128 N.Y. 50 | NY | 1891
The plaintiffs are owners of certain lands in the town of Flatlands, through which Flatbush avenue runs, and they own the fee in the avenue, subject to the public easements. The individual defendants are the street and sewer commissioners, appointed and acting under the act, chapter
The title of the act is "An act in relation to public improvements *53 in the town of Flatbush and the acquisition of the rights of a plank-road company in said town." Section 1 provides for the appointment of the five commissioners who are required to be citizens, residents and freeholders of the town. Section 2 provides for the purchase of rights, franchises and property within the town of Flatbush of the plank-road company, and authorizes them to change the lines of the avenue within the town, and to acquire lands for that purpose, and to fix a line on each side of the avenue as a court-yard line. It authorizes any person owning the adjacent property to use the portion of the avenue in the court-yard in front of his property as follows: By enclosing the same with open and ornamental fences, and by building open porches or stoops and having flowers and ornamental shrubbery and ornamental structures; and the commissioners are authorized to improve the avenue by grading, curbing, guttering, flagging and paving or macadamizing the same, to fix the width of the carriage-way and sidewalk and to plant ornamental trees thereon. Section 4 is as follows: "Such commissioners shall devise and make a plan for building one or more trunk sewers to take and discharge the sewage matter in such town into the tide-water. And for the purpose of building sewers in such town to connect with the trunk sewer or sewers, they may divide the territory in said town into as many districts as they may see fit, and devise a plan for the building of sewers in the streets of each district, so as to connect with such trunk sewer or sewers; they shall make and file maps showing such plans. All sewers herein provided for, other than trunk sewers, and other than sewers built for surface drainage only, are to be designated on any map or plan which may be filed, as herein provided, and are for the purposes of this act, designated as `lateral sewers.'" And in section 5 it is provided as follows: "And for the purpose of building such trunk and lateral sewers, they shall have the right to enter into or upon any street required for such sewers, and there to build and maintain the same. The right hereby given shall be deemed to include the right to acquire the necessary lands and rights to build the trunk and lateral *54 sewers and branches in the said town of Flatbush, and also to build so much of said trunk sewer as may be necessary in the town of Flatlands. In case they require any rights in any streets or other lands not belonging to the public, for the purpose of doing what is herein authorized as to said sewers, or for improving Flatbush avenue as hereinbefore provided, they may acquire such rights and property by purchase or by the proceedings and in the manner provided as to the acquisition of lands for the purposes of railways."
All the acts of the commissioners are to be performed in the town of Flatbush except the construction of the trunk sewer through the town of Flatlands to tide-water, and the plaintiffs claim that the construction of the sewer in the town of Flatlands is not expressed in the title.
The section of the Constitution invoked by the plaintiffs to destroy this act has given the courts much trouble. They have been able to formulate no general rule that will solve all the cases coming under this section. Whether the title of an act will stand the test of this constitutional requirement depends generally upon the peculiar provisions of the act. Every provision contained in a private or local bill must be germane to and fairly connected with and tending to promote the subject expressed in the title. As said in Astor v. Arcade RailwayCompany (
But we are of the opinion that the sewer cannot be constructed in Flatbush avenue in the town of Flatlands, without the consent of the owners of the soil, or, in the absence of such consent, without the acquisition of the title of such owners in the mode provided in the act. The act contemplates that the commissioners may require rights in streets not belonging to the public, and provides for the condemnation of such rights.
In the ordinary country highways of the state, the public simply have an easement in the soil for traveling, and the maintenance of the highways for that purpose, and the soil in such highways cannot ordinarily be subjected to any other burden or easement without acquiring the right or consent of the owners of the soil. (Bloomfield Gas Light Co. v. Calkins,
It is alleged in the complaint in this action that Flatbush avenue in the town of Flatlands "is a country road or highway extending through a rural district; that all of the lands abutting thereon consist exclusively of farms and farming lands; that said lands and said town of Flatlands are sparsely settled, and that said lands are chiefly vacant lands used only for farming purposes," and this was upon the trial admitted to be true. By statements made upon the trial, which seem to have been taken as evidence, it appeared that from the southerly line of the town of Flatbush, for a distance of more than a mile to the village of Flatlands, there were along the avenue but twenty dwelling-houses, mostly upon farms. Upon this evidence and other facts placed before the trial judge, he found, in substance, that Flatbush avenue was an urban street, and not a mere country highway, and that the sewers could be built therein without the consent of the owners of the soil, and without compensation to them. We do not think it important now to determine upon the facts as they appear, whether this avenue should be treated as an urban street, with all the public easements therein appertaining to such a street, or whether it should be treated as a country highway, with easements only for public travel, because the result must be the same in either event.
If the legislature had authorized a system of sewerage in the town of Flatlands for the convenience, health and welfare of the inhabitants of that town, and this sewer had been projected with lateral sewers, with the privilege of the owners of adjacent lots to connect their lots therewith, then we are inclined to believe, for reasons we need not now state, that the character of the avenue and of the locality was such and the population is such that the sewer could be built in the avenue without the consent of the fee owners and without compensation to them. The immediate benefits and advantages *57 which they in common with the whole community might receive might be all the compensation to which they would be entitled. But, as above stated, this sewer in Flatlands is in no way for the benefit of the owners of the lands through which it is built, or for the benefit of the community in which they live. Such owners have no right to connect their lots with the sewer and can in no way use the same. The sewer belongs exclusively to the town of Flatbush, and is solely for the benefit of the inhabitants thereof. Under such circumstances what right have the commissioners to enter upon the lands of the plaintiffs and dig up their soil and place sewers therein without their consent and without compensation to them? We can perceive none, and we know of no principle of law and no authority which can justify them. Suppose, instead of running this trunk sewer south it had been projected northerly through the populous city of Brooklyn to tide-water in the bay of New York, and suppose the lot owners upon the streets through which it was to run owned the fee of the lands in the street, will it be claimed that it could be thus constructed for the sole benefit of Flatbush — in no way for the benefit of the city of Brooklyn, the lot owners having no right whatever to use the sewer and having no benefit therefrom, for the sole purpose of discharging the sewage of Flatbush into the ocean, without the consent of the fee owners or any compensation to them? In such a case the principles which justify the use of urban streets for sewers would have no application.
We are, therefore, of opinion that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *58