The highway in question was laid out in 1887, and the main question litigated at the trial was whether the fence of the plaintiffs was within its bounds. The court charged the jury that if any part of the fence that was removed was not within the boundaries of the highway as laid out, the plaintiffs could recover. The verdict of the jury in favor of the defendant was, therefore, in effect a finding that all of the fence was within the boundaries and was an encroachment upon the highway. The evidence is sufficient to support the verdict.
But the plaintiffs claim that although the fence was an encroachment and the defendant was the highway commissioner, still he had no right to remove the fence because the notice which he served upon the plaintiffs was defective in not fully complying with the provisions of the statute. 2 R. S., 8th. ed., 1388, § 103.
A copy of the order for removal was served with the notice and referred to therein as being annexed. In the order, the original survey was recited and the width of the road as intended to be and as laid out was given, and it then stated that “ said highway is encroached upon, on the westerly side thereof, by the fence of Wallace Hathaway and of Berosus Hathaway as follows, to wit: At
a point west of, and opposite of, the southwest corner of a lot of land formerly known as the Lent lot, now owned by Timothy Sheldon, to the extent of one and one half rods; at a point twenty rods north of the point first above mentioned, to the extent of one rod; at a point thirty rods south of the point first above mentioned, to the extent of one rod.”
In the notice the encroachment was described in the same terms and the plaintiffs were required to remove it within sixty days. The claim of the plaintiffs is that the provision of the statute that requires the order and notice to specify “ the extent of the obstruction or encroachment, and the place or places where the same shall be,” was not complied with.
The plaintiffs did not deny the encroachment, as they had a right to do under the statute, § 105, and made no objection then to the sufficiency of the description in the notice or order. These were served on plaintiffs on 27th May, 1889. The defeñdant waited until September 15th following and then removed the fence to the edge of the highway.
In James v. Sammis, 10 N. Y. Supp., 143-5; 31 St. Rep., 192, which was an action for trespass like the present one, objections seem to have been made by the plaintiff to the order and notice *771that they did not sufficiently state the extent and place of encroachment. The court says that the plaintiff could make no attack upon any of those preceedings; that they were valid and effectual until set aside on review. The case was affirmed in the court of appeals, but upon other grounds. 132 N. Y., 239; 43 St. Rep., 910.
In the present case the plaintiffs apparently made no effort to comply with the order. It might have been more definite, but the plaintiffs were not misled by it. The real issue between the parties was over the location of the highway as laid out. Very evidently the plaintiffs knew that, if the line was as claimed by the commissioner, the fence was an encroachment.
But assume the notice was not sufficiently definite, is the defendant for that reason precluded from taking advantage of the fact, as found by the jury, that all of the fence was an encroachment ? In Van Wyck v. Lent, 33 Hun, 301, 304, it is said that “ the highways of the state are made for and devoted to public travel, and the public have the right to their use in their entirety, and when obstructions to public travel are found within their bounds, the commissioners of highways are clothed with power to remove them without waiting for the slow process of law, even though travel be not absolutely and entirely prevented.” This view finds support in other cases. Cook v. Harris, 61 N. Y., 448; Wetmore v. Tracy, 14 Wend., 250. In Davis v. Mayor, 14 N. Y., 524, it is said by Judge Denio, that “ any permanent or habitual obstruction in a public street or highway is an indictable nuisance although there be room enough left for carriages to pass." See Wood on Nuisances, § 252, and cases cited. In Harrower v. Ritson, 37 Barb., 301, this principle was conceded as applicable to encroachments by fences, but it was held that an .individual had no right to abate such a nuisance unless it interfered with the use of the road by the public. In Griffith v. McCullum, 46 Barb., 561, it seems to have been held that unless an encroachment upon a highway by fences is such as to constitute a private nuisance, as well as a public one, an individual, even though he be commissioner of highways, is not justifiable in removing the fence, and that the remedy furnished by the statute in such cases is exclusive. The statute, however, does not make it exclusive, and the view taken in the Van Wyck case seems to me to be preferable.
The commissioner of highways has the care and superintendence of the highways, and in that regard represents the public. His jurisdiction in the performance of his duty extended over the whole width of the highway as established. Driggs v. Phillips, 103 N. Y., 77, 83; 3 St. Rep., 69. If in the discharge of his official duty he removes without unnecessary damage an encroachment like the present, after notice, though informal, to the owner, he should not be deemed a trespasser. It would follow that this action is well defended.
It is further claimed by the plaintiffs that the court erred in giving, at the close of the trial, a certificate that the title to real estate came in question upon the trial.
The trial closed upon January 20, 1891. The certificate is *772dated February 6, 1891, and it does not appear whether or not it was given upon a hearing of the parties upon the subject. Ho motion on the subject appears to have been afterwards made. The certificate is not referred to in the notice of appeal, and is, therefore, not reviewable here, if it is to be deemed an intermediate order. Code, § 1801. If the certificate was granted upon a hearing, very likely an appeal directly from it would lie. If the certificate was given without a hearing, a motion might have been made to set it aside and an appeal then taken from the order made on such motion. Hawkins v. Peterson, 9 Weekly Dig., 408; Barney v. Keith, 6 Wend., 555; Lillis v. O'Conner, 8 Hun, 282. As the case stands, the question whether the certificate was properly given is not before us.
‘The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
Hardin, P. J., and Martin, J, concur.