In re City of New York

118 Misc. 161
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 Misc. 161 (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, 118 Misc. 161 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

This is a proceeding which, as its title indicates, was begun by the city of New York relative to acquiring title in fee, wherever the same has not been heretofore acquired, to the lands and premises required for the purpose of opening and extending Lafayette Avenue from Flatbush Avenue to Fulton Street,” in the borough of Brooklyn. The total number of parcels affected, as shown by the damage map, is eighty-two; but of this number [163]*163damage parcels 1, 3, 11 to 26 inclusive, 36, 37, 46 to 54 inclusive, 56, 63 to 70 inclusive, and 73 to 80 inclusive will receive only nominal damages, because the city has already acquired easements for street purposes in them, and hence the acquisition of title in fee involves only an award of nominal damages to the property owners.

The principal question is whether the owners of the premises fronting on that portion of Lafayette avenue affected by this proceeding are entitled to substantial damages or only to nominal damages because of being deprived of the use of so-called courtyard ” spaces, which extended eighteen feet from the building line on either side toward the center of the street. The origin of these courtyards, and of any rights of the abutting owners therein, is found in section 1 of chapter 31 of the Laws of 1852, which provided for the opening of that part of Lafayette avenue, as laid down on a map of property belonging to the heirs of John Jackson, deceased, lying westerly of Fulton avenue (now Fulton street). The common council of the city of Brooklyn was authorized to open or lay out the street or to take it by cession. The map in question showed Lafayette avenue as a street ninety feet wide. It was further provided as follows: “ The carriage way of said street shall be thirty feet wide, the sidewalks twelve feet, and the remaining eighteen feet on each side shall be enclosed, used and maintained as court yards.” This act became a law and went into effect on February 23, 1852. By deed dated March 22, 1852, and recorded December 6, 1852, Kimball P. Colfax and others, constituting the then owners of nearly all the lands fronting on the portion of Lafayette avenue affected by the statute, ceded the lands lying therein to the city of Brooklyn. This deed recited the statute and must be regarded as having been given and accepted to carry the statute into effect, and as conveying the land for the purpose and subject to the conditions named therein, a conclusion which is further supported by the fact that the courtyard spaces were actually inclosed and used as courtyards for many years.

Prior to the act above mentioned, and about 1839, the heirs of John Jackson caused the farm owned by them to be laid out into blocks and lots and a map thereof to be prepared, being the same map referred to in the statute. Afterward partition deeds were givsen among the heirs describing certain of the parcels conveyed to one or another as fronting on Lafayette avenue as shown on said map, and thereafter and prior to 1852 a number of parcels were conveyed to others by similar descriptions. This, it is claimed, vested in the grantees in such deeds and their successors in title private easements of right of way over Lafayette avenue as a street [164]*164ninety feet wide; and, it is urged, the act of 1852 could not deprive them of such rights. The deed of cession is a complete answer to this contention so far as the grantors, therein and their successors in interest are concerned, for they thereby relinquished any private easements of right of way which they may have had over the courtyard spaces to accept the plan proposed by the statute. They appear to have owned all the property concerned except three lots at the northwest corner of Lafayette avenue and St. Felix street, which had been conveyed by Christiana A. Peters, one of the Jackson heirs, to one Robert Carse in 1847. So far as appears from the evidence he still owned these lots at the time of the cession and he did not join therein. There was, however, universal acquiescence in the statutory plan for nearly, if not quite, fifty years. It follows that any private easements of right of way over the land within the courtyards have been long since extinguished. There is, therefore, no substantial basis for the city’s claim that the courtyards were only of nominal value to the owners of the abutting premises because of such easements of right of way.

The next question is for what purposes the courtyards might be used. The term courtyard ” is a corrupted form of curtilage ” and means the same thing (12 Cyc. 1021; 3 id. 988, notes 29, 31; Coddington v. Dry Dock Co., 31 N. J. L. 477, 485); and the definitions of that word clearly indicate that it designated a space of land about a dwelling house which not only might be inclosed, but within which appurtenant buildings and structures might be erected. 12 Cyc. 1021; Cary v. Thompson, 1 Daly, 35, 38; People v. Parker, 4 Johns. 424; People ex rel. Murphy v. Gedney, 10 Hun, 151, 154; Coddington v. Dry Dock Co., supra; Shep. Touchstone, 94. This courtyard privilege was, therefore, a valuable one to the property owners along Lafayette avenue between Flatbush avenue and Fulton street. It entitled them, in my opinion, to maintain stoops, balconies and bay-windows, above the surface, and area-ways, coal cellars and vaults below.

It is urged in substance by counsel for the Academy of Music, who oppose all awards other than nominal, that to hold that the courtyards were available under the act of 1852 for structures appurtenant to dwelling houses on abutting premises, such as stoops, bay-windows, etc., would render the act unconstitutional, as authorizing the taking of private property for other than a public purpose, and Matter of Clinton Avenue, 57 App. Div. 166; affd., 167 N. Y. 624, is cited in support of this contention. This case seems to me, however, to support exactly the opposite view, for the Clinton avenue courtyard act (Laws of 1899, chap. 257) expressly authorized the abutting owners to use the courtyard [165]*165space, subject to certain restrictions, for stoops, porches and piazzas * * * and for steps and approaches to a house * * * and for such other purposes as are usual and proper for a plot fronting on a street and appurtenant to a residence, hotel, apartment house or other dwelling house.” This act was held constitutional.

Certain cases cited in support of the proposition that the abutting owners have no right to use the courtyards for stoops, approaches, areaways and other projections appurtenant to their dwelling houses may here be noticed. In the case of Matter of Curran, 38 App. Div. 82, the building which the petitioner proposed to erect upon the courtyard space was apparently not a mere appurtenance to his dwelling house, but a separate building or an extension of the building on the abutting premises. In Linton v. Coupe, 138 App. Div. 518, the courtyards were maintained only by municipal authority. In the present case the power of the municipality to permit encroachments on lands devoted to public use is not involved. Lafayette avenue, as a public street, had its origin in the act of 1852, and the cession in pursuance thereof, and to permit the use of part of the lands for. courtyards, and the maintenance of appurtenant structures thereon was clearly within the powers of the legislature, as is evidenced by the Clinton Avenue Case, supra.

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16 Misc. 2d 158 (New York City Magistrates' Court, 1959)

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