Beers v. Schlessinger

120 A.D. 700, 105 N.Y.S. 779, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1292
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 A.D. 700 (Beers v. Schlessinger) 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
Beers v. Schlessinger, 120 A.D. 700, 105 N.Y.S. 779, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1292 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The property which has occasioned this controversy is located upon Chrystie street in the city of New York. - It had a frontage of sixty-eight feet nine inches on .Chrystie street upon which there had been erected a building or buildings, and of this sixty-eight feet nine inches, the northerly fifty-two feet were taken "in this proceeding, leaving the owner sixteen feet nine inches. The owner of this property also owned a lot fronting on- Belancey street which was included in the property taken, and the commissioners awarded for No. 13 Belancey street and Nos. 145 and 147 Chrystie street, together, to the owner $49,500,- and to the lessee of this property the sum of $86,000, which was divided as an award for the buildings of $71,000, and for what was called the leasehold $15,000. To that report the owners filed .their objection that the award- made to the lessee on account of the unexpired term of the leases held by him on. properties .Nos.. 145 and 147 Chrystie street included in damage parcel No. 85 was greatly in excess of the fair market value of the unexpired term of said leases; second, that the.award made to the owners for the land included in the parcel designated [702]*702damage parcel No. 85 is inadequate and much less than the fair interest of the- owners in the premises taken at the time of. the vesting of title in the city of New York and not due compensation for damages sustained by said taking; and, third, that, the eomm'is-. sioners adopted an erroneous method of estimating the value of the leasehold and the amount of the award for said leasehold to be paid to the lessee. The property vested in the city of New York in pursuance of a resolution of the board of estimate and' apportion-' ment on the 28th day of' July, 1903. These objections .were over ruled by the Special Term and- the report confirmed, .and there is presented on this appeal the question as to the correct method of ascertaining the interest of a lessee of real property taken under the right of eminent domain..

The property in question was,, at the time the title vested in the city,-owned by one Robert R:-Stnyvesant who' had on the 5th day of July, 1899,. leased it to Adolph Schlessinger by three leases for twenty-one years with covenants' for two renewals of twenty-one years each. These leases were identical in form and the rent reserved for the term was $1,650 a year, the .tenant tp pay all taxes, assessments and other charges. There is no question raised as to the value fixed by the commissioners upon the property, as a whole, but the owners-object to the award made for the value of the leasehold of $15,000 in addition to the award made to. the lessee for the value of the buildings erected upon the property. In'this discussion, therefore, we may assume that the total value of the land and .the buildings was properly fixed by the commissioners.

The commissioners ' awarded the landlord $49,500, but this included his interest in the Belancey street property." It would appear, from -the award and the testimony that' the commissioners fixed the value of the fee of the land of the Chrystie street property at $42,500, and of this amount awarded the tenant- $15,000 and the owner $27,500. • This would make- the total value of the Chrystie street property as fixed by the commissioners $113,500, of which the tenant was awárded $86,000 and the owner of the fee $27,500. Béfore the commissioners the owners conceded that the tenant was entitled to whatever award should be made for the build- - ings and the question as between the landlord and tenant seems to . have been, confined to the amount that, should be awarded to the [703]*703lessee, in addition to what was considered to be the value of the buildings, as the value of the leases. lipón this question experts were examined by both the landlord and tenant, and they attempted to fix the value of the lessee’s interest in the property upon calculations as to the amount of rent paid to the owners and as to the amount of rent which the tenant was able to collect from his subtenants; and the different theories upon which these experts based their judgment is illustrated by the remarkable conclusions at which they arrived. The expert for the tenant estimated the unex-. piréd term of the leasehold interest on the day the title.vested in the city .at $130,662.03, being some $17,000 more than the total value of the property as found by the commissioners for buildings, lessee’s interest and lessor’s 'interest. So - far as I understand, the accuracy of his mathematical computation is not disputed, and if the value of the leasehold could be correctly estimated by such a method I do not see that the owner has suffered any damage, and yet he was in receipt of a net rental of $1,650, with the probability of a considerable increase when the lease came to be renewed. It is only fair to say, however, that- this witness estimated the entire property as worth $141,646, so that in his opinion the value of the fee of the property subject to the lease was about $11,000. The expert called for the lessors testified that the market value of these leases if offered for sale would be about $3,500. This element of market value did not seem to include any interest in the buildings upon the property as the parties had by their apparent acquiescence agreed that an award for the buildings should be made to the tenant. But in the view I take of the proper, method 'by which the value of a lessee’s interest in real property is to be ascertained,, it seems to me that it is impossible to- eliminate the value of the buildings upon the property and treat the lease as a lease of unimproved property.. In considering the method to be adopted in ascertaining the value of the interest of a tenant of real property for a term of years, we must first.obtain a clear'idea of the situation. StuyÁsant was the owner of a plot of land, and as such owner he was entitled to the use of the property, and it could not be taken from him except for public use, and then only upon paying him its full value. In 1899 he leased that property to one Schlessfnger for twenty-one years, with a covenant of two renewals [704]*704of twenty-one years-each. Certain'rent was reserved, the tenant to pay. all taxes, assessments and other charges and to erect a building or buildings upon the premises. At the end of the twenty-one years the landlord was to have the privilege of purchasing the buildings at an appraised value or granting a new lease, at a rental to be based upon five per cent of the value of the property as unimproved property. At the end of this.first period of renewal the landlord had a similar option, either to purchase the building or to grant a new lease, and at the expiration of ■ the second renewal all improvements upon the property were to belong to the landlord. In 1903, about four years after the execution of this lease, the city of.New York took the property, and was, therefore, to pay to whoever owned it its fair I value at that time. ¡That value was to be, ascertained; not by an Í examination, of the profits of the business carried on in the buildings I or the iise. to which the buildings could be put, or the value of the j buildings to the owner as a business site,.but the fair market value I -thereof^ the price for which the property could be sold, and as ■' against both the owners of the property and the tenant that selling 1'price or actual market value is fixed as the amount that the city is required to payj and it stood in place of .the property. Now, it is.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A.D. 700, 105 N.Y.S. 779, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beers-v-schlessinger-nyappdiv-1907.