Champlain Stone & Sand Co. v. State of New York

66 Misc. 434, 123 N.Y.S. 536
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
DocketNo. 9131
StatusPublished

This text of 66 Misc. 434 (Champlain Stone & Sand Co. v. State of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champlain Stone & Sand Co. v. State of New York, 66 Misc. 434, 123 N.Y.S. 536 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinions

Murray, J.

This claim is filed to • recover damages for making a stone quarry, hereafter described, less accessible by reason of the State’s appropriating intervening land for the purposes of the improved, or new Barge canal.

In the year 1890, one Charles S. Benton was the owner of a piece or parcel of land running to the east from the Delaware and Hudson Company’s property at its railway station at Fort Ann, in the township of Fort Ann, Washington county and State of Hew York. On this land, east of Wood creek, which flowed between it and' the railway station mentioned, is a stone quarry known as the Bice stone quarry, comprising a tract of about fifteen acres and which is the subject of this litigation.

About the 14th day of March, 1906, the said Fenton leased to James E. Flood and James E. Sherrill, for the term of ten years, the. said Bice stone quarry and all the premises connected therewith, together with a right of way from the said quarry over and across the land mentioned to the railroad tracks of the Delaware and Hudson Bailway Company at Fort Ann, with the right to cross said land with a railroad track to enable the lessees to convey the products of the quarry to the said railroad tracks and bring from the railway tracks supplies for the operation of the quarry, and also the privilege of putting in machinery and erecting other necessary structures for the operation of the quarry.

It was agreed in the lease that the lessees should remain the owners of such structures and appliances as they put upon the land, and could remove them at the expiration of [436]*436the lease. This lease was recorded in the county clerk’s office of Washington county on August 7, 1906. Subsequently, and while this lease was in force, on March 24, 1906, Flood and Sherrill transferred and assigned it, with all the rights granted them and all their interest in the quarry, to the claimant herein. This assignment was also recorded in the county clerk’s office of Washington county at the same time the original lease was recorded. On August 27, 1906, the term of the original lease was extended for an additional term, making a total term of twenty years for which the property was leased.

The lease provided that Fenton, the owner and the lessor, was to receive the annual sum of $100 per year as rental and a royalty of four cents a cubic yard on all stone shipped from the quarry. When the original lease was transferred by Flood and Sherrill to the claimant’s company, they received for their leasehold rights and some plant, $30,000 in the stock of the company. They became, and are, officers of the Champlain Stone and Sand Company, and are largely interested therein.

Before the State formally appropriated the land hereinafter mentioned; there were upon the quarry property some machinery and bins constructed in 1907 for the mining, crushing and storing of the stone. There was also built a curved railroad track and roadbed from the quarry to the property of the Delaware and Hudson Company, connecting the quarry with the Delaware and Hudson Company’s railroad tracks at Fort Ann. The claimant niade the roadbed and the Delaware and Hudson Company put on the iron. The roadbed and all the appliances were, with the exception of the rails, bought and placed there by the stone company.

Between the quarry and the tracks of the Delaware and Hudson Company’s railroad at Fort Ann, and flowing through Fenton’s land, is Wood creek. The curved railway mentioned ran from the quarry to this creek, crossed Wood creek on a bridge and then ran to the railroad tracks. This spur, which was built in 1906 from the railroad, ran to Wood creek, spanned the banks of the creek by a wooden [437]*437bridge and then to the quarry. The Delaware and Hudson Company ran their cars, over and back, on this spur, over this bridge, to the quarry. The stone was dumped there in the cars, and the cars ran back to the railroad company’s tracks over the same route.

On December 27, 1906, there was filed in the office of the Superintendent of Public Works, at Albany, a map with the survey of land theretofore made which the State intended to formally appropriate for the purposes of the improved canal.

.The described land of Fenton was duly and formally appropriated by the State by the service on him on January 8, 1907, of the usual map and notice, and a duplicate thereof was served on the claimant on the 8th of August following. On January 14, 1907, a written notice to vacate the appropriated premises was served on Fenton.

The property of Fenton, thus condemned, lay between the railroad tracks of the Delaware and Hudson Company at Fort Ann and the claimant’s quarry. This land is traversed, or crossed, by Wood creek. The railroad track, or spur mentioned, was built by the claimants in the fall of 1907; it was used by the State for transporting its hydraulic dredge in the months of December, 1906, and January, 1907, and for a while previous to this it was not used by the claimants. In building the improved canal, the State follows, as closely as it is practicable, the course of Wood creek, which crosses, as mentioned, the land of Fenton taken by the State. After the appropriation of this property, the State used it for the purposes of the new Barge canal. The work authorized by the State destroyed the bridge built by the claimants across Wood creek, it cut off the direct transportation of stone from the quarry to the railroad company’s tracks, and rendered the quarry less accessible to the Delaware and Hudson Company’s railroad property.

Respecting the destruction of this bridge and the greater inaccessibility of the quarry, the claimant alleges that, in order to operate the said quarry to any extent, it was necessary to pass from said quarry directly across the land so appropriated to the railroad tracks of the Delaware and [438]*438Hudson Company; that said railroad track (which crossed Wood creek) was a necessary incident to the quarry plant, and without said railroad track the operation of the quarry would he practically impossible; that, by reason of the destruction thereof, the claimant has been deprived of a most valuable right of way and easement, and it has been deprived of the only convenient means of conveying fuel and other material to said plant, and of conveying and shipping •the products of the plant; that without the bridge the claimant will be unable to operate the plant, and the necessary cost of building such a bridge would involve the expenditure of a large amount of money.

The evidence of the claimant’s witnesses was that, without the railroad connection and the bridge across Wood creek, the lease was practically of no value.

The claimant’s officers lived in the vicinity of this quarry; they had known the property all their lives, and known about the quarry thirty years. When Flood and Sherrill obtained the lease from Fenton they testified: “ The quarry had

been practically unused for years. It was used occasionally, spasmodically. Might be used a month, and not again for two or three years, and used again for two or three months.”

“ The quarry was operated spasmodically, that is, if you had a job to do you might quarry a few stone there to complete that job, and then it was shut down.” Trap rock was never quarried in this quarry until we leased it, although it was known to be there.” The quarry in question had two kinds of stones, gniess and trap rock. Ho proper cross sections were run or, in my judgment, sufficient tests made to accurately approximate the quantity of either.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Misc. 434, 123 N.Y.S. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champlain-stone-sand-co-v-state-of-new-york-nyclaimsct-1910.