In re Board of Water Supply

73 Misc. 231, 130 N.Y.S. 997
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 73 Misc. 231 (In re Board of Water Supply) 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
In re Board of Water Supply, 73 Misc. 231, 130 N.Y.S. 997 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Mills, J.

This is a proceeding to acquire a tract of land in the western part of the city of Yonkers, desired by the city of Mew York for the purpose of constructing and maintaining there a reservoir in connection with Mew York city’s contemplated new water supply to be obtained from the Oatskill region.

In its condemnation proceedings the city of Mew York secured the appointment of a separate commission for each of the several sections into which it divided the lands to be acquired. In this proceeding, having to do with section Mo. 1 of those' lands, the commissioners recently made their sixth separate report, which embraces parcels Mos. 2, 4, 8-, 14, 17, 22, 27, 29, 34, 38, 40 and 54 and a claim presented by the Ramapo Water Company.

Upon the statutory motion to confirm the report, objections were made to several of the awards, oral 'argument was had, and, finally, very full and- able briefs were submitted by the respective learned counsel.,

I now proceed to consider those objections separately.

First. The city of'Mew York objects to the confirmation of the report as to the general" award made upon parcel Mo. 4.

The report as to that parcel makes a general award to the claimant, David H. King, Jr., of $440,000. That parcel [233]*233consists of fifty-three and six hundred and thirty-six thousandths acres of land, being part of an entire tract containing eighty-six acres. The principal objection made to this award is that the commission received evidence of the valiie as- building lots of the land taken, and of the residue of the tract not taken, although the same has not yet been actually subdivided into building lots, except as being mapped, when the city claims that they were not, when taken,- presently marketable or available for that use.

The situation of the lands is much the same as that of parcels Nos. 2 and 3, Hill View reservoir, section No. 1 (the same section) considered by the Appellate Division in this department in Matter of Simmons, 141 App. Div. 120; affd. by the Court of Appeals; without opinion June 12, 1911; and of parcel No. 5, same section, considered in that Appellate Division in Matter of Simmons (Ware Appeal), 144 App. Div. 255. Upon the views expressed in the opinions of the Appellate Division in' those cases, I think that the commissioners here did not err in receiving evidence of the availability and marketability of the lands as building lots and of their values upon such basis, or in making their awards upon the theory that the lands were so available and marketable. The amount allowed seems not- unreasonable as compared with the estimates of the expert witnesses and was well within the extremes of their testimony. The time needed, according to the concessions of the claimant’s witnesses, within which to develop and actually market all of the proposed lots, does not appear unreasonable for the adoption of such basis. Indeed, it is a fact of practically common knowledge hereabouts that land in the locality of those lands for many years has ceased to be regarded or valued as agricultural land, but has been considered and valued as prospective building lot sites. Indeed, the values given by the city’s experts can be justified upon no other basis. I, therefore, would not feel warranted in setting aside the general award as excessive. "

. Such award of $440,900 is large and much in excess of the estimates of the city’s witnesses, although much less than those of the witnesses for the claimant. It is manifest that, [234]*234upon the trial of so important an issue as that presented in reference to this parcel, each party should have been carefully accorded by the commissioners his or its full substantial rights. The record shows that as to this parcel the city was, by the rulings of the commission, deprived of a very substantial right upon the cross-examination of the witness Mitchell, who was a leading expert witness for the claimant. Upon direct examination he estimated the value of the land actually taken as $682,619 and the general damage to the rest of the tract as $183,828 making a total damage sustained by claimant of $866,447. It appeared upon his cross-examination . that he had been a member of the board of assessors of the city of Yonkers, which embraces these lands, in the years 1904, 19'05 and 1906, shortly before the lands were taken by Hew York city; and that, as such assessor, he had under oath in those years valued the entire tract in the assessment roll of the city. The counsel for the city of Hew York, continuing the cross-examination, then, by various appropriate questions, producing and submitting to the witness the assessment roll alleged to have been verified by him as such assessor, attempted to show out of the witness’ own mouth that, at a time when he admitted that the general real estate market conditions were the same as when the land was herein taken by the city, he had valued the lands therein, that is, the entire tract, at only the sum of $142,000, whereas, as a witness for the claimant, he had just estimated the damages for the taking by the city of only about two-thirds of the tract at the sum of $866,447, a difference which, unexplained, appears startling. The inquiries of the counsel of the city to the above effect were all excluded by the commission upon the strenuous objection of the counsel for the claimant.

It is manifest and indeed elementary that such line of inquiry upon cross-examination was entirely proper. Hothing is more common in the conduct of any sort of a judicial trial than an effort to impeach an opposing witness by showing or attempting to show that out of court he has made a. statement as to a material fact contrary to his direct evidence as to the same. If the witness, upon cross-examination, [235]*235denies the making of such contrary statement, it is always competent for the opposing party to prove, by other appropriate evidence, that he did make it. The ruling of the commission excluding such line of inquiry upon such cross-examination was plainly erroneous. It may also have been very prejudicial to the city. It may be a matter of common belief that boards of assessors in Westchester county do not assess land at anything like its real market value, fixing that standard by recent neighborhood sales or by the' opinions of men experienced in real estate matters; but it does not seem possible that any such discrepancy between assessed 'and real market values can exist as that above indicated. It may well be that, had full cross-examination of the witness along the line attempted been allowed, he would have been entirely discredited with the commission.

While it is well settled that, in general, the report of such a commission will not be set aside for mere errors in receiving or' rejecting testimony, yet in this case the matter at issue is very important; a very large award was made and evidently a large award must be made in the end; there is a wide difference in estimate between the witnesses of the opposing parties, and the witness sought to be impeached was one who would naturally have great weight with the commission; and the alleged contradicting statement was not a casual talk or biased estimate, but was a disinterested estimate made under oath and in the discharge of a public duty. Under these circumstances I have, after much reflection, concluded that the report, as to such general award upon parcel Ho.

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73 Misc. 231, 130 N.Y.S. 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-board-of-water-supply-nysupct-1911.