Eastman v. Mayor of New York

46 N.E. 841, 152 N.Y. 468, 6 E.H. Smith 468, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 985
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 841 (Eastman v. Mayor of New York) 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
Eastman v. Mayor of New York, 46 N.E. 841, 152 N.Y. 468, 6 E.H. Smith 468, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 985 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

Andrews, Ch. J.

The main question m this case is as to the rule of damages to be applied for the withholding by the lessor from the lessee of the possession of the bulkhead and wharf rights at the foot of East Seventieth street, East river, under the lease of April 28th, 1887. The lease was executed pursuant to a sale by the dock department, at public auction, for the term of three years from May 1st, 1887, of the wharf-age and cranage which should arise, accrue and become due during said term, for the use and occupation of the wharf property in question, together with the right to collect the same. The plaintiff became the purchaser at the sale, upon his bid of an annual rental of §760. The lease, which purports to be made between the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of T7ew York, by the board of docks, as the lessor, and the plaintiff as lessee, described the subject-matter of the lease as follows: “ All and singular, the wharfage which may arise, accrue, or become due for the use and occupation in the manner and at the rates prescribed by law of all that certain public wharf property situated on the East river, in the city and county of 27ew York, and known and described as follows, to wit: 6 Bulkhead at foot of East Seventieth street, East river,’ together with the right to enter upon the said wharf property, for the purposes of this lease, and to collect the said wharfage.” The lessee was authorized to demand, receive and sue for “such wharfage as may, during the continuance of said term, arise, accrue or become due from the master, owner, factor or agent of any vessel which shall, during said term, come to, lie at or use the hereinbefore mentioned wharf property.” The rent reserved was payable quarterly in advance, and the *472 plaintiff, on or before May 1st, 1887, paid the first quarter’s rent, and, in addition (as required by the terms of sale), the sum of $25 for auctioneer’s fees, making in the aggregate the sum of $215. The plaintiff was never put in possession of the wharfage right. When the lease was executed a barge of the street cleaning department was moored at the wharf, and so remained until after the next quarter day. The plaintiff protested and demanded to be put into possession of the wharf, but although promises were made he was unable to have the barge removed, and after repeated complaints abandoned the effort and never occupied the wharf. This action was brought after the expiration of the term for which the lease was given. The plaintiff sought on the trial to recover as damages the value of the use of the leased property for the purposes of his business as a contractor for the removal of cellar excavations from the city of New York to places on Long Island and elsewhere where filling in was required. The business made it necessary that the plaintiff should have a convenient wharf for dumping the earth into boats for transportation. The evidence tended to show that if the plaintiff could have controlled this wharf for the purposes of his business, it would have been worth to him from six to eight thousand dollars a year. The wharf was equipped with a dump, and the earth brought by the carts could be discharged into a boat beneath the dumping board, which extended over the water.

The trial judge held that the only damage recoverable was the loss of the statutory wharfage which might have been earned by the plaintiff. It was shown without contradiction that if the wharf had been occupied during the whole year by vessels paying wharfage, the wharfage would not have exceeded the rent reserved. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the rent and auctioneer’s fees paid by him, namely, for $215, with interest. Both parties excepted to the direction, the plaintiff on the ground that he was entitled to recover the difference between the rent reserved and the value of the use of the premises during the term for his busi *473 ness, and the defendant on the ground that the complaint did not cover a claim to recover back the payment made, and that the only claim he was entitled to maintain was a claim for wharfage against the city for the occupation of the wharf by the barge of the street cleaning department. It is of the first importance in the decision of this case to ascertain the nature and extent of the right which was vested in the plaintiff by the lease in question. It was not a lease of real estate. The bulkhead or wharf was not leased to the plaintiff. That was a part of the public street, and by means of it access was obtained by the public to the East river. It was Seventieth street extended to the water. The lease did not purport to convey to the plaintiff any exclusive right to the wharf or to the soil, but the wharf remained after as before the lease, in the possession of the city as the trustee of the public right in and to the public streets of the city, for the common use of the citizens. What the lease did grant was the right of wharfage incident to the use of the bulkhead by vessels or boats engaged in commerce. The right to collect the wharfage is an incorporeal right incident to the use of a wharf, for the mooring, loading and unloading of vessels. (Mayor, etc., v. Mabie, 13 N. Y. 151.) This was the only right which the lease granted to the plaintiff. The language confines the grant to the (e wharfage 'which may arise, accrue or become due for the use and occupation in the manner and at the rates prescribed by law,” together with the right to collect the same. It defines the purpose of the grant and the right intended to be given in clear and explicit language: ISTo actionable breach by the city of any express or implied covenant in the lease can exist unless connected with an interference with the very right granted, because only such a breach can be deemed to have heen within the contemplation of the parties to the contract; and, where such a breach has occurred, the damages must, of necessity, be limited to the value of the right as given by the lease of which the lessee has been deprived. (Trull v. Granger, 8 N. Y. 115; Boom Co. v. Patterson, 98 U. S. 403.) The lease in question granted a specific right, and the parties, *474 by their contract, measured the value of the right as between themselves by the amount of wharfage which it was possible to collect for the use of the wharf at the rate fixed by the statute. The value of the wharf to the plaintiff in his business may have been much greater than the ordinary wharfage fees. It is very probable that he took the lease with the expectation that he wotdd practically control the wharf for the mooring and loading- of his own boats without interference by other vessels. But lie acquired no exclusive right by the lease. The wharf remained as before, a public wharf to which vessels might be assigned by the harbor authorities. The only legal damage he sustained, if any, by the failure of the defendant to put him in possession of the wharfage right, was the difference between the rent reserved and the value of the use of the wharf at the rate of wharfage fixed by law. The case of Langdon v. Mayor, etc. (133 N. Y. 628) determines no principle adverse to this view.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 841, 152 N.Y. 468, 6 E.H. Smith 468, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-v-mayor-of-new-york-ny-1897.