Dennis V. Tobolski, Esq. County Attorney, Cattaraugus
You have asked whether a county can abandon a county bridge on an abandoned section of a town road without first obtaining releases from the neighboring property owners normally required by law.
Your letter indicates that in 1969 the Town of Ashford in Cattaraugus County abandoned a segment of a town road that intersected County Road #85 at one terminus and Emerson Road at the other. In the center of the abandoned segment is a bridge which traverses Buttermilk Creek and which has been maintained in the past by Cattaraugus County. Your letter notes that the adjacent landowners between the intersection of County Road #85 and the abandoned town road use County Road #85 for access to their property, while owners of property between Emerson Road and the abandoned town road utilize Emerson Road for access. The owner of property on either side of the abandoned section is the State of New York, and the property is currently occupied by the Nuclear Fuel Services Division of the Westinghouse firm.
The Highway Law sets forth the procedure by which a county may abandon a county bridge on a town road (Highway Law, §
You have asked whether the procedures for closure of bridges found in section
The Highway Law treats the abandonment of town roads and the abandonment of bridges on those roads separately, and sets forth separate procedures for each. Procedures and grounds for closing roads are found in Highway Law, §§
With regard to the abandonment of bridges, the Highway Law establishes a different standard. As noted, section 231 requires not only county board approval for closure of a bridge, but also requires release from neighboring, affected landowners (Highway Law, §
In a 1980 opinion, we suggested the following procedure to be followed when abandoning a road which included a bridge:
"If [the bridge is] over twenty feet in length, however, then it may be advisable to comply with the procedures set forth in Highway Law, §
231 , subdivisions 11 — 12-a, inclusive, even though the span is less than twenty-five feet. In any case of absolute abandonment, moreover, it may be prudent to protect the Town against possible tort liability to motorists or pedestrians by erecting suitable signs and barricades" (1980 Op Atty Gen [Inf] 102, 105).
We believe the procedures suggested by this 1980 opinion should be followed in the immediate case (see also, Matter of Village of Dresden vCounty of Yates,
We conclude that the procedures for closure of bridges set forth in section
