Claim of Lawton v. City of New Rochelle
This text of 123 A.D. 832 (Claim of Lawton v. City of New Rochelle) 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.
Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment appointing commissioners, rendered in a proceeding instituted pursuant'to chapter 113 of the Laws of 1883, as amended by chapter 281 of the Laws of 1884,
The case is not changed by the fact that the respondent conveyed the land to the village for a street in 1887. Certainly there was no express contract on the part of the village to pay damages in case the grade of the street established should be changed at any time in the future,.and such a contract cannot be implied from a statute which every one was conclusively presumed to know was subject to repeal at the will of the Legislature. (Meriwether v. Garrett, 102 U. S. 472, 511.) The Legislature has seen fit to dissolve the corporation to which the statute in .question applied' and to create another without giving any remedy against it for damages occurring from changes in. the grades of its streets. The respondent had no vested right to damages before the grade was changed, and when the change occurred it was damnum, absque injuria.
The charter.of the city of New Rochelle (§ 254) contained the usual provision preserving contracts, obligations and liabilities, viz.: All duties, contracts, obligations and liabilities imposed upon said [836]*836village of Hew Rochelle are hereby transferred to*, vested in and imposed upon the city of Hew Rochelle, * * * and the rights and privileges of all persons.or parties that may have arisen or accrued under, pursuant to, or by reason of any such contracts, obligations or liabilities on the part of said village, shall remain and be the same under this act as they would have béen under the charter of and laws relating to said village,” but. these" provisions cannot aid the respondent for the plain reason that his rights had not “ arisen or, aoeruedP This .judgment rests upon the .proposition -that the respondent acquired a vested property .right, in the nature of an easement in the street, to have it maintained at the grade first established; but if I am wrong in controverting that proposition, it by no means follows that he had a vested right to have damages resulting from the invasion of -that right ascertained in a particular manner. There is no provision in the.appellant’s charter for any such proceeding as that followed in this, case, and the right to maintain it to appraise damages that had .not accrued when the appellant was created, cannot be spelled out of the clauses quoted, supra- , The suggestion of the learned judge below, that the right would be imperiled by denying this particular remedy, tends to support the conclusion that the right itself does not exist. If this judgment can be sustained, it will not be difficult to find very many provisions of village and city charters in full force and vigor, supposed long since to have been repealed,
The judgment should be reversed.
Woodward and Jenks, JJ.,. concurred; Rich, J., voted to affirm upon the opinion of Mr. Justice Burr at Special Term;. Hirsohberg, P.
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123 A.D. 832, 108 N.Y.S. 583, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claim-of-lawton-v-city-of-new-rochelle-nyappdiv-1908.