Court Opinion

ID: 5193671
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 15:40:03.70718+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:59.873005
License: Public Domain

The following is1 the opinion of Stoveb, J., delivered at Special Term:
Stoveb, J.:
The application is for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the village to audit a claim for injuries to property, claimed to have ■been sustained by reason of the closing of a highway.
The statute* provides that the municipal corporation may, with the approval of the company, acquire, by purchase, any lands, rights ■or easements necessary or required for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of sections 60, 61 and 62 of the Railroad Act,† but if unable to do so, shall acquire such lands, rights or easements by •condemnation, either under the Condemnation Law or under the provisions of the charter of such municipal corporation ; and provides for notice to the company of the proceedings.
The claim is made by the petitioner that it is the duty of the municipality to acquire his rights before closing the street. The statute provides two ways of acquiring property by a municipal corporation; first, by agreement with the property owners, and, in ■case of failure to agree, by condemnation proceedings. Any taking ■of property, except by either of the ways mentioned, would be illegal, and subject the parties participating in such appropriation ■ to an action.
■ While it is true that a mandamus’ should issue where a public ■officer or body neglects a. plain duty, yet the duty must be plain .and clear, and in this case the claim is made that there is no. taking ■of any property or rights of the petitioner. It is not quite clear that the court could, upon such an application as this, compel the municipality either to audit the claim or to commence condemnation proceedings. Each of these acts requires the preliminary determination on the part of- the municipality that there was a taking of the .property, and that there was a necessity therefor.
*267If the petitioner’s property had been taken illegally, he has a complete remedy at law, and it would seem that'mandamus is not the remedy of the petitioner. The municipality certainly has no right to audit the claim unless in their judgment the property is required for the purpose; in other words, it must be the subject of agreement between the parties as to the price before the municipal corporation alone can audit the claim. If such an agreement cannot be had, recourse must be had to the assessment by commissioners, and this must be done upon the application of the municipal corporation. It must be preceded by a determination that the rights in suit are necessary, and other preliminary requisites, in order to give jurisdiction under the Condemnation Law ;* and it is not quite clear how a mandamus can accomplish the purpose of the relator herein, namely, the payment of his claim for damages. As before stated, if his property has been illegally taken, he has a compílete remedy against the municipality for the wrong done him, and dhis should be enforced by action rather than mandamus.

 Railroad Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 565), § 63, as amd. by Laws of 1899, .chap. 226.— [Rep. •

 Added by Laws of 1897, chap. 754, as amd. by Laws of 1898, chap. 520, and Laws of 1899, chap. 359.— [Rep. ■ ■ ■' ■

Code Oiv. Proc. §§ 3357-3384.— [Rep.