Halfmoon Bridge Co. v. . Canal Board

107 N.E. 344, 213 N.Y. 160, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 745
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 107 N.E. 344 (Halfmoon Bridge Co. v. . Canal Board) 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
Halfmoon Bridge Co. v. . Canal Board, 107 N.E. 344, 213 N.Y. 160, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 745 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

The appellant was the owner and operator of a toll bridge spanning the Mohawk river between points within that section of the said river which is to be canalized for the purposes of the barge canal. The plans adopted by the state for the construction of such canal involved the destruction of appellant’s bridge, and in 1910, in accordance with said plans, the canal board served upon the appellant a certificate by which it undertook to appropriate the toll house and lands owned by the latter on either side of the river,' and by which was asserted the claim that the Barge Canal Act did not require the state to construct at its expense a new bridge for appellant. Subsequently this action was commenced, there being alleged in the complaint, in substance, the foregoing and other facts, and that the respondents proposed to destroy said bridge, which was of the value of about forty thousand dollars, under the claim of their right to do so without constructing at the expense of the state any bridge in the place thereof, and which reconstruction if made would cost about eighty thousand dollars; and the complaint, amongst other things, prayed for judgment that the respondents should be enjoined from destroying the bridge except on the condition of building at the expense of the state a new bridge of suitable pattern in the place of the one thus destroyed. The respondents by their answer confirmed appellant’s claim that they were asserting the right to destroy its bridge without compensation or substitution of another bridge *163 "by alleging their right to remove the old bridge and denying any obligation ón the part of the state to construct a new one in its place.

After the action was at issue, a large number of motions were made involving the continuance and discontinuance of injunctions restraining the respondents from proceeding with their plans and various other questions, with the result that it was held by the Appellate Division that the appellant’s substantial allegations were correct and that the respondents could not destroy its bridge without the construction in the place thereof, at the expense of the state, of another one. While the action was in this condition it was brought on for trial, the evidence submitted and closed, and a brief presented on behalf of the appellant. For one reason or another the decision of the action was delayed until a special act was passed permitting the respondents to take possession of the property of appellant which was then left to secure compensation by proceedings before the Court of Claims, and thereafter notice was served in purported compliance with the terms of said act by the respondents claiming to appropriate and take possession of such property.

At this point the respondents made their motion for leave to serve a supplemental answer in the action setting forth the facts last enumerated and the permission to do which was granted on the condition, amongst others, that they pay the sum and allowance of fifteen hundred dollars in controversy on this appeal.

In reversing this allowance the Appellate Division seems to have proceeded on the theory that it was made as an extra allowance of costs •under the provisions of section 3253 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that this was not an action in which such an extra allowance of costs could be made, and that, therefore, the allowance being based on an.erroneous and impossible theory should not be allowed to stand as a condition of serving the supple *164 mental answer. We think that in reaching this conclusion the Appellate Division fell into error.

In the first place I should not be willing to concede, if that question were involved, that this action was not one in which an extra allowance of costs could be made under the Code. In adopting the view which it did the Appellate Division seems to have considered the condition of the action as it would have been after the supplemental pleading had been served and when very likely there would not have been involved any subject-matter which would sustain an extra allowance of costs in the amount of $1,500. But of course the condition of the action which appellant was entitled to have considered was the one which existed before the supplemental pleading was served and at the time when the allowance was made. At that point the action was being maintained to restrain the respondents from destroying appellant’s property, said, and by some evidence shown, to be worth the sum of $40,000, without compensation or replacement, and which right thus to destroy the respondents were asserting. Without attempting actually to decide, that question, it seems to me pretty clear that under these conditions the subject-matter of the suit was the prevention of the destruction by the respondents of property belonging to the appellant worth $40,000, and that in the event of success an extra allowance under the provisions of the Code could have been granted on the basis of such subject-matter which would have exceeded, the amount of the item in question. (Hayden v. Mathews, 4 App. Div. 338; affd., 158 N. Y. 735; Williams v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 61 How. Pr. 305; Mingay v. Holly Mfg. Co., 99 N. Y. 270; Lehigh Valley R. R. Co. v. Canal Board, 146 App. Div. 151; affd., 204 N. Y. 471.)

But, in the second place, that question is not involved, for we have no doubt that the court at Special Term in the exercise of a sound and reasonable discretion had a perfect right independent of the provisions of the Code to *165 which reference has been made, to compel the respondents, as a condition of allowing service of the proposed supplemental answer, to pay such sum as in its judgment would fully compensate the appellant for expenses incurred in the litigation whether taxable or not, and that this is what was done.

Section 544 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “Upon the application of either party, the court may, and, in a proper case, must, upon such terms as are just, permit him to make a supplemental complaint, answer or reply, alleging material facts which occurred after his former pleading.”

It has been held that under these provisions the court to which application for leave to serve such a supplemental pleading is made “ ‘ may determine whether there has been inexcusable laches, or whether any of the reasons appear which are recognized as giving authority for denying the exercise of the general right in the particular instance; and the court must grant leave, unless the motion papers show a case in which the court, may exercise a discretion as to granting or withholding leave.’ * * * It has a discretion to permit or refuse a supplemental pleading; but that discretion must be exercised reasonably, and not capriciously or wilfully.” (Spears v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y., 72 N. Y. 442; Holyoke v. Adams, 59 N. Y. 233; Pollmann v. Livingston, 17 App. Div. 528; Park & Sons Co. v. Hubbard, 198 N. Y. 136, 139.)

In the case first cited the city of New York originally had been the disinterested stakeholder of a fund claimed by two contesting claimants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 N.E. 344, 213 N.Y. 160, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halfmoon-bridge-co-v-canal-board-ny-1914.