Furniss v. Hudson River Railroad

5 Sandf. 551
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMay 29, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Sandf. 551 (Furniss v. Hudson River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furniss v. Hudson River Railroad, 5 Sandf. 551 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

[553]*553By the Court.

Bosworth, J.

—The regularity of the proceedings, on the part of the defendants, to ascertain the compensation to be made to the plaintiff for so much of his land as was actually taken, or physically affected by any operation connected with the construction of their road, or for the purpose of its maintenance, is not questioned. No departure from, or want of conformity to the provisions of the act of incorporation, and of the acts amendatory thereof, in any of the things done to vest in them the title to the part taken, or the right to .injuriously affect other parts not taken, has been pointed out, or is apparent. The title to the former, and the right to injuriously affect the latter, became perfect on the 8th of July, 1848. There is no error in the decision made at the trial, that those proceedings were a complete justification for any entry, after the 9th of July, 1848, on, or injury to, the lands taken for the road. It is not pretended that any was actually taken which the petition did not describe as lands intended to be taken, nor that any land was physically injuriously affected, except such as the petition described that it was necessary to injuriously affect.

It was submitted to the jury to find whether there had been any entry prior to the 9th of July, 1848, on any land of the plaintiff, lying above high water mark, by the defendants, or those who had contracted to construct any part of the road for them, or by- the men in their employ ; and they were instructed, if they found there had been, to find a verdict for the plaintiff, and if they found there had not been, that the defendants were entitled to a verdict. The jury found a verdict in favor of the defendants. This portion of the charge was correct, and the verdict was justified by the evidence.

The plaintiff requested the judge to charge the jury, that he was entitled to recover for any entry, prior to the 9th of July, 1848, on any part of the premises described in the complaint in this action, or in the proceedings of the defendants for the ascertainment of compensation to be made, as parcels No. 26 and 28, lying between high-water and low-water mark. The judge refused to so charge, and to such refusal the plaintiff excepted.

The judge did not err in refusing to charge as requested.

The complaint states the western boundary of the plaintiff’s [554]*554land to be the high-water mark of the Hudson river. It does not state that he owns the fee of the strip between high-water mark and low-water mark, or that he has any estate in it; or right to the possession of it, or that he was ever in the occupation of it. But it does state “ that on a portion of said land is a dock, of which he has been seized and possessed for the time aforesaid ” (the time he became seized of the land, which is alleged to have been in July, 1835); “ that as the owner of the aforesaid lands, he is entitled to grants of the land lying under water, and in front of the lands above described.” That the operation of the defendants in constructing their road, “ has prevented the said plaintiff from passing from his said real estate to the river in front thereof, and has rendered thereby the plaintiff's right to the aforesaid water-grants valueless, to a great degree, and has thereby greatly injured the real estate in the two aforesaid closes, fronting on said (12th) Avenue, by reducing the price of a great part thereof, and taking from the plaintiff another larger part thereof for said road.”

The deeds given in evidence by the plaintiff, and under which he claimed title to the closes described in his complaint, bound them, northwesterly, “ the Hudson river.” He shows no right to grants of the land lying under water and opposite to the two closes, except such as results from ownership of the land bounded by the Hudson river. Whatever right he may have had, appurtenant to his lands described in the complaint, if in judgment of law, it would be injured by the construction and maintenance of the road, it must be presumed that the commissioners took such injury into consideration, and included in their assessment a sum which they deemed a compensation for it.

If any such right has been rendered less valuable, by reason of access to the river from his other lands having been cut off, and if access to it cannot be had by any of the means contemplated by the act, and if such a result was not foreseen, and for that reason the injury was not estimated, the remedy of the plaintiff is an appraisal under § 28 of the act of 1846. (Laws of 1846, p. 283.)

If access may be had to it through any of the means pointed out in \ 16 of the act, and if the company is in fault for not having provided them, the obvious remedy is an action to [555]*555recover damages for not having performed a duty enjoined by the act, or to compel its specific performance.

The hypothetical question put to the witness Richard Oakley, was properly excluded. The question was thus : 2. “ Suppose a lot extending east from the dock and having a connection by the road spoken of with such docks ; state whether or not such lot was injured in value by the construction of the railroad, and cutting off any access to the dock ?” The judge refused to allow the question to be put, and the plaintiff’s counsel excepted to the decision.

The complaint does not allege as a specific ground of damage, that access to the dock from the land east of it has been cut off, and that the value of the lands thus situated has been diminished by that cause. It alleges that the usefulness of the dock has been destroyed. Of this there was no proof. Indeed there could not well be, as its utility at more remote periods is entirely fabulous, and during more recent times has been almost impossible. The complaint also alleges that the plaintiff has been prevented from passing from his lands to the river in front thereof, whereby his right to the water-grants has been rendered to a great degree valueless, and thereby his real estatq fronting on the river has. been injured by reducing the price of a great part thereof, and taking another larger part thereof for the road. The ground of complaint therefore is, that the real estate fronting on the 12th Avenue, has been, as to a part of it, depreciated in value, by rendering worthless the right to water-grants, and as to other parts of it, by actually taking them for the road, and not that the general value of the lands east of the road has been reduced by rendering access from them to the dock difficult. The judge properly decided that the proposed inquiry was irrelevant to any issue formed by the pleadings.

Any contingent and consequential depreciation of the value of the portion of the land not taken, in consequence of the construction of a railroad in a proper manner, and according to its charter, whether reference be had to its market value, or its desirableness as a residence, or for general or any particular use, cannot be made the basis of an action to recover damages beyond, or in addition to the compensation awarded for taking so much of the land as was properly taken. If the usual access [556]*556to the river cannot be conveniently had by reason of the low supporting walls, the obvious remedy is an action for the nonperformance of the duty enjoined by § 16 of the act of 1846, p.

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Related

Henderson v. New York Central Railroad
24 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 344 (New York Supreme Court, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Sandf. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furniss-v-hudson-river-railroad-nysuperctnyc-1852.