Town of Pierrepont v. Lovelass

Boardman, J.:

Various reasons are urged why this judgment should be reversed. I will proceed to notice them in their order.

First'. It is alleged that the town was not the o.wner of the bridge destroyed, in such a legal sense as to enable it to maintain this action in the name of the “ Town of Pierrepont.”

The complaint says plaintiff was the owner of the bridge. The answer contains a general denial. In no other way is the right of plaintiff to maintain this action in its present form questioned. By reference to sections 144 and 148 of the Code, it would seem that any objection to the capacity of plaintiff to maintain this action was waived, inasmuch as the defendants neither demurred nor set up by answer any such defense. (Fulton Fire Ins. Co. v. Baldwin, 37 N. Y., 648.) The defendants, having waived any objections to the rights of the plaintiff to maintain this action, are concluded thereby, and if a' cause of action has been established by the evidence upon the trial, the plaintiff may recover. (Seaton v. Davis, 1 N. Y. S. C., 91; Wright v. Wright, 54 N. Y., 437.) Aside from this answer to the objection, the referee has found that the town was the owner of the bridge destroyed, and had capacity to maintain the action. Such conclusion is sustained, I think, by the evidence and the law. The town takes in its name, by virtue of any conveyance of lands within its limits, in any manner for the use or benefit of the inhabitants of such town. (1 R. S. [Edm. ed.], 310, § 3; 2 Wend., 109.) The turnpike company owned this highway and the right to maintain a bridge across the Racket, as a part *699of such highway, at the place where this bridge stood. By chapter 154 of the Laws of 1822, it is alleged that the turnpike company released this road to the inhabitants of the town, whereby the town became the owner, not in the ordinary manner, but by succession to the rights of the turnpike company. The fact that the highway was laid out in districts, and was managed by the commissioners of highways, does not affect the question of title in plaintiff. So far as the bridge in question is concerned, it was maintained by the whole town, from taxes levied upon all its inhabitants, as a matter of convenience. In this view it becomes unnecessary to determine whether the commissioners of highways or other town officers can, in ordinary cases, bring such an action as this, or whether it must be brought in the name of the town. The town acquired the right to maintain this bridge of the turnpike company, with the legislative sanction. The right thus acquired becomes an easement, and is the property of the town; and, in my judgment, the referee was correct in holding that the town could maintain the action.

Second. There is no evidence in the case from which we can say} as a conclusion of law, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The referee finds that there was none.. The overseer of highways has no care over or duties in respect to bridges. Notice to him was not notice to the town. (Bush v. Trustees of Geneva, 3 N. Y. S. C., 409; Bartlett v. Crozier, 17 Johns., 439, 447.)

Third. The'referee has found that the bridge was properly constructed. This is claimed to be error. If the defendants had no right to run logs down the river as a public highway, they are not in a situation to raise such a question. They would be wrongdoers, and, however defective plaintiff’s structure, the defendants would be liable for any injury to it. The plaintiff was only bound to protect its bridge against dangers legally threatening its existence. But the evidence sustains the findings of the referee. The bridge was well constructed, of proper dimensions, and of suitable materials, heighth and strength. It had proved sufficient for many years. It would be extravagant for the court, upon the evidence, to hold that the bridge was so negligently constructed as to deprive plaintiff of its recovery in this action.

Fourth. After the logs were placed by defendants upon the ice in the river, they employed certain persons to run them down the *700river when the spring freshets came, contracting to pay five cents per log for the service. Defendants claim these parties " (Snell and Douglass) thereby became contractors and alone liable for any damage done by the negligent or careless running of the logs. What Snell and Douglass agreed to do, was, to run such logs as defendants had or should put into the river. The defendants were to set the logs afloat. After they were afloat, Snell and Douglass were to run them ; that is, they and their men were to remain behind to pick up and keep in the channel stranded logs, and break up and forward any jams that might occur. Snell and Douglass were in no proper sense contractors. They were laborers for hire no less than if they had been paid by the day for the work. The payment by the piece secured greater fidelity and industry, but did not change the character of their employment. If, however, Snell and Douglass can be deemed contractors, I do not think the defendants would be relieved of responsibility for their negligence. The act which they were employed to do was unlawful, since, as we shall see, Racket river was not a public highway. (Congreve v. Smith, 18 N. Y., 79.) They were employed by defendants to do such act. The dangers arising therefrom were the natural consequences of the thing to be done. It was the duty of the defendants to provide against or prevent such consequences. By simply contracting with others to do the dangerous- act, the defendants do not relieve themselves from its consequences. (Creed v. Hartmann, 29 N. Y., 591; Storrs v. City of Utica, 17 id., 105.) Besides, these defendants put the logs in the river; this was the primary source of the mischief, without which the injury would not have happened. The natural action of the water might, and probably did, produce the injury, independently of the action of Snell and Douglass. The large mass of the 200,000 logs, doubtless was carried down by the force of the current alone. Thus, defendants’ conduct led directly, we might say, in view of the result, necessarily to the injury. For such direct act defendants are liable (Jones v. Chantry, 4 N. Y. S. C., 63), even though other acts set in motion by them concurred in the result. (Pollett v. Long, 56 N. Y., 200.)

Fifth. In the case of Morgan v. King (35 N. Y., 454), the court declared the law, making the Racket river a public highway, *701unconstitutional, and held upon the facts then before the court, that such river, above Potsdatn, was not in fact a public highway, and was not the subject of a public easement. The facts proved in that case, so far as we can judge from the report, were not essentially different from those here given in evidence. Applying the law of that case to the facts before us now, and it is evident that decision is conclusive. But the defendants insist that the town is not a riparian owner, and is not, therefore, in a situation to urge the invalidity of the law, declaring the river a public highway, for want of compensation to owners of the adjacent soil. Such claim is founded on the erroneous assumption that the town had no vested right to use the banks and bed of the river to maintain the bridge. For over forty years the town has maintained such a bridge at the same point. If necessary, a dedication might be presumed, since an easement may be so acquired. But we have already seen that the plaintiff acquired a vested right from the turnpike company in 1822. As a consequence the acts of 1850 and 1851 were void, so far as they affected the plaintiff in the absence of compensation, and the defendants took no rights by said acts as against the plaintiff’s prior rights. The findings of the referee in his exhaustive and elaborate report, and the law applicable to the case, make it quite conclusive that the Racket river, at and above the point where this bridge was, is not a public highway, much less a navigable 'stream.

It is unnecessary to consider in detail the exceptions taken upon the trial. Many of them are sufficiently answered in the previous discussion.

The offer to show that a square headed pier was of an improper form, was properly rejected, because it was an opinion upon a state of facts which any person, however inexperienced, was equally competent to form; it was not a question for experts; and for the further reason that plaintiff’s counsel had admitted, as appears by the case, that an “A ” shaped pier would shunt” off logs better than a square end pier. Whatever force could have come from the evidence, had therefore been conceded, and did not require proof.

The offer to show that there was no other existing outlet to market for lumber growing in the valley of the Racket, and that there were large quantities above this bridge, was properly rejected. *702It may be that “necessity knows no■ law,” still, necessity does not ordinarily exempt parties from the consequences of their acts. It is not necessary that parties should buy logs or land where there is no means of reaching or removing the timber except by trespassing upon the rights of others. So far as such evidence tended to justify the making of the Backet a public highway, it is answered by the other facts in the case, showing that it is not and cannot be made such under our laws.

The trial of this case has apparently been conducted with great care, labor and skill; the report of the referee bears evidence of his industry and faithfulness in the discharge of his duties; and the result to my mind is just and proper. After a careful consideration of the learned arguments of counsel upon this appeal, I, can see no good reason why a new trial should be had. The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.