Cannon Point North, Inc. v. City of New York

46 A.D.3d 146, 843 N.Y.S.2d 51
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 9, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 A.D.3d 146 (Cannon Point North, Inc. v. City of New York) 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
Cannon Point North, Inc. v. City of New York, 46 A.D.3d 146, 843 N.Y.S.2d 51 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Buckley, J.

Plaintiff is the owner of the premises known as 25 Sutton Place South, part of which building rests upon a platform above the northbound and southbound roadways of the FDR Drive between East 54th Street and East 56th Street; two other buildings, public parks, and private gardens also rest on the structure, which plaintiff terms the FDR roof structure and defendants refer to as the understructure of plaintiffs building. At issue is who owns that structure, and thus, who is responsible for its maintenance and repair.

In 1936, the first segment of the FDR Drive, then known as the East River Drive, was put into service, from the terminus of [148]*148the Triborough Bridge at East 125th Street to East 92nd Street. In 1938, the Board of Estimate resolved to extend the Drive to East 49th Street. The Board authorized the taking of fee title to that segment, except for East 54th to 56th Street, where “a permanent easement for street purposes” would be acquired, “together with permanent easements in the land required for foundations and supports of the highway . . . excluding from said easements column rights, which shall not exceed 18 inches in width and shall not be located at intervals of less than 15 feet in the centrally located mall spaces.” From 55th to 56th Street, the easement was to have an elevation of 36 feet. The purpose of these easements was “to permit the owner of the abutting property to construct buildings over the highway and thereby obviate large claims for consequential damages,” and therefore it was “necessary to reserve to the owner of the abutting property column rights in the 4-foot centrally located mall space, shown on the layout map.”

In March 1939, Supreme Court granted the City’s condemnation petition, but reserved for future hearings the issue of just compensation to the property owners. The condemnation order’s description of the property, including the easements, matched that of the resolution.

In October 1939, Supreme Court granted the City’s petition to add to its taking “title to the buildings and structures, above elevation 36.0 feet . . . , as existing on June 28, 1939, between East 55th street and East 56th street.”

During the hearing on just compensation, the City and the property owner at the time, the Henry Phipps Estates (HPE), agreed to slightly modify the easement to “a somewhat less area than originally planned, which will enable the property owner to make use of the area above the plane taken by the easement.” At the conclusion of the hearing, Supreme Court set the just compensation for the easement for East 55th to 56th Streets at $336,757, comprised of $191,200 for “[djamage by reason of easement,” $80,557 for “[ajdditional foundations,” and $65,000 for “improvements.”

The “[ajdditional foundations” award reflected the extra amount the property owner would have to spend to erect foundations to support a building spanning the Drive, “over and above” the cost of normal foundations that could be constructed if the Drive did not exist. The amount assigned to the additional foundations was made “on the assumption that the owner will have the right to erect [itsj foundations on the [149]*149easterly and westerly walls of the subway structure, and also on the mall in the center of the [Drive] structure,” and that it would be “permitted to perform the work during the day time and not at night.” A subsequent order stated that the damage awards had been made upon:

“the assumption that the owner will have the right to use the East River Drive structure as a foundation for part of any buildings to be erected thereon. If this right is not given, then permission is granted to reopen this proceeding for the purpose of giving any additional damages that may be established by reason of such failure and refusal.”

The second segment of the Drive, from 92nd to 49th Street, was opened in 1940. At that time, there was no cover over the easement at issue.

In 1941, the City and HPE executed an indenture that closed and discontinued parts of the City’s easement, along the west wall, central mall foundations and column area, east wall foundations and column area, and certain additional foundation areas, because:

“it was intended by the parties . . . that [HPE], in addition to the column rights reserved to it in the centrally located mall, should have the right to utilize parts of such easement on the east and on the west and additional parts in the said centrally located mall, for the purpose of erecting and maintaining columns and foundations in connection with the erection and maintenance of buildings over and across the easement; but the resolutions heretofore adopted by the Board of Estimate did not reserve to [HPE] the right so to do.”

HPE agreed to erect its columns at certain uniform spacings, “and to restore or replace any roadways, parapets, granite facings, walls, curbs, and any other appurtenances, or structures damaged or removed in said erection.” In addition, HPE granted to the City

“a permanent easement to maintain, repair, or replace parapets, walls and foundations located within the parts of [the] easement to be closed and discontinued, subject, however, to the right of [HPE] to erect and maintain its columns and foundations therein and thereon, and provided that such main[150]*150tenance, repair or replacement shall not interfere with or damage any structures hereafter erected by [HPE].”

In 1957, it was discovered that the City had inadvertently omitted from the condemnation maps any upper limit to the easement, and the Board of Estimate therefore approved a new map, limiting the elevation of the City’s easement to 36 feet, in conformity with the 1939-1941 agreements, Board resolutions, and court orders, so that construction of buildings over the Drive could proceed.

On June 6, 1957, the lessees of the property from HPE entered into an agreement with the City pursuant to which the lessees promised: “To so perform their work of borings, installing foundations, erecting columns and beams, and erecting their buildings as not to endanger the stability of the roadway of the . . . Drive . . . and its appurtenant structures, and [to] replace any portions thereof which are disturbed or affected by such work.” The lessees agreed to a particular work schedule for the “erecting of its steel for the cover deck . . . within and immediately abutting the highway easement.” They further undertook to provide “at their own cost and expense, all necessary anchor bolts, electrical conduits, electrical pull boxes, wall and ceiling chases and niches, required by the City for the future installation of the permanent roadway lighting and ventilation systems and the necessary anchorages in the walls for the future installation of panels or tiles.” The lessees would also submit to the Manhattan Borough President, for prior approval, plans for “maintenance operations which may interfere with vehicular traffic.”

Construction of the subject building was completed in 1959; plaintiff acquired title in 1973.

Inspections of the Drive conducted in 2002 and 2003, at the behest of the City, revealed cracks in the concrete above the Drive and below plaintiffs building and in columns along the Drive, which posed a danger of concrete falling onto passing vehicles.

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Related

Cannon Point North, Inc. v. City of New York
87 A.D.3d 861 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 A.D.3d 146, 843 N.Y.S.2d 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-point-north-inc-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-2007.