Bohm v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.

29 N.E. 802, 129 N.Y. 576, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 247, 84 Sickels 576, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 907
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 802 (Bohm v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bohm v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co., 29 N.E. 802, 129 N.Y. 576, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 247, 84 Sickels 576, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 907 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The defendants seek upon these appeals to obtain from this court some decisive statement as to the rule which should obtain in actions like these, in arriving at the amount of damages which should be paid by defendants to abutting lot owners on account of the building and maintenance of defendants’ roads in the city of Hew York. To that end they have waived every other exception in the cases.

There are, it is .said, large numbers of cases in which the decision of the question is of the greatest importance to both parties.

The defendants claim that if the correct rule for the ascertainment of damages had been followed in these cases, the uncontradicted evidence showed that plaintiffs had not sustained any damage whatever. At the outset the plaintiffs’ counsel sets up a bar to our entering upon an examination of the subject by alleging that the qxiestion is not raised, and that there is no exception which brings the matter before us.

In the Somers case the defendants requested the court to find as follows :

“ Twentieth. The existence and operation of the defendants’ railroad in Second avenue has greatly increased the population of the locality in which the plaintiff’s property is situated, and has brought traffic into Second avenue. The plaintiff’s property has thereby incidentally been benefited.

“ Twenty-first. Since the year 1880, there has been a general *583 rise in the value of real estate situated upon Second avenue, and this increase in value is largely attributable to the existence and operation of the defendants’ railroad.”

Substantially the same requests were made in theBohm case. These requests the defendants state are founded upon uncontradicted evidence.

Upon a careful perusal of the evidence in the case, I think this contention is well founded. The court refused to make the findings as requested and the defendants excepted.

Motions were made by the defendants in each ease for a dismissal of the complaint on the merits, because, among other grounds, it appeared the plaintiff’s property had been benefited by the railroad and had increased in value since its erection and by reason thereof. The motions were denied and exceptions taken.

We think, upon the whole, that the question was sufficiently raised. It is true that exceptions are unavailing when they are taken to the refusal of a judge to find as facts matters which are merely evidence and which are immaterial. In these cases, however, we must remember that the sole question at issue between the parties upon this branch of the case was as to the proper rule to be observed'in ascertaining the amount of damages the plaintiffs had sustained, if they had sustained any.

The amount of damages would be materially affected by the rule which should be observed in determining their existence. And yet in making the bare finding of the amount of damage sustained, it would not appear that any particular rule had been followed, and hence it would not appear that any erroneous rule had been adopted. It might in some cases be urged, perhaps, that there was no evidence upon which to base a finding of damage, if a correct rule had been adopted, and yet a perusal of the testimony might show some slight amount, and hence the exception would fail. The judgment might at the same time be really founded upon the incorrect rule.

There would, in almost any event, be a difficulty in determining whether a wrong rule had or had not been adopted. *584 If it were a trial by jury, the judge would be requested to instruct the jurors as to the true rule, and an exception would lie to his refusal and to the rule actually adopted and the question brought up in that way. In 'a trial before the court it is more awkward. The requests in these cases were to find certain facts which had been established by uncontradicted evidence, and upon those facts the defendants seek to draw an inference in the nature of a conclusion of fact or of law, or both, that the plaintiffs have sustained no damage. The court has in truth refused to find the facts as requested, and such refusal added to the circumstance that he has found the plaintiffs have sustained substantial damages and to an amount stated by him, leads to the inevitable conclusion that he refused to find them, because they were in his judgment immaterial. A request to find that the plaintiffs had sustained no damage, or a motion for a nonsuit on the ground that no damage had been proved, might not alone bring up the question. Taking all the means together, which the defendants adopted in their perfectly legitimate attempt to bring up for review the question as to what is the proper rule of damages in these cases, we must say that if their able counsel has not yet succeeded, it is difficult to see how success in that line can be achieved hereafter.

Without overruling the cases upon the subject of exceptions to refusals to find upon mere matters of evidence, we think the cases before us are distinguishable. The question sought to be raised here is so difficult of presentation by way of exception or request upon a trial before a court or referee, and is withal so important, that we are disposed to say the various requests to find and the exceptions taken to the judge’s refusals, together with the motion for a nonsuit on the ground that no damage had been proved, and the exceptions taken to the denial of such motion, should in these cases and under the circumstances be, regarded as sufficient to enable us to review and pass upon the question on its merits. ’ Justice we think demands this. ,

Although these are suits in equity, commenced to obtain *585 equitable relief and to prevent the defendants from operating their road unless they pay the plaintiffs the damages they will sustain from the permanent interference by the railroad with their easements of light, air and access, yet the rules upon which such damages are to be awarded are so far well settled as to enable us to say that those damages are oidy such as would be given in a proceeding for the condemnation of lands for a railroad use, regard being had to the different characteristics of the property to be taken in these cases.

The rule was last announced in this court in the recent case of American Bank Note Co. v. New York Elevated R. R. Co., * not yet reported. What rule obtains in this state in proceedings to condemn the kind of property which has been taken by the defendants in these cases is now made the -subject of inquiry. Generally in taking land the rule may be said to be to pay the full value of the land taken at its market price, and no deductions can be made from that value for any purpose whatever. Then as to the land remaining, the question has been to some extent mooted, whether the company should pay for the injury caused to such land by the mere taking of the other property, or whether*, in case the proposed use of the property taken would depreciate the value of that which was not taken, such proposed use could be regarded and the depreciation arising therefrom be awarded as part of the consequential damages suffered from the taking.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 802, 129 N.Y. 576, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 247, 84 Sickels 576, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bohm-v-metropolitan-elevated-railway-co-ny-1892.