American Bank-Note Co. v. New York Elevated Railroad

13 N.Y.S. 626, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1607

This text of 13 N.Y.S. 626 (American Bank-Note Co. v. New York Elevated Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bank-Note Co. v. New York Elevated Railroad, 13 N.Y.S. 626, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1607 (superctny 1891).

Opinion

Freedman, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the special term for injunctive relief, damages, and costs. The action was brought for equitable relief against the maintenance and operation of an elevated railroad in front of plaintiff’s premises, consisting of Nos. 115 to 123 Greenwich street. The defendants insist that, prior to the commencement of the action in 1888, they had gained a right by prescription to maintain and operate their elevated rail- ■ road in front of plaintiff’s premises. The West Side & Yonkers Patent Bail-way Company, to whose rights the defendants have succeeded, constructed its elevated railroad in Greenwich street and in front of the premises in question prior to July 1, 1868. The said railroad was a single-track road, consisting of an iron superstructure and cross-ties supported upon iron columns •set on the curb-stone line on the east side of Greenwich street, and operated by a cable. The said railroad was put in operation July 2, 1868, and its operation since that time underwent the following changes, viz.: April 20, 1871, steam dummies were substituted for cable power to draw the trains. April 20, 1871, to April 5, 1877, turn-outs were built at different periods. October, 1877, to June 1878, the west side track was built. June 2, 1878, the west side track was put in operation. Fall of 1879 to May 2, 1880, the east track was reconstructed. Since June 2, 1878, the railroad has been operated by means of trains drawn by steam-engines down one track and up the other, with the exception of the use of temporary turn-outs during the period of reconstructing the east track. These facts being clearly insufficient to establish a user of the entire system for more than 20 years, the defendants have confined their claim of right by prescription to the east track and the structure upon which it rests. As to those it is claimed that, notwithstanding the changes they have undergone, they have been maintained substantially and sufficiently continuously for more than 20 years before the commencement of the action; that thereby the defendant acquired the right to maintain them by prescription against the plaintiff; that, the right to maintain the structure and the track having been acquired, they can operate the road in any manner or by any method authorized by the legislature; and that, therefore, it can make no difference that the road was operated by a cable until 1871, and that then steam-engines were substituted. A thorough analysis of the details of this claim, if it were necessary that it should be made, would give rise to quite a number of interesting questions upon which much has been said and written; but I do not deem it necessary. - The answer to the entire claim is that the defendants could not acquire a right by prescription, as claimed. Originally the theory of prescriptions was that the right claimed must have been enjoyed beyond the period of the memory of man, which, for a long time in England, went back to the time of Bichard I. But, to obviate the necessity of such an impossible proof, it became customary to rely upon the presumption of a deed having been given, and of its having [628]*628been lost, after showing an enjoyment for a sufficient length of time. The matter is regulated in England now by statute. In the United States grants of incorporeal hereditaments are presumed, upon proof of an adverse enjoyment which has been exclusive and uninterrupted for 20 years, or the period of time fixed by the respective statutes of the several states as the limitation in respect to lands themselves. In the state of New York the limitation is 20 years; but to authorize the presumption of a grant the enjoyment must not only have been uninterrupted for the period of 20 years, but it must have been adverse, not by leave or favor, but under a claim and assertion of right, and with the knowledge and acquiescence of the owner. Parker v. Foote, 19 Wend. 309. The defendants have lawful warrant from the public authorities to construct, and they have lawful warrant from the public authorities to maintain and operate, their elevated railroad in and- through Greenwich street, but only on condition that compensation be made to abutting owners. This proposition has been affirmed so many times that its verification by the citation of authorities would be a work of supererogation. The enjoyment by the defendants of so much of the street in question as they did take in front of plaintiff’s premises, was therefore not adverse to the plaintiff and its predecessors in title, but under a license from the public authorities on condition that compensation be made; and the entry under this license must therefore be presumed to have been in subordination to the rights of the abutting owners. Upon this branch of the ease the decision in Broiestedt v. Railroad Co., 55 N. Y. 220, is directly in point. The defendants,, therefore, can no more •sustain their claim of adverse enjoyment than a purchaser under a municipal tax lease can sustain a claim of adverse possession. As tp the latter, it is well settled that possession and claim under a municipal tax lease for over 20 years is not adverse to the claim of the owner in fee. Bedell v. Shaw, 59 N. Y. 46. The claim of the defendants to a right by prescription is, therefore, untenable, and, that being so, no acquiescence by the plaintiff and its predecessors in title, not constituting an equitable estoppel as defined by the general term of the supreme court in the recent case of Knox v. Railway Co., 12 N. Y. Supp, 848, will bar the action. The evidence in tills,case wholly fails to establish such an estoppel. Equally untenable is the claim of the defendants that the right of a plaintiff as an abutting owner to equitable relief against an elevated railroad arises not from its operation, but solely from its unlawful appropriation of the street to the construction and maintenance of its structure. It is difficult to perceive how a legal right can exist to use an illegal structure to its utmost capacity. Even a steam surface railroad, lawfully in existence and operation, may in fact be operated to an extent going so much beyond the ordinary and legitimate uses of the street as to involve an abridgment of the abutting owner’s easement in the street, and to entitle him to a corresponding compensation. Greene v. Railroad Co., 65 How.Pr. 154. It is only when a steam surface railroad, having lawful public authority for the purpose, makes a reasonable use of a street for railroad purposes, without substantially changing its grade, so that the use is not exclusive in its nature, but leaves the passage across and through the street substantially free and unobstructed for the public use, that an abutting owner has no cause of action, and that is all that was decided in Fobes v. Railroad Co., 121 N. Y. 505, 24 N. E. Rep. 919. As to the effects produced by the operation of an elevated railroad upon abutting property the following is the latest position taken by the court of appeals. The precise question under consideration was the question of noise, but the remarks of Andrews, J., who delivered the opinion of the court on that occasion, and in which all concurred except Earl, j., apply with equal force to every element of damage caused by an inconsistent and illegal street use. Judge Andrews says in Kane v. Railroad Co., 26 N. E. Rep. 278,282: “The court allowed the jury to consider the noise created by the trains of the defendant as an element of damage. If the defendant liad [629]

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Related

Campbell v. . Seaman
63 N.Y. 568 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
Bedell v. . Shaw
59 N.Y. 46 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Broiestedt v. . South Side R.R. Co. of L.I.
55 N.Y. 220 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Fobes v. Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad
24 N.E. 919 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
Kenkele v. Manhattan Railway Co.
8 N.Y.S. 707 (New York Supreme Court, 1890)
Parker & Edgarton v. Foote
19 Wend. 309 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.Y.S. 626, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bank-note-co-v-new-york-elevated-railroad-superctny-1891.