In re One Hundred & Sixteenth Street

1 A.D. 436, 37 N.Y.S. 508
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1 A.D. 436 (In re One Hundred & Sixteenth Street) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re One Hundred & Sixteenth Street, 1 A.D. 436, 37 N.Y.S. 508 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The city of New York instituted proceedings for the opening of a portion of One Hundred and Sixteenth street in the city of New York, and commissioners of estimate and assessment were-appointed under the provisions of section 964 of the Consolidation Act (Laws of 1882, chap. 410). The commissioners have made' their report,, by which they have allowed the respondent, the New York Hospital, the sum of $54,533.40 for certain land included in the- bed of the street; and from an order confirming that report certain, of the pwners of property that were assessed have appealed.

[439]*439The commissioners, in making their award, have evidently allowed the New York Hospital the full value of the land taken, subject to no easement, either in favor of the public or of any abutting owner. And the sole question presented is, whether the commissioners adopted a correct principle in making this award; and that depends upon whether the New York Hospital owned this strip of land, the value of which has been awarded to it by the commissioners, in fee, free from any easement or light of way. If such an easement existed, we think that the principle that the commissioners adopted was wrong and that the award should have been the value of the property subject to the easement.

It is now settled in this State that one holding an easement in a strip of land which entitled him to have it maintained as a street or road sustains no damage in consequence of the taking of the fee of such road or street as a street or highway. After it is thus taken and maintained by the public authorities, the abutting owner’s easement still remains unimpaired. He has all the right in the road or highway that he had before enjoyed, and no property of his is taken by the proceeding. Thus in the case of City of Buffalo v. Pratt (131 N. Y. 299) it was expressly held that the owner who does not own the fee of the land in the street has no right to compensation upon the taking of the street, under legislative or municipal sanction for a public street so long as the fee of the street is held by the public or municipal authorities and no use is made of the street that will obstruct free passage upon it, or amount to a nuisance, or deprive the owner of the enjoyment of the easement of light, air and access.

Under this proceeding, the city will acquire the fee of the property taken, to be held in trust, however, for use as a public street; and when the fee is thus acquired, neither the city nor the State has the power to devote such property to any use inconsistent with that for which it is acquired and is held, except upon payment of compensation to the abutting property owners. (See Story v. N. Y. El. R. R. Co., 90 N. Y. 173; Kane v. El. R. R. Co., 125 id. 164.)

The New York Hospital was the owner of the fee of the land taken, and was entitled to be paid its value in this proceeding. Under section 970 of the Consolidation Act (Law's of 1882, chap. 410), the commissioners were required to make a just and equitable esti[440]*440mate and assessment of the loss and damage, if any, over and above the benefit and advantage to the respective owners, lessees, parties and persons respectively entitled unto or interested in the lands, tenements, hereditaments and premises so required for the purpose of opening said street. It is the property opened by the New York Hospital that is to be valued, and if such property is subject to any easement either in favor of the public or of an individual, the award should be for the value of the property subject to such easement, as such easement is not in this proceeding taken or appropriated. The one question that we have to determine, therefore, is whether or not this property of the New York Hospital is subject to any easement either in favor of the public or of any abutting owner.

There was no dispute as to the facts before the commissioners. It appeared that upon the plan of the city laid out under the provisions of the Laws of 1807 (Chap. 115), One Hundred and Sixteenth ■ street (the street in question) was laid out as a public street, as was also Eleventh avenue, running at right angles to One Hundred and Sixteenth street. In 1818, after the filing of that plan laying out this street and avenue, by a deed dated March 27, 1818, and recorded April 9, 1818, the New York Hospital acquired a large piece of property, and subsequently entered into possession of the property thus acquired, erected upon it a hospital for insane patients, and has remained in the exclusive and uninterrupted possession and enjoyment of such property up to the present time. Subsequently Eleventh avenue was opened through the property, and at the time of the conveyance to Carrigan hereafter mentioned such avenue was a public street, the fee of which had been acquired under the act of 1807 (Chap. 115), and such street was maintained by the city of New York as an open public street. One Hundred and Sixteenth street, how ever, has never been opened or used as a street, but the portion of it in question was inclosed by a substantial in closure and occupied by the New York Hospital. The south boundary line of this property thus acquired by the New York Hospital crossed One Hundred and Sixteenth street as laid out on the plan of the city diagonally running in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, and struck the south boundary of One Hundred and Sixteenth street 176 feet 2 inches west of Eleventh avenue; the hospital thus owning a [441]*441piece of ground to the south of One Hundred and Sixteenth street as laid out, about 57 feet 7 inches upon Eleventh avenue, and 176 feet 2 inches upon the southerly boundary of One Hundred and Sixteenth street as laid out.

One Andrew Carrigan appears to have been the owner of the piece of property to the south of that owned by the New York Hospital, and this piece of land to the south of One Hundred and-Sixteenth street owned by the New York Hospital would be a portion of four lots upon the southwest corner of One Hundred and Sixteenth street and Eleventh avenue, being a portion of two lots on the avenue and two lots upon the street as those lots were laid out upon the map of the city. By a deed dated October 25, 1866, the New York Hospital conveyed this parcel of land south of One Hundred and Sixteenth street to the said Carrigan by a deed which the appellants claim subordinated the property of the New York Hospital in the street to an easement.

It is clear from an examination of the property that this conveyance to Carrigan ivas for the purpose of squaring out his property so that he should have the title to all laud on the southwest corner of One Hundred and Sixteenth street and Eleventh avenue. The consideration of that conveyance was one dollar, and there is no evidence that the hospital received any other consideration than that named in the deed. The deed was the usual full covenant warranty deed, the piece of land conveyed being described as

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Bluebook (online)
1 A.D. 436, 37 N.Y.S. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-one-hundred-sixteenth-street-nyappdiv-1896.