Mohawk & Hudson Rail Road v. Artcher

The Chancellor.

It is too late for the complainants to urge the objection here, that they had no sufficient legal notice of the time and place of the meeting of the jury of freeholders, as it appears they had actual notice, and their agent attended and was heard before the jury in opposition to the application. I am inclined to think that the complainants were entitled to a written notice of the time and place, and of the object of the meeting of the jury, at least six days before the time appointed for such meeting, by analogy to the forty ninth section of the title of the revised statutes relative to highways and bridges. (1 R. 8. 514.) But by appearing before the jury and contesting the right of the defendant, Artcher, to have the road laid out across the fixtures of the inclined plane, without objecting to the regularity of the notice, that objection may be considered as waived. (See Lansing v. Caswell, 4 Paige’s Rep. 519.) The provisions of the revised statutes relative to the laying out of private roads are very imperfect; but it is evident that it was never the intention of the legislature to authorize the opening of a private road, through the lands of one person for the benefit of another, until after the damages had not only been assessed but actually paid by the person for whose benefit such private road is laid out and opened. Indeed it may well be doubted whether the legislature has any power to authorize the taking of the property of one person for the mere purpose of increasing the value of the property of another, where the public interest will not be in any manner benefitted by the taking of such property, or by the uses to which it is to be applied. My opinion on this subject has been fully expressed, in other cases which have come before me, particularly in the recent case of Varick v. Smith, (5 Paige’s Rep. 127.) But as there maybe cases where a private road might be considered so far a public benefit as to authorize the legislature to exercise the right of eminent domain, on account of the benefit which the public may de*86rive from the opening and the use of such road, I shall not put the decision of (his case upon the constitutionality of the law under which the defendants claimed the right to lay out the road across the complainants property. I shall therefore, proceed to consider the question whether the statute itself authorises the laying out either of a public or a private road across the fixtures of the complainants inclined plane.

In the case of Lansing v. Caswell, before referred to, I had occasion to give a construction to the 57th section of the article of the revised statutes relative to the laying out of public and private roads, (1 R. S. 514;) and I then came to the conclusion, that this section of the statute must be construed with reference to the situation and nature of the property to which the yard or fixtures on the proposed site of the road, or" high way, are appurtenant. The punctuation of the last half of the 57th section, in the authorized edition of the revised statutes, has somewhat obscured the sense, by substituting semicolons, in several places, instead of the commas which were used in the original text as passed by the legislature. This section, as originally reported by the revisors, extended the prohibition to fixtures and erections of every kind, as well as to buildings. But as the object of the revisors and of the legislature was to embody in the statute the principles of the decision of the supreme court, in the case of Clark v. Phelps, (4 Cowen's Rep. 190,) the language of the section was altered, by confining that part of the restriction to fixtures or erections for the purposes of trade or manufactures, so as to exclude fixtures and erections of a less meritorious character. At the time the chapter of the revised statutes relative to highways, ferries and bridges, was passed, (the fall of 1827,) there were no rail roads in this state, although the charter of this company had been granted the preceding year. It is not surprising, therefore, that the terms of this section of the statute should not be found to be exactly appropriate to the kind or class of fixtures or erections to which the fixtures and machinery of an inclined plane upon a rail road most properly belong. Perhaps, in this case, where the company is authorized by its charter to transport merchandize upon its inclined planes, *87the machinery erected and placed by the rail road company upon its inclined planes, for the purpose of drawing up and letting down such merchandize, as well as cars for the conveyance of passengers, may be considered as fixtures or erections for the purposes of trade; and as within the express terms of this prohibitory section of the statute. There can be no doubt, however, that this case is clearly within the spirit and intent of the prohibition of the statute against laying out roads and highways through buildings, fixtures, or erections of a certain description, where the benefit to be derived from the laying out of the road in that particular place bears no reasonable proportion to the injury and inconvenience which will be sustained by those through whose fixtures or erections the road is laid. Although the defendant, in his answer, swears that the laying out and using of this private road, for the purpose of carting sand across the complainants’ inclined plane, will not, in his opinion, interfere with the beneficial use of such inclined plane, or bo any injury to the complainants, the court cannot shut its eyes to the fact, of public notoriety, that, from the manner in which the fixtures upon an inclined plane are constructed, the use of such fixtures, for the purpose of letting down and drawing up trains of freight, or passenger carriages, is wholly incompatible with a general right to cross such inclined plane with carriages, or teams, as upon a public or private road. The question to be determined in this case is, not whether the defendant intends to use his private road at such times, and in such a manner, as to interfere with the complainants’ use of their inclined plane; but whether it is lawful for the commissioners of highways to lay out and open a road across and through the complainants’ fixtures on the inclined plane, which would legally authorize the public, or an individual, to cross the inclined plane at all times, and to cut down or prostrate such fixtures, to the extent of the width of such road, if they shall be found to interfere with such general right of crossing. I am satisfied that, upon a proper construction of the statute, the commissioners of highways of Bethlehem had no jurisdiction or authority to lay out a road of *88any kind across or through the fixtures upon this inclined plane; and that their proceedings are void.

Although the complainants might have lain by and permitted the defendants to open the road, and have then proceeded by suits at law to recover satisfaction for the injury, the cases of Belknap v. Belknap, (2 John. Ch. Rep. 463,) and Livingston v. Livingston, (6 idem, 497,) and the cases there referred to, show that this court has an undoubted jurisdiction to interfere by injunction, in such a case, where public officers are proceeding illegally and improperly, under a claim of right, or where the exercise of such a jurisdiction is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of suits at law. And the present case appears to be a proper one for the exercise of such a jurisdiction, as the act complained of is not a mere trespass, but an attempt to exercise a continued right of passing across and through the complainants’ fixtures upon the inclined plane, to the permanent and continued injury of their property. The motion to dissolve the injunction must therefore be denied, with costs.