Judges: Chester
Filed Date: 5/15/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff for a number of years has owned and operated a pump manufacturing plant and lands located at the village of Seneca Falls. The concern is in full operation, employing a large number of men. The plaintiff seeks to enjoin the defendants from making, filing and serving a map which shall result in appropriating its plant and lands for the improvement of the Cayuga and Seneca canals, pursuant to chapter 391 of the Laws of 1909, unless such appropriation map contains a provision that the plaintiff may continue in possession and operation of its plant until January 1, 1915, and until the same shall be needed by the state or its contractors for the purposes of such construction.
The plaintiff does not deny the right of the state to take its lands for public purposes under the act in question, but it insists that if it takes it before it is needed it would be taking more property than is necessary, for the improvement, and, therefore, that such taking would be unlawful.
Section 4 of the Barge Canal Law (Laws of 1003, chap. 147) which, by reference, is made a part of said chapter 391 of the Laws of 1909, gives the state engineer the right to appropriate such lands for the purposes mentioned “ as shall in his judgment be necessary ’ ’ in the manner provided by the law. In order to do so he must make an accurate survey and map of the lands to be appropriated, with his certificate attached that the lands therein described are necessary
It is admitted by the defendants that the survey and the map are being made for the purposes of appropriating the plaintiff’s lands, but no claim is made by the plaintiff that the state engineer or the. other defendants are proceeding otherwise than in accordance with the statute, except that they are proposing to take such lands before they are needed. The state engineer and the other defendants allege that they have no intention of appropriating or taking possession of or making use of any portion of the plaintiff’s property before the time when in the judgment of the state engineer and the canal board such- an appropriation is necessary for the improvement of the canals, and they allege that they are unable to state just when they must take the property, as that will depend to a great extent upon the progress of the work under pending contracts, and they express a purpose to occasion the plaintiff as little inconvenience and damage •as possible, considering the nature of the work and the requirements of the state.
There is no claim of any kind on the part of the plaintiff that the state engineer, the canal board or any of the defendants are acting with respect to the
The power to appropriate the land of necessity must include the power to determine the time when it shall be taken, and the court has no more power to control the judgment of the officer to whom the discretion is given with respect to the time of taking, than it has with respect to the quantity of the property to be taken.
So far as appears the defendants are acting in good faith and entirely within the law, instead of contrary thereto. They are in a position to know when the land will be required for canal purposes and it is not •to be assumed that in the discharge of their official •duties they will take possession of plaintiff’s property before it is needed. The time of the taking, as well as the necessity for it, must be left to the discretion of the public officers to whom the legislature has com
The plaintiff cites Halfmoon Bridge Co. v. Canal Board, 78 Misc. Rep. 284, 157 App. Div. 183, in support of its claim for the injunction. That was a case where the canal board was proceeding to destroy a bridge which was a part of a public highway without building a new bridge to accommodate public travel as the law required, before destroying the old one, and the injunction there was sustained on the theory that the defendants could not escape their obligation to build the new bridge under the power which they had to destroy the old one and thus leave the public without the benefits of a highway at the place in question.
The case is so dissimilar in its facts that it is not an authority for the relief sought here.
The motion for the injunction should be denied, with ten dollars costs.
Motion denied, with ten dollars costs.