The defendant owns land upon both sidés of the plaintiff’s right of way strip in the town of Ossining, for a distance of fifty feet. Its parcel on the westerly side of plaintiff’s right of way, which runs approximately north and south, is of considerable depth or width and is composed of land under water included within an old grant. Its parcel on the east of plaintiff’s right of way strip is only three feet in depth or width, but is connected with Water street, a public highway, by a right of way twelve feet ,in width. Upon its westerly parcel the defendant maintains its club-house and for several years, but considerably less than twenty, it has had a plank crossway over plaintiff’s
Upon the trial no controversy as to any material fact appeared.
In August, 1847, Benjamin Brandreth owned the land fronting for 2,135-J feet irpon the Hudson river, with a grant of outside land under 'water. The plaintiff’s predecessor, the Hudson River Railroad Company, laid out its railroad along substantially the water front of that tract. On the 25th of August, 1847, Brandreth conveyed to • plaintiff’s predecessor the land needed for its proposed right of way
In July, 1854, the plaintiff’s predecessor, the Hudson River Railroad Company, by quitclaim deed conveyed back to the said Brandreth a narrow strip of land approximately eleven feet wide on the easterly side of the strip which Brandreth in 1847 had conveyed to the company.
Through several intermediate conveyances the defendant became the owner in fee of its premises. The description in -the deed to defendant includes plaintiff’s right of way strip and contains the following subject clause, viz.: “Subject, however, to the rights of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad as used and possessed by them.”
It thus appears that defendant has come to own a cross section, fifty feet in length, out of the parcels retained by Brandreth after his conveyance to plaintiff’s predecessor, vdii'ch parcels were in length 2,135-| feet upon both sides of the right of way strip conveyed; or, in other words, that the defendant now owns a little less than one-fortieth in length of those parcels so retained, treating the deed by Brandreth to the company in 1847 and the deed by Brandreth back to the company in 1854 as one entire transaction.
It seems to me that the two following questions are presented for determination, viz.:
Second. Does such right of crossing, if it exists, include the right to lay and maintain the proposed gas and water pipes %
As to the first question, there can he no doubt that a reasonable right -of crossing over plaintiff’s right of way strip, to and from the west parcel to the east parcel, retained by the grantor Brandreth, existed as a result of his conveyance to the plaintiff’s predecessor.
■ This right would exist upon the doctrine of necessity, aside from the provisions of the charter of plaintiff’s predecessor and aside from the provisions of the Railroad Law. It also existed under section 16 of that charter, and that too without regard to the use of the lands, i. e., whether or not they were devoted to agricultural purposes. People ex rel. Frost v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 168 N. Y. 187.
It is unnecessary to consider whether or not the dictum contained in the opinion of the Appellate Division in the First Department, in the case of New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company v. Marshall, 120 App. Div. 742, to the effect that section 32 of the Railroad Law applies only to farm lands, is correct.
This right of the landowner Brandreth to have, and this duty of the railroad company to provide, crossings, were\ recognized in the deed above recited by Brandreth to plaintiff’s predecessor, as appears bj the reservation therein, hereinbefore recited. From such reservation in that deed it may be inferred that the parties thereto at that time deemed the two crossings reserved sufficient for the then needs of the parcels retained by the grantor. If, owing to the changed conditions, e. g., increased use of the land due to the development of the locality, additional crossings are needed within the length of the 2,13 5-| feet strip conveyed, it is well settled that the court, under said section 16, can compel the railroad company, the plaintiff, to furnish them. This was distinctly held in People ex rel. Frost v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., supra. There is no proof before me showing the present condition of the parcels retained by
The defendant’s claim here seems to rest upon the contention that, if said original retained tracts, bordering plaintiff’s right of way for 2,135-J feet, have now become divided into any number of separate ownerships, e. g., forty-two cross sections of fifty feet in length, each owned by a separate individual, the plaintiff can be required and compelled to furnish a separate crossing between the ■ two parcels, east and west, comprising each cross section, or forty-two separate crossings in all over the strip originally conveyed by Brandreth to plaintiff’s predecessor. If this be true of cross sections fifty feet in length, it might also be true of those twenty-five feet in length, and then the plaintiff might be compelled to furnish eighty-four separate crossings of the original Brandreth strip of 2,135£ feet in length. Plainly such a duty resting upon plaintiff might be very onerous. BTo direct authority sustaining this contention has been presented, and none is known to me. In this respect this case seems to be a matter of first impression. The claim here made in behalf of the defendant is that the general rule, to the effect that the duty of furnishing reasonable crossings is a continuous one varying in its requirements according to the varying conditions, requires the extreme results above stated if such conditions should arise. I am not convinced of the soundness of this reasoning and am unwilling to accept and follow it here in the first instance. If such a conclusion be reached, I think it had better be declared by an appellate tribunal. Eeither the plaintiff nor its predecessor is or would be in any way responsible for the subdivision of the adjoining parcels into so many small cross sections, v While such subdivision may be a factor to be considered in determining the number of crossings now required within the 2,135¿ feet of the original Brandreth strip, it does not seem to me that it should be regarded as the only or as the conclusive factor. In short, I do not think that the naked fact that defendant’s parcels constitute a portion or one cross section of the original parcels retained by Brandreth is enough to sustain defendant’s claim to a crossing.
Even if this contention be correct, still I apprehend that the rights of the defendant, as owner of the servient tenement, would be such rights as were in the original owner thereof; or, in case such ownership had come to be in several individuals each owning a separate parcel, such rights would be in such owners collectively and not severally. Therefore, even upon this theory, the result would be the same and it would not follow that the owner of each separate subdivision or cross section of the original parcels would have the right to a separate crossing. It does not seem that such a result could have been in the contemplation of the parties to the original deed by Brandrcth to plaintiff’s predecessor of the right of way strip. The situation of such parties at the time of the conveyance must be .considered, as well as the language of the conveyance, in determining its intent and effect. Bridger v. Pierson, 45 N. Y. 601, 604.
While the evidence does not show the present condition of the parcels retained by Brandreth outside of defendant’s cross section thereof, still it appears that for many years, at least fifteen, the plaintiff, without objection, permitted the' defendant to have and use its present crossing. In the absence of such evidence as to the present condition of the entire original parcels, 2,135| feet in length, it seems to me
As to the second question herein involved for determination, I think that, if defendant has a right of crossing, such right includes the right of laying and maintaining the proposed gas and water pipes. Such right seems to me to be within the meaning of the terms “ managing such lands ” contained in said section 16 of the charter of plaintiff’s predecessor.
It is well established that the use which may be made of a right of way or crossing may increase or diminish with changed conditions. It is now well known that water and gas are necessary in any such structure as defendant maintains, and indeed in almost any building, and the right of crossing should be held to include any right of transportation not interfering with plaintiff’s user. I do not perceive how defendant’s pipes, if properly laid, can so interfere, or how the laying of them, if superintended by the plaintiff or performed by it at its election, can so interfere.
Doubtless the plaintiff has the right to superintend the work or, at its election, to do the same at the expense of the defendant, and incidentally the right to establish and enforce reasonable regulations for the doing of the work and for the maintenance of the pipes and for changes thereof which may be required by the future needs of plaintiff. The crossing agreement which plaintiff required defendant to execute went beyond the imposition of such regulations in that it proposed to make defendant accept the pipe crossing as a privilege by plaintiff’s license and not as a right in the defendant, and also to make such privilege revolcable by plaintiff at will unon thirty days’ notice. Hence defendant was justified in refusing to execute the agreement. The defendant is therefore entitled to judgment:
(2) Upon its counterclaim, awarding to it twenty dollars damages, its expenses in laying the pipes which plaintiff removed, and stating its rights as above ’defined and enjoining the plaintiff from interfering with it in the exercise thereof.
The terms of the decision must he settled upon notice.
Judgment accordingly.