In re The Board of Education

24 A.D. 117, 48 N.Y.S. 1061
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 A.D. 117 (In re The Board of Education) 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 The Board of Education, 24 A.D. 117, 48 N.Y.S. 1061 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Patterson, J.:

Upon an application of the hoard of education of the city of New York to acquire title to certain lands on the northerly side of Ninety-third street and the westerly side of Amsterdam avenue for school purposes, commissioners of estimate and appraisal were appointed by the court, and such commissioners have made their report, from [118]*118which it appears that part of the land taken was formerly included within the old Bloomingdale road, and another part within a lane running westerly from Bloomingdale road towards the Hudson river. Among the owners of the land taken under this procéeding was John 0. Baker. His premises are situated at the corner of Ninety-third street and the Boulevard. On the commissioners’ damage map it appears that the Bloomingdale road adjoined the eastern boundary of Baker’s land. Parcels Nos. 4, 9 and 10 on such map were all parts of Bloomingdale road, lying between the westerly and the center line of that road, as it existed prior to 1868, in which year it was closed. Parcel No. 2 on the commissioners’ damage map lies to the west of the westerly line of the Bloomingdale road and is in part land lying in the bed of the lane referred to, which is called in some of the papers in this case Mott’s lane. The commissioners reported that the title to the fee in the parcels 2, 4, 9 and 10 was in unknown owners; that Baker had perpetual easements of light and air and of access to the four parcels; that the entire value of the land and easements was $1Y,954, and they awarded Baker for the value of his easements $13,551 and the unknown owners of tire fee $4,403. Objections were filed to the report and'to the awards by Mr. Hamilton and others, they claiming to he heirs of Charles Ward Aptliorp, their ancestor, in whom the fee of the four parcels at one. time vested; and the subjects they bring up for review on an appeal from an order confirming the report of the commissioners, are, first, the decision of the commissioners that the appellants were not the absolute owners in fee of such four parcels (which involves the correctness of the award to unknown owners), and, second, the decision of the commissioners that Baker, the owner of the westerly portion of the property taken, had the easements referred to and was entitled to the award therefor, and, third, the decision of the commissioners in making the apportionment as they did, between the unknown owners of the bed of the old Bloomingdale road and the owners of the easements appurtenant to Baker’s land.

With the subject of the value of the land and of the easements we have nothing to do. None of the testimony relating to that matter appears in the record, the appellants having waived their exception in respect to value, and confined their objection to that relating to the title.

[119]*119Respecting the appellants’ contention that there should have been a specific and absolute award to them of the value of the naked fee, we do not find in the evidence such a clear, exclusive right in them as would compel a direct award of the amount to them in this proceeding. It was not made to appear, so far as we are able to discover from this record, that they were the only heirs of Charles Ward Apthorp or alone entitled to receive this money. It is said that the commissioners should have made the award to these appellants because their title -was undisputed. If it were made plain that they are the only present representatives of their ancestor, entitled to the land, the claim would be reasonable and just; but upon the evidence given, such as it is, respecting the descendants and heirs at law of Charles Ward Apthorp, the commissioners were justified in their action respecting this award. It was not fully known to such commissioners who were or might be at the present time all the heirs at law of Apthorp, and in such case they were authorized by section 3 of chapter 191 of the Laws of 1888 to make the award to unknown owners.

The question which has received the most elaborate and exhaustive treatment by the appellants relates to the right of Mr. Baker to the award for the easements. The claim is made that no such right exists, and a multitude of authorities are cited by the learned counsel for the appellants to sustain the proposition that, -when the Blooming-dale road was closed by the commissioners of Central Park under the authority of chapter 697 of the Laws of 1867, the public easement in both the road and the lane, and all private rights and easements also, were effectually and forever extinguished, and that the land vested in the owner of the fee untramelled by any right of any adjacent owner. The title to Mr. Baker’s land, to which the easements taken by these commissioners were appurtenant, is derived as to part of such land from one Clarkson, and as to another part from Vanderbilt. The rights of Clarkson and Vanderbilt and their grantees were determined and adjudged in the cases of Holloway v. Delano (64 Hun, 31; S. C., 139 N. Y. 414) and Holloway v. Southmayd (139 id. 390). It was decided in those cases that the effect of the act of 1867 was merely to extinguish public easements, and that the purpose and the effect of that act, it is plain from its language, were to discontinue the road as a public highway, [120]*120and in so doing to extinguish the public easement. The legislature was not concerned with private easements and rights in the lands covered by the public highway. Its action left these private interests as they were; the public had no interest in their destruction. The award of damages was to compensate property owners who could prove they had been injured by the discontinuance of a public highway.”

Unless we are simply, to ignore the determination of the Court of Appeals as to the effect of the very conveyances involved here, the right of Baker to the award for the easements is clear. The whole argument of the appellants upon this subject seems to be an effort to reopen a discussion which has been finally closed by the court of last resort. That effort, if it is to be made at all, must be made in that tribunal. We are bound by its decision, and have neither the right to disregard it nor the disposition to criticise it.

It is further claimed by the appellants that the easements which Mr. Baker may have had were abandoned ; that sometime in 1888 he inclosed his land by building a substantial wooden fence around the property, including Bloomingdale road to its center line, and it is urged that this indication of ownership of the land is incompatible with the claim of a lesser right to mere easements in that land. That contention seems to be disposed of by what was said in White's Bank v. Nichols (64 N. Y. 65), namely, that the “ owner of an easement does not, by asserting aright to the fee of the servient estate, and by taking possession thereof, destroy his right to the easement. No acts of such owner will extinguish his right, save those "that indicate his intention to abandon it, unless other persons have been led by such acts to believe the right abandoned, and to act upon the belief, so that an assertion of the right will be to their injury.” There is nothing in the papers, as they are before us in this case, to show that these appellants, or any one else, have been injuriously affected by the circumstance of the land being inclosed in the manner referred to.

It is thus established, on the authority of the Holloway cases, that the right to the easements was in Baker.

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Related

Lewisohn v. Lansing Co.
119 A.D. 393 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1907)
Denman v. Hamilton
58 N.Y.S. 1137 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
In re Board of Education
52 N.Y.S. 1136 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
24 A.D. 117, 48 N.Y.S. 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-board-of-education-nyappdiv-1897.