In re Avenue V
This text of 144 N.Y.S. 680 (In re Avenue V) 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.
Opinion
It seems to me that the objection is well taken. Experience shows that the block by block rule is usually a proper method of assessing for benefits, and, so far as the damages awarded for the land is concerned, I see no reason for departing from the rule; but I am unable to see any reason why the value of the improvement taken should be assessed back upon the abutting property. The benefit which the abutting property receives from the opening of the street is not enhanced by the fact that not only the land but also the improvement were taken. If buildings were taken upon every portion of the avenue as opened, there might be some reason for applying the block by block rule to the cost of the improvement as well as the land; but, where the street through its greater length is opened through vacant property, and where upon one damage parcel a building is taken, I see no reason why the cost of this building should be assessed upon the adjacent property. I am aware that Justice Bischoff, in an opinion appearing in the Law Journal of October 29, 1906, held that the cost of the improvement should be included in the assessment levied under the block by block rule; but whether or not the block by block rule should be applied depends upon the peculiar circumstances of each case, and the application of > the rule in that case is not necessarily a precedent in others. The provisions of section 992 of the charter, authorizing property owners to convey land to the city for street purposes, exempts their abutting property from assessment for any portion of the expenses of opening the residue of the street, “except the due and fair proportion of the awards that may be made” for the buildings as aforesaid. This indicates legislative intent that the cost of taking a building should not, as a general rule, be assessed on the abutting property, but should be assessed upon the total area of the property benefited by the opening of the street.
I see no reason for interfering with the amount of the award for damages.
The report should be confirmed as to the award for damages, but not as to the assessment for benefits. It may be referred back to the commissioners of estimate to state separately the amount awarded on [682]*682“damage parcel No. 77” for land and for improvements, with direction to the commissioners of assessment to determine whether any portion of the value of this improvement should be charged to the city and to distribute the amount of the award for the building ratably over the total area of property assessed for benefits for the opening of this street.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
144 N.Y.S. 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-avenue-v-nysupct-1909.