Hyland v. President & Trustees of the Village of Ossining

Rich, J.: .

The judgments appealed from direct the removal of an obstruction in course of erection in front of plaintiffs’ premises. Section 66 of chapter 242 of the Laws of 1906 (defendant’s charter) provides that “ The territory within the corporation limits of said village is hereby declared a separate road district, exempt from the jurisdiction‘and superintendence of the' commissioners of highways of the town of Ossining, and the trustees of said village shall be commissioners of highways for the same, and for such purposes shall possess and have all the powers possessed by commissioners of highways of towns, under article four of chapter five hundred and sixty-eight of the laws of eighteen hundred and ninety, known as chapter nineteen of the general laws and the several acts amendatory *292thereof, so far as the same can be made applicable thereto, and the clerk of said village shall possess and perform all the powers and duties of the town clerk therein.” Section 70 of the charter provides that live resident freeholders may present to the board of trustees a petition for laying out, altering, widening,.narrowing or discontinuing a street in the village.” A petition was presented to the president and board of trustees conforming to the provisions of this section on July 16, 19.07, asking for “ the alteration or widening and change of alignment of a portion of Secor Hoad in said village, in the particulars hereinafter mentioned, and closing of Main Street at its intersection with the west side of Secor Hoad in said village,” and containing a description of the proposed change, which contemplated taking a strip of land belonging to plaintiffs on the north side of said road. Upon presentation of the petition a notice was given of a hearing appointed to be held on July thirty-first, and sufficient notice thereof given to plaintiffs (see §§ 71, 156 of the charter). Subsequently the prayer of the petition was granted, and without making any provision for acquiring the land necessary for the proposed change, defendant entered into a contract, for carrying out the plans, and work was immediately commenced. After this, and in order to avoid the necessity of acquiring an easement over plaintiffs’ property, the plans were changed, and defendant has undertaken to erect a solid wall of masonry five feet thick and six feet high above the surface of the ground directly in front of plaintiffs’ premises and immediately adjacent thereto, the top of the wall being about even with the top of the windows in the first floor of' plaintiffs’ residence, upon the top of which it is proposed to erect a fence four feet high.

The learned trial justice, before whom this action was tried, has found upon satisfactory evidence that the proposed structure is unsightly and of great annoyance to plaintiffs, and has prevented them from having -access to a part of their premises. The change in the plans was unauthorized; the work was not done in accordance with the plans adopted by the board of trustees, but after plans of the city engineer, who staked out a different route, with the approval of the chairman of the committee on roads and bridges, which was subsequently acquiesced in by the other members of the board. The plans, having once been formally adopted, could only *293be changed by like action of the board of trustees, legally and duly constituted. It is conceded that this was not done until some time after the commencement of this action, and it follows that the attempted modification was without authority and void.

As the judgments must be affirmed, it will be unnecessary to discuss the other alleged irregularities on the part of defendant.

The judgments should be affirmed, with costs.

Woodward, Jenks, G-aynor and Miller, JJ., concurred.

Judgments affirmed, with costs.