Bates v. Holbrook

67 A.D. 25, 73 N.Y.S. 417
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 A.D. 25 (Bates v. Holbrook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Holbrook, 67 A.D. 25, 73 N.Y.S. 417 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The plaintiff is the lessee and proprietor-of a hotel called the “Everett House,” at the northwest corner of Fourth avenue and Seventeenth street, in the city of Mew York, and has been in possession thereof and conducting a hotel therein since the month of July, 1894. The lease under' which the plaintiff is now occupying the premises is dated May 1, 1896, for the term of ten years. The defendants are copartners, and as sub-contractors are engaged in the construction of the portion of the underground railroad in the city of Mew York, extending from .Great Jones street to Thirty-third street, and to facilitate their work under their contract they have; erected upon what is a portion of. Union Square, in the city of [27]*27Hew York, on the south side of Seventeenth street, between Fourth avenue and Broadway, and directly in front of the plaintiff’s hotel, buildings in which are placed boilers, forges, air compressors, machinery to furnish power, and other appliances for the prosecution of the work under their contract. The action is brought to restrain the defendants from maintaining this building and using it for the purpose for which it was constructed, and to recover the damages sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of the erection and use of the said building. The court, upon the trial, dismissed the complaint, and from the judgment entered therein the plaintiff appeals.

The defendants’ contract for the construction of this section of the underground railroad is dated March 8, 1900. The period within which the defendants are required to complete their work does not appear from the record. There was evidence that the work would be completed within the time provided for by the contract, and it is asserted in the respondents’ brief that that time was within two years of the trial, which was in May, 1901. The structure complained of seems to have been erected in July, 1900. By an act passed April 5, 1832, being chapter 89 of the laws of that year there was included within the park called Union Place ” all the land bounded east by the easterly line of Fourth avenue; west by the westerly line of Broadway; south by the southerly line of Fourteenth street, and north by the northerly line of Seventeenth street. All of Seventeenth street from Fourth avenue to Broadway is thus within the area of Union Square. It would also appear that at some time prior to the commencement of this action Seventeenth street, opposite the plaintiff’s premises, had been widened, so that there was included within the paved portion of the roadway, extending from Fourth avenue to Broadway, a plot of land something over 100 feet south of what had been the southerly side of Seventeenth street, and this portion of Union Square had been used as a portion of the driveway of Seventeenth street. As there was no. street open between Fourteenth and Seventeenth streets from Fourth avenue to Broadway, this widened street would appear to have been necessary for the accommodation of the public. After the defendants obtained their contracts they inclosed a portion of what had been used as Seventeenth street, in front of the plaintiff’s hotel, 100 [28]*28by 120 feet, with a high board fence, and within this space erected buildings wherein were placed boilers, forges, air compressors, machinery to furnish power, and appliances for the prosecution of the work under their contract, and this space is also used as a storage place for tools and machinery.' The power generated within this in closure is compressed air, which is conducted to the work in lines of pipe, and the structure is so erected as to leave in front of the plaintiff’s hotel a paved carriageway of the same width as is the roadway of Seventeenth street east of Fourth avenue and west of Broadway. In this roadway, however, there is a line of street railway.

The court below found that the construction of the rapid transit railroad in which these defendants are engaged is an important public work; that the work is not performed negligently carelessly or unskillfully or in an unreasonable manner. Ho private rights of the plaintiff are trespassed on by these defendants. The defendants are not liable for consequential damages resulting to the plaintiff from the construction of the work in which they are engaged. The erection and maintenance of the structure in front of plaintiff’s hotel by the defendants have resulted and will during their continued maintenance result in loss and injury to the plaintiff. The use of the public property by the defendants is merely temporary, being limited by the time necessary for the completion of the work upon which the defendants are engaged. The resulting annoyance to the plaintiff is temporary. The defendants occupy the public property under proper authority. * * * The work could be conducted practically as well and with less injury to this particular plaintiff if the defendants’ plant were placed elsewhere, or were subdivided into a number of smaller plants distributed along the line of the work.- The aggregate damage, however, produced thereby would not be lessened, and the loss which now falls upon the plaintiff would be cast upon others. The defendants are engaged upon a public work under public authority.. The necessary and proper place for the construction of the operating plant were matters to be determined by the contractor and the public authorities under whose supervision and direction the work was to be performed. The proper authorities determined that the plant should be erected in front of plaintiff’s premises. They acted in good faith and their exercise of discretion is not open to review. [29]*29The plaintiff is injured, but is not entitled to either damages or an injunction.”

There are several propositions of law involved in this finding that are disputed by the plaintiff, and their determination seems to be the substantial question presented upon this appeal. That this structure and use of Union Square has caused serious injury to the plaintiff’s premises and the business there conducted is found as a fact by the court and does not seem to have been disputed by the •defendants upon the trial. The plaintiff testified that for the first six months of the year 1900, from the first of January to the first of July, the rental received by him from the rooms in his hotel was between $55,000 and $60,000, and the rental received by him from these rooms during the preceding year, 1889, was about $96,000; that the rental from July 1, 1899, to January 1, 1900, was between $55,000 and $60,000; the rental from the rooms from the 1st of July, 1900, to the 1st of January, 1901, the period during which this structure existed, was less than $25,000, and from January 1, 1901, to Hay 1, 1901, the rental received was less than $18,000. These were the receipts from rentals of rooms, disconnected entirely with the receipts from the restaurant, the business being so conducted that the rooms were rented separately. Thus, the amount received, for rent of the rooms after the erection of this structure and in the commencement of the work upon this subway was reduced to less than one-half what it had been immediately preceding the commencement of this work. The effect of the erection of this structure and the use to which it has been put appears from the evidence of persons who had occupied these rooms in the hotel fronting upon Seventeenth street, and appears to have been a substantial appropriation of the plaintiff’s property and a very serious damage to the business that he conducted upon the premises.

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Related

Germenten v. Bradley Contracting Co.
186 A.D. 868 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1919)
Jacobus v. Willis
74 Misc. 591 (New York Supreme Court, 1911)
Carpenter v. City of New York
115 A.D. 552 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)
Mount Morris Bank v. New York & Harlem Railroad
50 Misc. 417 (New York Supreme Court, 1906)
Bates v. Holbrook
89 A.D. 548 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A.D. 25, 73 N.Y.S. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-holbrook-nyappdiv-1901.