In re City of New York

41 Misc. 134, 83 N.Y.S. 951
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 Misc. 134 (In re City of New York) 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 City of New York, 41 Misc. 134, 83 N.Y.S. 951 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Leventritt, J.

This is an application to annul and vacate certain proceedings had by the city of Hew York through its flock commissioner for the acquisition of such rights in the pier known as Old Ho. 24 as were in owners other than itself. The proceedings had progressed to the stage of taking a large amount of testimony before the commissioners of estimate and assessment, offered both on behalf of the city and the present objectors, before this application was made.

The ground of objection is jurisdictional. It is claimed that the proceedings were initiated under a wrong section of the charter, and that the omission to take a necessary preliminary step renders all subsequent acts jurisdictionally defective.

Briefly stated, the individual proprietors claim that their interest on the one hand, and that of the city on the other, partake of the nature of a tenancy in severalty, and that, therefore, proceedings should have been had under section 822 of the charter, which requires that before taking condemnation proceedings the city should make an attempt to [136]*136agree with private owners upon a price for their interest. This section provides that the commissioner of docks is authorized to acquire any and all wharf property to which the corporation then has no right or title, and any rights, terms, easements, and privileges pertaining to any wharf property. Acquisition may be made by purchase or process of law, but, by the latter means, only after an attempt to reach a private agreement. The individual proprietors or claimants maintain that the city of Yew York was the owner and in possession of the northeasterly half of this pier, and that they collectively were the owners and in .possession of the southwesterly half, and that each of said ownerships and possessions was distinct and separate.

This proceeding has been brought under section 824 of the charter which provides that in all proceedings for the acquirement of the interests of a person or corporation who is an owner in common or a joint tenant with the city of Yew York, of any wharf property, rights, terms, easements, etc., it shall not be necessary for the commissioner of docks to make any attempt to agree with the owners upon a price before commencing the condemnation proceedings authorized by section 822. The city claims that its ownership with the individual proprietors collectively is joint and that section 824 applies.

There are certain minor questions involved on this motion but it will be necessary to treat at length merely the fundamental one outlined. The issue is clear. The objectors claim that they own the southwesterly half of the pier exclusively; that the city has no interest therein, and that to acquire a valid title thereto the same proceedings must be had as in the case of a piece of private dock property; that the first requisite toward such acquisition is the preliminary attempt to treat or agree with the owners; that this requisite has not been complied with, and that, therefore, the proceeding is fatally defective. Against this claim of an ownership in severalty of a half of the pier the city sets up a claim of a joint or common proprietorship, and ownership, not of a several half.but of an undivided half in each.

[137]*137I have found the solution of the question not free from difficulty. Such doubt as I have had has arisen from the fact that it is not, nor can be, disputed, that at certain portions of the pier the right to wharfage is severally in the city, and at other portions is severally in the individual ówners, that these rights are exclusive and not subject to interference one by the other. If this proceeding were merely for the condemnation of the several rights to wharfage arising at one portion of the pier as an incorporeal hereditament I should be compelled to.hold section 822 applicable. In reaching the conclusion that the proceeding is well brought under section 824,1 have been determined by the fact that though the wharfage at a part may be the exclusive property of the individual proprietors, the proceeding is for the condemnation of that of which this particular wharfage right is merely an incident, and that as to the rest, both so far as structure and other wharfage rights are concerned, the ownership is joint.

The pier was originally constructed in 1809 and extended in 1849. The original construction was pursuant to the city’s plan to extend piers at right angles from the permanent streets into the rivers. Legislation was- invoked as there was doubt as to the precise rights of the corporation against the fronting lot-owners. Chapter 80 of the Laws of 1798 was the first statute applicable. This was substantially re-enacted in 1801 by chapter 129 of the laws of that year, which also added certain new provisions. The gist of these earlier acts was to vest authority in the city to direct piers to be sunk at the expense of the proprietors of fronting lots, and to grant them a common interest in proportion to the breadth of their lots, and upon the proprietors’ refusal to erect the piers, the corporation was authorized to make piers at its own expense and to receive the entire wharfage to its own use.- Section 8 of the Act of 1801 provided: “ That it shall be lawful for the said mayor, aldermen and commonalty to grant to the owners of lots fronting on any of the said streets * * * their heirs and assigns, a common interest in the piers to be sunk in front of such streets in proportion to [138]*138the breadth of their respective lots.” While this community of interest had reference, probably, primarily to the rights which the lotowners should acquire inter sese, it is important as showing the purpose of the Legislature that where there was joint sharing of expense there should be a resulting joint or common interest or ownership in the piers. This interest in the piers was something distinct from the right to wharfage. It follows, in principle, that where a construction should be undertaken, not by the corporation alone or the owners alone, but under circumstances where the corporation should become a contributing member to the expense of the erection of the pier, it would acquire a community of interest with the other sharers of the expense. .Section 8 was in full force and effect when the Act of 1806 was passed, which is the specific statute under which this pier was erected in 1809 and extended in 1849. Section 1 of chapter 126 of the Laws of 1806 provided that the corporation might, at its own expense, sink piers as it thought eligible, between Whitehall slip and the east side of Exchange slip, and might also, at its own expense, cause such other public basins to be formed as it deemed necessary, and to take to its own use the slippage or wharfage arising therefrom. Section 2, which is the section here primarily applicable, provided: “ That in all cases where the said mayor, aldermen and commonalty should think it for the public good to enlarge any of the slips in the said city, they shall be at liberty and have full power so to do, and upon paying one-third of the expense of building the necessary piers and bridges, shall be entitled not only to the slippage of that side of the said piers which shall be adjacent to such slips respectively, but also to one-half of the wharfage to arise from the outermost end of said piers.”

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Bluebook (online)
41 Misc. 134, 83 N.Y.S. 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1903.