Village of Lancaster v. Richardson

4 Lans. 136 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871

*139By the Court

Mullin, P. J.

This action was brought to recover a penalty of five dollars for violation of a by-law of the village of Lancaster, forbidding any person to willfully cut, mar, or otherwise injure, or cause to be injured, any shade trees planted along the streets and sidewalks of the said village.

The defendant owned the land on which the trees in ques tian were standing, and, deeming them to be too near together to admit of their growth without injury to each other, and apprehensive that they would injure his fences and endanger the health of his family, he cut down two of the said trees, whereby those remaining were left at about equal distances apart, and the dangers apprehended removed. It was for this cutting the action was brought.

By section 48 of the charter of said village (Laws of 1859, chap. 320), the trustees are authorized to pass by-laws to prevent injury to, or the destruction of, shade trees planted along the streets and sidewalks of the said village, and to impose penalties therefor; but they were forbidden to impose a penalty for any act prohibited, and for doing which a penalty is prescribed, by the laws of this State. (See § 47 of the same chapter.)

By chapter 573 of the Laws of 1853, it is provided that any person, who shall maliciously or wantonly destroy, injure or deface any ornamental tree, shrub or plant, whether situated on any private ground or on any street, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be punished by a fine or imprisonment, or both, and shall be liable to the party injured for five times the amount of the actual damage.

It is insisted by the defendant’s counsel that this provision embraces all cases of injury to shade trees, and, therefore, the trustees of Lancaster had no power to pass the by-law in question.

It seems to me that a shade tree is an ornamental tree, within the meaning of the act of 1853; but the punishment, being a fine or imprisonment or both, is not a penalty, within the legal definition of that term. A penalty is a sum of *140money which the law exacts the payment of, by way of punishment for doing some act which is prohibited, or omitting to do some act which is required to be done.

A fine is a sum of money exacted of a person guilty of a misdemeanor or a crime, the amount of which may be fixed by law or left in the discretion of the court. Imprisonment is not, in any legal sense, a penalty.

If I am right in this, then no penalty has been imposed by any law of the State for destroying or injuring ornamental trees; and, hence, it was competent for the trustees of Lancaster to enact the by-law in question.

The only remaining question is, was it a violation of the by-law for defendant to cut down the trees?

Independently of the statute, trees standing in the streets or highway, the soil of which belongs to the adjacent owners, are the exclusive property of such owners, and they may remove them at pleasure.

When the land is taken for a highway, the public acquire the right to take such trees standing or being within the limits of the highway, for the making and repair of roads and bridges on such land. The value of such trees is presumed to enter into and form part of the damages to be paid the owner of the land so taken.

Without authority of the legislature, owners of land taken for highways would not be at liberty to plant shade trees therein, except at the hazard of their being removed or destroyed by the officers charged with the care of the highways, as dangerous to travelers, or as interfering with the use thereof by the public. To enable owners to plant shade trees freed from the risks of removal, it is provided by section 127 of the highway act that owners may plant such trees, upon highways, not less than three rods wide; and any persons injuring such trees are declared liable in damages to the owners.

I am unable to find any satisfactory provision that recognizes any interest in the public in such trees.

*141On the contrary, they all recognize the owner of the land as the owner of the trees, and that he is at liberty to deal with them as he deems proper.

A law that would place trees, planted for the purpose of ornament or shade in a public street or highway, under the care of the public officers charged with the care of the streets, and secure them against injury done by the owner or other person by proper penalties, would be a very wholesome and just exercise of legislative power.

There would be no injustice in treating the planting of trees in a street or highway as an appropriation of them to the public use for the purposes of ornament or shade, and prohibiting either the owner or the public officers from removing them without the consent of the other. But, until such legislation is provided, trees planted in the streets or highways must be deemed the property of the owner; and all by-laws passed for the protection of such trees can apply only to other persons. Before the public can assume to say that a man cannot cut down his own trees, they must have acquired an interest therein by purchase or by the right of eminent domain.

To prevent a man from using his property is virtually taking it from him, to a certain extent; and that cannot be done without compensation. The judgment must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.