In re the Acquisition by the Rhinebeck & Connecticut Railroad
In re the Acquisition by the Rhinebeck & Connecticut Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The main question presented by this appeal is, whether after confirmation of the report of commissioners of appraisal, appointed in proceedings instituted by a railroad company, under the “ act to authorize the formation of railroad coiporations and to regulate the same,” passed April 2, 1850, to acquire lands for the use of the road, the company may abandon the proceedings and refuse to pay the awards made to the owners, if for any reason it is not deemed for the interest of the corporatiou, or it elects not to complete the purchase.
In the Matter of the Commissioners of Washington Park (56 N. Y., 144), this court reaffirmed the doctrine of previous cases that proceedings taken by public officers or bodies for the condemnation of land for streets, or public parks under statutes authorizing the appropriation of' private property for public use, on compensation being made to the owners, might, with consent of the court, be abandoned at any time before the confirmation of the report of the commissioners of appraisal. The decisions on the subject were referred to and considered in the opinion of Rapallo, J., and he stated it to be the established doctrine, that in “ street cases the corporation may be permitted to discontinue proceedings at any time before rights resulting therefrom have become vested in the property owners,” and that “ no such rights are vested, until the report of the commissioners is finally confirmed, and there is a final award in the nature of a judgment in favor of the property owners, for their compensation.”
In none of the cases referred to in the opinion was the
The provisions of the various statutes, considered in the cases, are by no means uniform. In some of them, as in the statute of 1813, relating to the city of Hew York, the corporation, becomes seized of the land on confirmation of the report of the commissioners of estimate and assessment, while in others, as in the statute relating to the village of Brooklyn (chapter 155, Laws of 1827), after confirmation of the report payments is required to be made before the corporation became vested with the title or the right of possession of the lands mentioned in the report.
The statute last mentioned was under considération in The People v. Corporation of Brooklyn (1 Wend., 318), and in Martin v. Mayor, etc. (1 Hill, 545), and in both cases, although it was not the precise point in judgment, the opinion of the court clearly was that the confirmation of the report was the point, where the discretion of the corporation to abandon the proceedings ended. The cases of Stafford v. The Mayor, etc., of Albany (6 J. R., 1; S. C., 7 id., 541) and Hawkins v. The Trustees of Rochester (1 Wend, 54) support the same conclusion.
The test of the right of a corporation, in street cases, to discontinue at any particular stage of the proceedings is, we think, under the decisions, whether “ they have progressed so-far as to give mutual rights to the parties.” (Savage, C. J., in People v. Corporation of Brooklyn, 1 Wend., 325.) If they have been carried to the point where the public has acquired a right to the land, and the landowner a right to the compensation awarded, the corporation cannot recede.
The company, when the report of the commissioners is made, is apprised of the sum which it will he required to pay for the lands embraced in the report, and if the valuation is, in the judgment of the company, excessive, or if, for any reason, it is regarded for the interest of the corporation not to proceed further, it may decline to do so; but if the company elect to go on and apply for and procure a confirmation of the report, the relation of vendor and vendee is then estab
In this case the Rhinebeck and Connecticut Railroad Company took proceedings under the statute to acquire the lands of the respondents. Commissioners of appraisal were appointed, who made their report, and the company thereupon, upon notice, moved for its confirmation. The court, on the 18th of December, 1815, granted the motion, and made the order required by the seventeenth section- of the act, which order directed, among other things, that the sum awarded to the respondents should be paid to them, or deposited in the First Rational Bank of Rhinebeck to the credit of their attorney. The order was not entered, and the papers on which it was granted were not filed. The company retained them, and refused to enter the order or file the papers, or to pay or deposit the amount of the award. This motion -was made to compel the company to file the papers and order, and for other and further relief.
The court, after hearing the parties, made an order granting the specific relief asked in the notice of motion, and also
It was the right of the respondents to have the order of confirmation, and the papers upon which it was granted, filed in the proper clerk’s office. The company had no exclusive right to them. The order was the evidence of the decision of the court, and with the papers upon which it was granted, should have been filed with the clerk who is the custodian of its records.
That part of the order which directs the respondent to file the report and papers, and the order of confirmation was clearly right, and we think, also, that the awarding of a precept to collect the award of the commissioners in default of the respondents’ paying or depositing the same as required by the order of confirmation, was authorized under the amendment of 1854. (Laws of 1854, chap. 282; Matter of the N. Y. C. and H. R. R. R. Co., 60 N. Y., 116.) The facts stated in the affidavits presented in opposition to the motion, do not show that the proceedings were abandoned by mutual consent of the parties. The attorney for the company before the order of confirmation was made, consented to give the attorney for the landowners, ten days time- to consult with and obtain their consent to have the award vacated. But the attorney did not postpone the application for the order of confirmation, but procured it to be signed, and put the company in a position to enforce its claim to the land.
The order should be affirmed with costs, without prejudice to the company to move the court for leave to abandon the proceedings, or as it may be advised.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the Matter of the Acquisition by the Rhinebeck and Connecticut Railroad Company (Appellants) of the title to certain lands owned, etc., by Alida G. Radcliffe
- Status
- Published