Fox v. New York City Interborough Railway Co.

48 Misc. 162, 95 N.Y.S. 251
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Misc. 162 (Fox v. New York City Interborough Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. New York City Interborough Railway Co., 48 Misc. 162, 95 N.Y.S. 251 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Giegerich, J.

An. injunction is sought by the plaintiffs, owners of property abutting on the street in question, to restrain the defendant from continuing the construction of a railroad through such street. The ground of the application is that the consents required by statute have not been obtained. The requirements referred to are contained in section 91 of the Railroad Law (L. 1890, ch. 565, as amd.), which, among other things, provides as follows: “Sec. 91. Consent of Property Owners and Local Authorities.— A street surface railroad, or extensions or branches thereof, shall not be built, extended or operated unless the consent in writing acknowledged or proved as are deeds entitled to be recorded, of the owners, in cities and villages, of one-half in value, and in towns, not within the corporate limits of a city or village, of the owners of two-thirds in value, of the property bounded on and also the consent of the local authorities having control of that portion of a street or highway upon which it is proposed to build or operate such railroad shall have been first obtained.” One of the pieces of property relied upon and included by the defendant toward making up the “ one-half in value ” required by the statute is a large plot, occupying an entire block, having a frontage of 534 feet on the street in question and running back between the two streets on either side a distance of over 800 feet to the street in the rear. The block is owned by the Ursuline Convent, which maintains thereon an academy and chapel, located approximately in the center of the block. The sole use made of the property is for the purposes of such academy. The entrance, both for carriages and for pedestrians, is upon the street in question. The grounds, so far as improved, are devoted to lawns, shrubbery, groves, gardens, and such other purposes as are incidental to the uses of the school conducted by the convent as a boarding and day school. The question is whether the entire assessed valuation of the block can be included for the purpose of making up the one-half in value required by the statute above quoted, or whether only such proportion of such .assessment as represents the part of the property abutting on the street in question should be included. On behalf [165]*165of the motion the claim is made, as I understand it, that only the front of the tract to a depth of 100 feet should be reckoned in, giving such lots the value of similar unimproved lots on adjacent blocks. This method would be obviously unfair, however, because, if followed out on all the streets bounding the block, it would leave entirely out of account an interior piece, over one-half in area of the entire block (comprising all that was more than 100 feet back from the several streets), and on which are located all the buildings. On the other hand, to include the entire assessment would, I think, be equally unfair in the other direction and give this property undue voting power on an important proposition which concerns especially the property immediately fronting the proposed railroad and having a frontage on no other street. It is not reasonable to construe the statute as meaning that an entire block, merely because held in one ownership, is entitled to be voted for its full value on all four streets bounding it, while a neighboring block, held in several ownerships in the usual way, would have only a fraction of that voting power. Such a construction would give the owner of such a. block approximately four times the voting power of other owners and in four different places. Such an extreme inequality was surely never intended by the law. It would be totally subversive of the principle of equal representation on which the statute is based. It would place it in the power of the owner of a solid block to dominate the neighborhood and force a railroad upon one street and exclude it from another, notwithstanding the unanimous desire to the contrary of owners of a greater aggregate frontage on the several streets concerned. On the other hand, I realize the practical difficulties in making any accurate apportionment of the assessment, especially in a' case of this kind, where the property is not vacant, but is improved in a measure and is occupied as an entity, and is consequently more or less affected, and directly affected, for better or worse, by whatever happens on any of the four streets by which it is bounded. Too much weight ought not to be given, however, to the condition of the property at the time [166]*166of the obtaining of the consents. As said in Tiedemann v. Staten I. M. R. R. Co., 18 App. Div. 368, 370: “The statements in those affidavits were in reference to the situation as it then appeared, and in view of the location of the two houses on the premises. This may not always so continue. * * * The manner in which the description is given in the assessment roll is a matter of no moment. Xor is the necessity of procuring consent limited to the street on. which the property may front when it is also bounded on another street in which the construction of a railroad is proposed. The frontage of premises bounded on two or more streets may not in some places be the same or so limited for all time in the future as it is or hitherto has been.” In the case just quoted from, the question now in issue was referred to, but dismissed without consideration, as not presented by the facts. It was there said (page 370) : “ It is unnecessary to inquire whether land bounded upon a street may extend so far back from it that the remote portion may not be deemed included in that so bounded for the purposes in question. Such a suggestion is not applicable to the property on the north side of Hyatt street. As represented by the ownership it is in two parcels. That on the west, adjacent to Stuyvesant street, is owned by one Norvell, and that on the east, adjacent to St. Mark’s place, is owned by the plaintiff. The depth of each of those parcels north from Hyatt street is less than its depth from those other streets respectively, as represented by the plat in the motion papers. In the common acceptation of the words property bounded on ’ a street it is difficult to see how this owned by Norvell and the plaintiff can be denied that relation to Hyatt street; or how in that respect any part of such property can be taken out of the operation of the statute applicable to that relation to such street, for the purpose of establishing the prerequisite condition of consent of the owners to the right of the defendant to proceed to the construction of its railroad there.” The dimensions .of the lots referred to are not stated in the report, but to make that case parallel to this, as respects the point under consideration, we should 1 re here a strip along East Two Hundredth street, the [167]*167street in question, having the frontage of 534 feet and a depth of less than half that amount, or say 250 feet instead of a depth of over 900 feet on the one side and over 800 on the other, as is actually the fact. As just said, the dimensions are not mentioned in that case, and for aught that appears the depth may have been much less than 250 feet. That decision may be regarded as an authority for the proposition that a corner lot of ordinary dimensions may be counted in for its full appraised value on the street from which it has the least depth and in which it is proposed to build a railroad in computing whether the requisite consents have been obtained. It may be remarked in this connection that there is no apparent unfairness in allowing the owner of a corner lot of dimensions not exceeding the average, say 100 feet by 100, to vote the full assessment of his property on each street.

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Related

Tiedemann v. Staten Island Midland Railroad
18 A.D. 368 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)
Merriman v. Utica Belt Line Street Railroad
18 Misc. 269 (New York Supreme Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 162, 95 N.Y.S. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-new-york-city-interborough-railway-co-nysupct-1905.