaration, and that the defendants had notice of the obstruction, and the only question is, whether these stones constituted such an obstruction as renders the defendants liable for the injury sustained by the plaintiffs. If it was such an obstruction as they were bound to remove, they are answerable. It is necessary that we should consider what is required of towns.. The St. 1786, c. 81, § 1, provides that highways shall be kept in repair and amended from time to time; that the same may be safe and convenient for travelers with their horses, etc. Of course travelers are to use due diligence to avoid accidents and .towns are to keep the highways in such condition that travelers using such care may go safe. "We think it clear that this provision does not mean that the whole of the road from one boundary to the other shall be made smooth. * * * But there may be such obstructions out of the travelled path as will render the road unsafe, such for instance as would frighten horses. * * * We think that the obstruction complained of was not a defect for which the defendants are liable.”
In Hoffart v. Town of West Turin (90 App. Div. 348) the
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted upon questions of law only.
McLennan, P.J., concurred; Williams, J., voted for reversal on the ground that the verdict is excessive; Spring, J., dissented in an opinion in which Kruse, J., concurred. . _
Dissenting Opinion
After dark in the early evening of the 28th of September, 1903, the plaintiff, was driving along a public highway -from the village of Newark, in the county of Wayne, wlien he uiet an automobile which frightened his horse so that he suddenly veered tb one side, running upon a pile of muck at the side of the road, overturning the vehicle and permanently injuring the plaintiff.
The defendants own a farm contiguous to the place of the' accident. They had drawn muck by the side of the road from their hog yard in May and June prior to the accident, because it was more convenient tp keep it in that place than on the farm. The pilé was about one hundred and seventy feet in length, fourteen or fifteen feet in width .and varying in height from two to- four feet, and extending to within four feet of the beaten track. Nearly one-third of the highway, therefore, was. appropriated by this pile of hog manure for. four months. The land was comparatively level so that the whole highway between the fences could be driven over.
It is-claimed that this was a lawful use of the- highway by the • defendants because" they were the adjacent proprietors and their fee extended to its centei;. I do not so understand the authorities.
In Cohen v. Mayor, etc. (113 N. Y. 532) a wagon was stored in '. the highway in front of the premises of the adjacent owner, and ‘ „the court in commenting on the right to use the highway for this purpose says, at page 535 : “ The primary Use of a highway- is for ■the purpose of •permitting the passing and fepassing of the public and it is entitled to the unobstructed and uninterrupted use- of the entire width of the highway for that purpose.”- And again : “ It is no answer to the charge of nuisance that, even with the obstruction in the* highway there is still room for two or more wagons to pass, nor
In Tinker v. N. Y., O. & W. R. Co. (157 N. Y. 312) the defendant, the owner of the fee, had placed some timbers within the boundaries of the highway at which the plaintiff’s team was frightened, running away and throwing her from the wagon, and she recovered in an action for negligence. The Court of Appeals in affirming the judgment say (at p. 318): “The primary purpose of highways is use by the public for travel and transportation, and the general rule is that any one who- interferes with such use commits a nuisance.” The court then comments upon the temporary appropriation which may be made by an ad jacent owner as a matter of necessity. It indorses, in considering that question, the doctrine enunciated in Flynn v. Taylor (127 N. Y. 596) where it was held in order to justify such an obstruction that “ two facts, however, must exist to render the encroachment lawful: 1 — The obstruction must be reasonably necessary for the transaction of business; 2 — It must not'unreasonably interfere with the rights of the public.” Then the court in the Tinker case add : “ It follows that if an encroachment be not justified by these two facts, it is unlawful and a nuisance. * * * The rule relating to encroachments on highways is not confined to obstructions in the beaten track, but embraces all parts of the highway; nor is it necessary that the injury should be done to a traveler coming in contact with the obstruction.”
To the same effect are Eggleston v. Columbia Turnpike Road Co. (82 N. Y. 281); Houghtaling v. Shelley (51 Hun, 598); Halstead v. Village of Warsaw (43 App. Div. 39); Dygert v. Schenck (23 Wend. 446).
The court permitted the jury to find whether this deposit of compost was a dangerous obstruction, one that impeded travel upon the
The evidence justified the jury in finding that the injuries would not. have happened to the plaintiff except for this .compost heap. The land contiguous to the highway was level, the muck was piled up about four feet high and as soon as the wheels of the cart ran upon it the vehicle was turned over. If the accident would not have occurred except for this unlawful obstruction in the highway the defendants. are liable, for the muck pile may be said to have •been one of the inducing causes of the injuries to the plaintiff. (Ring v. City of Cohoes, 77 N. Y. 83; Phillips v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 127 id. 657.)
Nor do I think the court should interfere with the size of the verdict. If the story of the plaintiff and his witnesses .is true the jury have hot awarded an unreasonable"sum. If li.e is malingering he is not entitled to substantial damages at all.. The jury have passed upon this question and there'is no occasion for our interference, unless we set aside the verdict, and I do not think it is against the weight of evidence. ,
I think the judgment should be affirmed, With costs.
Kruse, J., concurred.
’ . Judgment and order denying motion for new trial on the minutes reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant, to abide event. ,