In re Manhattan Terminal

120 N.Y.S. 465
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 N.Y.S. 465 (In re Manhattan Terminal) 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 Manhattan Terminal, 120 N.Y.S. 465 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

DAYTON, J.

Motion to confirm report of commissioners, dated July 9, 1909, filed July 19, 1909, made by certain owners on notice and by publication in the City Record to all parties in interest; the city having failed to make such motion. The minutes of- the hearing on the return day, November 4, 1909, show that all questions raised were [467]*467deemed properly before the court for adjudication upon the entire report as to damage parcels 3 to 33, inclusive, involving awards aggregating about $3,000,000. The owners complain of the “law’s delay,” nearly three years, from which they have suffered by being deprived of the use and income of their property or its proceeds—an evil or penalty which might be spared in the future by the adoption of simpler and speedier methods for forcibly taking the lands of the citizen for public purposes. This comment is not a reflection upon these commissioners nor upon counsel, • The fault lies in the cumbersome and costly existing procedure. The remedy 'lies in suitable and careful legislation on this important subject. The corporation counsel opposed the awards to damage parcels 3, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 15, 17, 18, 31, 33, 35, 37, 38, 39, 31, and 33. He moved on the argument to confirm as to damage parcel 19. An order by consent was granted directing payments to certain mortgagees and also to the owners of damage parcels 9, 10, 11, 13, 13, 14, 16, 30, 33, 34, and 30. By arrangement between counsel time to exchange and submit briefs was named. On December 16, 1909, briefs, replies, and sur-replies were finally submitted.

It is elaborately urged by the corporation counsel that the awards to which he objects are “palpably excessive, unjust, and against the weight of evidence.” Not a few of the owners protest that their awards are insufficient. A condensed statement as to some of these parcels may serve to indicate the propriety of the awards made for all the parcels in controversy. The valuations referred to are the lowest testified by the respective experts. Damage parcels 4, 5, 17, 18, and 33—premises No. 80 Park Row, area 3,387 square feet: Owner’s expert, $363,790 without the building; city’s expert, $100,000 for land and $10,000 for building; final award, $174,330. No. 83 Park Row, same area: Owner’s expert, $338,700 without the building; city’s expert, $100,000 for land, $3,500 for building; final award, $167,090. No. 15 Chambers street, area 809 square feet: Owner’s expert, $133,-485; city’s expert, $70,765; preliminary award, $93,035; final award, $86,017. No. 1 Chambers street, area 3,105 square feet: Owner’s expert, $394,700; city’s expert, $168,400; preliminary award, $335,000; final award, $317,375. Nos. 11 and 13 Chambers street, area 6,007 square feet: Owner’s expert, $750,875; city’s expert, $363,433; preliminary award, $495,535; final award, $458,360. It appeared that about 1903 these properties sold for less than the awards. The city’s experts seem to have limited their increase in value between 1903 and 1907 to about 10 per cent. Damage parcel 19, area 3,363 square feet, frontage 34 feet on Chambers street and 37.66 feet on Reade street: Owner’s expert, land $189,040, building $10,960; total, $300,000; city’s expert, land $108,098, building $13,000; total, $130,698; award, $146,608.

The owners insist that the report be sent back for revision and correction for inequality aiid inconsistency of awards, and that the commissioners be compelled to state the principles according to which the award for this and other parcels in the said block were made, with items for allowances for the land and buildings taken. Counsel for the owners claim that on their final estimate the commissioners arbi[468]*468trarily reduced their awards 7% per.cent, on five of the six parcels in that block, leaving parcel 21 at the preliminary estimate. This made a difference against parcel 19 of about $12,000. Parcel 21 had been recently improved by the erection of an expensive building for banking purposes. Testimony was given as to the value of the building on parcel-19. The award was for “land and improvements.” The court may have power to return the awards for specification of the items entering into the awards; yet, as was said in 25 App. Div. 22, 49 N. Y. Supp. 319, Board of Water Com’rs v. Shutts:

“Such a course should not be taken unless it is made tc>, appear that there is probable cause to believe that the commissioners have made a material, error which neither their report nor their minutes disclose.”

From In re New St., 63 Misc. Rep, 495, 117 N. Y. Supp. "409 it may be inferred that extreme instances required revision as to certain parcels. No suggestion of additional evidence is here proposed. No change' in the awards, on this record, can be predicated upon what would practically be a reargument.

Damage parcel 15: These premises contained an area of 1,784 square feet, "upon which was a three-story brick building used for a liquor saloon, bringing a yearly rental of $15,500 under a lease having an unexpired term of about 13 years from the time the city took possession December 24, 1906, with rentals $16,500 from July 1, 1909, to July 1, 1914, and $17,500 for the next five years. Owner’s expert, $639,400; city’s expert, $190,400; award, $261,760, out of which $36,100 is to be deducted as compensation to the lessee. The corporation counsel urges that this extraordinarily large rental was paid because the property was located near the entrance of the bridge, but that there was no obligation on the part of the city to maintain that entrance, and that a change thereof would ’decrease largely the rental value, and therefore undue weight was given to the “temporary rental obtained for this property.” Might the commissioners indulge in the happening that the entrance to the bridge would be changed by the city during the terms of the lease in a proceeding other than this? Testimony as to the value of this unexpired term was uncontradicted by the owners. They claim, however, that as the lessee remained in possession until the award was made, and may contingently continue in possession until the expiration of his" lease, the allowance to him is excessive.- If he has so remained in possession, the presumption is that the city is collecting the rent reserved in the lease. At all events, his lease is destroyed by this proceeding. On the record the allowance to him was not excessive.

Damage parcel 31: Nos. 29, 31, and 33 Park street, area 6,545 square feet, frontage nearly 76 feet; two seven-story brick tenements, with stores on ground floor; on the rear was a four-story tenement; owner’s expert, $401,835, land without buildings;' city’s expert, $212,-260, including $29,000 for buildings; award, 279,975. The corporation counsel urged, that the amount awarded was $75;975 more than-this property'sold for in 1904, and was therefore excessive. The voluminous testimony as to this parcel was given in 1907. The manifold reasons stated by the respective-experts were-doubtless considered by-[469]*469the commissioners, though not bound by such opinions. Unless the integrity or qualifications of commissioners be successfully attacked, unless it appears affirmatively that they proceeded upon an erroneous theory, their judgment of values is controlling. No such attack has been made, nor does the record disclose that their conclusions are based upon an erroneous theory.

Damage parcel 27: Nos. 46 and 48 Centre street, area 2,777 square feet; owner’s expert, $194,390 for land, $15,610 for buildings, total $210,000; city’s expert, $88,864 for land, $20,000 for buildings, total $108,804; award $135,181.

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120 N.Y.S. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-manhattan-terminal-nysupct-1909.