The certiorari is brought to review the proceedings of the highway commissioner in altering a public highway near its termination in another highway, by changing its direction, where it run obliquely through the farm of one of the petitioners, so as to make it run on the *Page 308 line of lots and strike the other highway at right angles, thereby shortening the distance from the point of divergence to the other highway about twenty rods. This was done with the assent of the owners of the land through which the altered road run, and they released all damages caused thereby. The proceeding were reversed by the General Term upon the ground that four years had not elapsed from the reversal, by referees, of an order making the same alteration.
In 1871, the then highway commissioner, with the aid of a jury who certified to its necessity, filed an order making the alteration, which, on appeal under the act of 1847 (chapter 455), was referred to referees, who reversed the order. In 1872, the appellant, as highway commissioner, upon petition and after a release of damages by the owners, filed the order in question, which makes the same alteration as that before reversed. The statute which is claimed to bar this proceeding is section 9 of the act of 1847, before referred to, and reads as follows:
"Every referee appointed under the preceding section shall be entitled to receive two dollars for every day employed in the hearing and decision of such appeal or appeals, to be paid by the party appealing where the determination of the commissioners shall be confirmed, but where it is reversed to be a charge upon the county; and when the referees shall make any decision laying out, altering or discontinuing any road in whole or in part, it shall be the duty of the commissioners of highways of the town to carry out such decision in the same manner as required in cases of final determination of appeals, as provided by the thirteenth section of the act hereby amended; and such decision shall remain unaltered for the term of four years from the time the same shall have been filed in the office of the town clerk."
The General Term held that "such decision," in the last clause of the section, was not confined to the antecedent decision specified in the same clause, viz., "any decision laying out, altering or discontinuing any road in whole or in part," but might be taken to refer to the word "decision" *Page 309 in the first part of the section. With great respect, I am unable to concur in this construction of the statute. The first part of the section relates to the compensation of referees, and directs by whom such compensation shall be paid, and includes every decision which may be made; the latter portion of the section, not by punctuation merely but by plain intendment, relates to a different subject, and is independent of the first part of the section, and should be construed accordingly. It requires commissioners to carry into effect any decision of referees, laying out, altering or discontinuing any road, and then declares that "such decision" shall remain unaltered four years. It seems to me manifest that the decision which is to remain unaltered is the decision which lays out, alters or discontinues a highway, and which the commissioners were to carry into effect. A decision which refuses to lay out, alter or discontinue is not included. When the language of a statute is unambiguous there is no occasion for construction; the language must have its effect. There is no reference in this part of the section to any thing contained in the first, and no reference to decisions generally, but the language is confined to such decisions as require affirmative action. The two parts of the section should be construed as if contained in separate sections. But if we leave the plain meaning of the language and seek after a supposed intent, I cannot agree with the General Term in inferring that the legislature must have intended to put a refusal to act upon the same footing in respect to its finality for four years as affirmative action, authorizing an improvement. The laying out of a road requires work, labor and expense, and perhaps the obtaining of land to carry it into effect, and we can well see that public policy might dictate its remaining a sufficient time to test its utility before the question should be again opened; while a mere refusal to lay out a road at one time would be no reason for not asking it at another. An alteration might not be deemed important at a particular time, while in a single year it might be regarded as desirable. The policy of continuing as final a decision against making an *Page 310 improvement is not apparent; and when the language does not justify such a construction, it is difficult to find any ground for recognizing such a policy.
We concur with the court below, that the certificate of freeholders is only necessary where highways are laid out through improved land without the consent of the owners. With such consent and a release, the commissioner had power without a jury to lay out or alter a highway. (Lalor's Sup., 162; 28 N.Y., 297; 20 id., 252.) This objection is therefore untenable.
The objection that the change made is not an alteration, cannot be sustained. The road is the same; it does not open a new route of travel; it makes a right angle instead of an obtuse angle in an existing highway. We cannot say that the public interest did not demand it; public convenience, the adaptability of the land for a public highway, and the expense of repairs, are questions for the commissioner to determine. The propriety of the alteration is not reviewable. Every alteration of a highway may involve to some extent the laying out of some part of a new highway, and the necessary discontinuance of a part of an old highway, but such laying out and discontinuance are the incidents of an alteration, and not independent improvements contemplated by statute under those definitions. At all events, the new piece of road laid out would be a highway, under the authority possessed by the commissioner to lay out highways with the assent of the owners of land, and without the aid of a jury.
The judgment of the Supreme Court must be reversed, and the proceedings of the commissioner affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *Page 311