In re Munson

36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 325
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 325 (In re Munson) 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 Munson, 36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 325 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinions

Barrett, J.:

In 1871 the legislature authorized the laying out of a public square or place in the upper part of the city for use as a military parade ground. (Laws 1871, chap. 628.) Under this authority the proper officers located the contemplated improvement upon the low ground north of Fort George, and in due time the maps required by law were filed in the departments of parks and public works. The laying out was thus completed on the 5th day of April, 1873. Proceedings were subsequently taken to acquire title to the land. These proceedings underwent various vicissitudes, not now necessary to detail, until the month of June, 1877, when the legislature having repealed the entire act of 1871, they were finally discontinued. Provision was made in this latter act for a commission to appraise and estimate the loss or damage sustained by the owners of any real estate situated within the map boundaries, by reason of the laying out of the parade ground, or the proceedings taken under the act of 1871, or by reason of the repeal of that act. This commission was appointed, and after taking a large amount of testimony and hearing the parties in interest, it reported against the property owners, holding* in substance that they had suffered no loss or damage by what had transpired.

This report was sent back to the commissioners by Mr. Justice Brady with instructions to allow the claimants the amount of the taxes paid by them, or for which they were liable, during the period [329]*329between tbe completion of the laying out (by the filing of the map on the 5th of April, 1873) and the repeal (on June 15, 1877) of the act of 1871. The commissioners obeyed these instructions and again reported. This report also was sent back by Mr. Justice Daniels, with instructions to include in the tax remission not only the land within the limits of the parade ground proper, but also that in the surrounding streets and avenues. This was done and the report was then confirmed. From such confirmation the property owners — dissatisfied with the mere tax remission and claiming more substantial relief — appeal.

The first questions to be examined are the duties under the act, of (1) the commission, and (2) the court in review of the commission.

First as to the commission.

This involves a general consideration of the subject. It is not denied that but for the act of 1877 the claimants would be remediless. Under the decisions in this State, individual rights have been subordinated to the public convenience. In England, personal rights have been more jealously guarded by the courts. There the public authorities are not permitted to play fast and loose with property owners. They cannot, at their pleasure, discontinue proceedings for the condemnation of lands which have gone so far as to bind the owners, but may be required by mandamus to complete them. (King v. Commissioners, 4 B. & Ad., 335; King v. Hungerford Market Co., Id., 327.)

That this is the natural justice of the thing was recognized In the Matter of the Commissioners of Washington Park (56 N. Y., 148). “ There is a strong equity in the claim made by the appellants,” says Bapallo, J., “ that the election to take their property when once exercised in such manner as to bind the owners, should be equally binding upon those who are empowered and elect to take it; and that the owners should not be exposed to repeated applications for this purpose, which might result, not only in keeping them in perpetual suspense as to their ownership, but might enable the other party to abuse the power intrusted to it by repeatedly making and withdrawing applications until it should obtain an appraisal satisfactory to itself, and thus deprive the owners of that just compensation for their property which is guaranteed to them by the Constitution of the State.”

[330]*330The second section of the act of 1877 was undoubtedly intended ás a measure of relief to the property owners. For upwards of four years they had been practically kept in suspense as to their ownership.” Proceedings to acquire title had been instituted and then discontinued, recommenced and then dismissed, again set in motion and then left in abeyance, until the repeal of the act of 1871 and the final discontinuance. They had sought in vain to compel the completion of the improvement, the courts holding that the department had power to discontinue the proceedings at any time before the confirmation of the assessment. (Matter of Military Parade Ground, 60 N. Y., 319.) Under such circumstances, the legislative sense of justice was naturally aroused. The delays, the uncertainties, the seeming caprices to which these property owners had been thus subjected, naturally pleaded with the legislature for something like the normal measure of justice which would have been awarded in England as, of course, without special act of parliament.

It is clear that the intention was to take this particular and somewhat extraordinary case out of the ordinary rule in this State, which, notwithstanding the strong equity ” to which Rapallo, J., referred, leaves the property owner without power to compel the authorities either to proceed, take and pay for his property, or, upon discontinuance, to compensate him for the practical impounding of his rights. If this was not intended, the act was delusive and meaningless. The legislature knew the state of our law. It was aware that the property owners had no general redress. The machinery of a commission was surely not provided merely that the commissioners might tell 'the property owners what they already knew, namely, that their claims were without legal foundation. No, the spirit of the act is broad and remedial. While the legislature itself carefully avoided legalizing or even recognizing as equitable any claim provable under the act, it yet authorized the legality or equity “ of any and all such claims to be determined by the commissioners and by the court upon the hearing of their report.” It thus left both commissioners and court free to do equity and justice in the premises, to compensate those who had really suffered loss by what had transpired imder legislative authority, and to award such compensation upon fair and just principles.

[331]*331This then was the duty of the commissioners. What is the duty of the court ? Upon this head we are hardly inclined to agree with either side. We neither deem it to be our duty under the act to review each award upon the facts, nor do we feel bound by the negative finding which has been submitted by the commissioners.

The court should consider the legality or equity of each claim, and review the ruling of the commissioners thereon. We refer to the inherent character of the claim — to its allowance or rejection generally. As to the quantum, of damages, it is the commissioners, not the court, who are to “appraise, estimate and determine.” Their judgment, upon conflicting proofs, is of course final. But. the court will review and correct them even in this regard where they err in matter of principle. It is for the court to settle the true rule which should guide in • estimating the damages, and for the commissioners to apply such rule fairly and justly to the facts developed before them. Did the commissioners then err in matter of principle?

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Related

Spears v. . Mayor, Etc., City of N.Y.
87 N.Y. 359 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
Matter of Military Parade Ground
60 N.Y. 319 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
In re Mayor
17 Barb. 617 (New York Supreme Court, 1854)
Edmands v. City of Boston
108 Mass. 535 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1871)
Lafayette, Muncie & Bloomington R. R. v. Murdock
68 Ind. 137 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-munson-nysupct-1883.