Judges: Jenks
Filed Date: 7/1/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiffs are an electric lighting corporation, and Lent, who is a would-be customer. In order to furnish light to Lent or any other customers who might apply, this corporation sought to lay down conduits, tubes and other apparatus in certain ways known as the Bowery, Tilyou’s walk and Kensington walk. Lent is the lessee of the premises which' abut upon the Bowery. It is practically undisputed that these three ways are walks made and maintained by the defendant or by a company which he controls over private property of which parts have been leased to various persons, as in Lent’s case, for places of amusement, and of which a large part has been kept and maintained by the defendant and liis said company for like purposes. The public has used these ways ’ or walks for access to these various places of amusement. ■ The Bowery has existed about thirteen years. The defendant asserts that none other has ever exercised authority or asserted any jurisdiction over these ways, that he or his company has laid them down and maintained them; that such use by the public has been under the permission of the said defendant and the other said owner; that lie has personally improved the Bowery at large outlay that he and the other
The learned and able counsel for the respondents concedes that the appellant is the owner of the legal and equitable title to all that part of the Bowery between the westerly terminus of the company’s conduit and Lent’s premises, and that the said Bowery and the said walks “ have never been acquired by the city or dedicated so as to become streets in the legal sense but he asserts that Lent, with other occupants, “received their grants or leases, as the case might be, bounded by such streets or with such streets in physical existence at the time.” He asserts that the plaintiff corporation “bases its right to extend its conduits * * *. solely by reason of its employment by the said plaintiff-respondent Abraham Lent, and by other occupants of premises abutting upon the Bowery, Kensington walk and Tilyou’s walk.”
It is contended that the reasoning in Thousand Island Park Association v. Tucker (173 N. Y. 203, 209) is applicable. In that case, the plaintiff, a camp meeting or summer (park association, had leased lots, and it was held that as against the plaintiff, the errand of Tucker, a farmer who supplied certain lessors of the lots with poultry and vegetables, was lawful; Cullen, J., saying: “ But however this may be, the lots leased were laid out on a map and plan of the park showing the streets and roads. By leasing the lots as designated on such maps, the plaintiff thereby dedicated the land in the streets and roads to the use of the lot lessees, and any one using a road for access to the premises of such lessee on the latter’s request can justify his presence there as against the plaintiff under such dedication.” The cases may be discriminated. Tucker, incidentally to the errands of his business, merely used the road for access as he had' the right to do in common with the public. _ Naturally, he simply passed and repassedalong.it as his business required. The ease at bar would be analogous if the plaintiff sought' to use the
It is also contended that the grant or lease of lots in this territory includes a corresponding grant or lease of the private street for all street purposes, and that this principle assures the right of the plaintiff to lay its conduits in these ways. We are cited to Palmer v. Larchmont Electric Co. (158 N. Y. 231). I think that the cases are not analogous. The plaintiff corporation asserts its right because it is asked to supply light to Lent and others in their own premises. In Palmer’s Gase {supra) the court recognizes the distinction made in Calkins’ Gase {supra), that a gas light company could not lay its pipes in a country highway without compensation to the owner of the abutting land where its pipes were not used for lighting the highway through which the company sought to lay its ¡lipes. Galkins’ case was approved in Eels v. A. T. & T. Co. (supra) and in Van Brunt v. Town of Flatbush (128 N. Y. 50, 55). And the basic proposition for the judgment in Palmer’s case is that the owner of a fee in a country highway “taken, opened and dedicated” for the public use, is entitled to no further compensation after the territory has become thickly settled and the highway has become a street, and hence the necessity for lighting the street has come, which requires the erection of poles and the stringing of wires, inasmuch as such lighting was a necessary street purpose, and so was not an additional burden without the implied contemplation of the parties at the time the land was “ taken and dedicated to highway purposes.” It is not contended that these walks were ever “ taken, opened and dedicated” or “taken and dedicated” to highway purposes. Indeed, as I have pointed out, the learned counsel for the respondents states in his printed points that “ the said Bowery and said walks have never been acquired by the city or dedicated so as tobecomestreets in the legal sense.” Whether there has been a dedication and an acceptance is a question of fact. (Flack v.
Village of Green Island, 122 N. Y. 107.) I think that upon this
A judgment after trial may differ from the preliminary relief justified by this record. (Mills v. United States Printing Co., 99 App. Div. 605, 608, and cases cited.) But I am of opinion that this injunction pendente lite should not stand.
Hirschberg, P. J., Bartlett, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion for injunction denied, with costs.
Story v. New York Elevated R. R. Co.— [Rep.
See 3 Kent Comm. 433, 433.— [Rep.
See 4th ed.— [Rep.