In re the City of Buffalo

1 N.Y. St. Rep. 742
CourtSuperior Court of Buffalo
DecidedJune 15, 1886
DocketNos. 1 and 4
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 742 (In re the City of Buffalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the City of Buffalo, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 742 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Smith, J.

All of the persons owning or interested in the lands proposed to be taken in these proceedings, oppose the confirmation of the commissioners report as to the compensation to be paid them. The most serious and important objections made to the report arise out of the claims made by Briggs & Webb, as lessees of a parcel of the land. It appears from the evidence taken by the commissioners, and returned and filed with their report, that Messrs. Whit-more, Rathbun and others, being the owners of certain of the lands, leased a parcel thereof to Messrs. Briggs & Webb for the term of five years, from April 1st, 1882, at the amiual rent of $500. The lease was in writing, under seal, duly executed by the lessors and lessees, and by it the parties agreed that the lessees should “have the privilege of renting said premises for the term of five years longer, after the expiration of the said first five years, upon giving to the party of the first part [the lessors] written notice of [744]*744their election so to do at least six months prior to the termination of this lease, at the annual rent of $600;” that in case of a sale of said premises by the lessors at the expiration of the original term of five years, the lease should be cancelled and be null and void, but the lessees should have at least six months notice of such sale prior to the expiration of such term, and in case of a bona fide offer to purchase the demised premises from the lessors, which they should elect to accept, the lessees should have the' first privilege of purchasing said premises at the price and upon the terms of such offer, and in case the lessees refused to so purchase, they should surrender the possession of the premises, and remove their buildings and property therefrom at the expiration of the original term of five years; that in case said premises should not be sold at the expiration of said original term, and the lessees should elect to take a renewal of the lease for a further term of five years, then a sale of said premises by the lessors at any time after such renewal should terminate the lease, and the lessees should surrender said premises to the lessors or their grantees within six months after written notice so to do, but that in case a bona fide offer to the lessors to purchase said premises of them, the lessees should have the first privilege to purchase the same at the price and upon the terms offered, and if they refused to make such purchase, they should surrender possession of said premises, and remove their property therefrom, as before agreed. The lease also contained a provision that the lessees should not use said premises “for any other purposes than for ice houses, harvesting ice, or uses necessary for or adapted to the business of ice dealers.”

After the commencement of these proceedings, and in the month of May, 1884, the lessees, in pursuance of the-terms of the lease, gave notice in writing to the lessors, that the lessees did “elect and determine to renew said lease and rent said premises for the term of five years longer after the expiration of the first five years mentioned in the lease, at the rent and upon the terms therein mentioned.”

Soon after the execution of the lease the lessees took possession of the demised premises, and erected thereon a large ice house, with engines, boilers, elevators, platforms, scales and other machinery and appliances for receiving, storing, weighing and delivering ice in large quantities. Evidence of experts was given tending to prove that the cost of the building, machinery and appliances was from $15,000 to upwards of $20,000, the estimates of the witnesses varying several thousand dollars. Evidence was also given that the annual rental value of the demised premises was from [745]*745$1,000 to $6,000, the estimates of the several witnesses differing to that extent.

The commissioners report that they have ascertained and determined the just compensation to be paid to the owners of, and persons interested in, that part of the lands taken in these proceedings, which is owned in fee by Messrs. Whitmore, Rathbun and others, to be $31,000, of which sum they award to said Whitmore, Rathbun and others, $23,975; to said Briggs & Webb for their leasehold interest under the lease aforesaid, $7,000, and to another lessee of a small part of the lands last mentioned, twenty-five dollars.

An affidavit read in opposition to the motion to confirm the report, and made by Mr. Tabor, states that since the making of the report he was informed by Mr. Nelson K. Hopkins, one of the commissioners, that said award of $7,000 to Briggs & Webb only included the value of said lease to them, and did not include the value of the builcb ings and machinery erected by them upon the demised premises; and their counsel insists that, in addition to the award to them of the value of their lease, i. e., of the unexpired term, they ought to have been awarded upwards of $20,000, which they claim to have proved to be the value of their said building and machinery. On the other hand the counsel for Messrs. Whitmore, Rathbun and others object to the award to Briggs & Webb of $7,000 for their leasehold estate, and to the deduction of that" sum from the amount fixed as the just compensation to be paid for the lands of which the said premises leased to Briggs & Webb form a part.

These proceedings are taken mider the provisions of chapter 159, of the Laws of 1884. It authorizes the city of Buffalo to take as additions to its public parks certain lands of which those affected by these proceedings are a part, and the appointment by this court of three commissioners to ascertain and report the just compensation to be paid to the person or persons owning or having any interest in the lands taken by virtue of the law. The language of the lease to Briggs & Webb, in respect to them right to remove such buildings and machinery as they might place upon the demised premises, is peculiar. The lessors do not in express terms agree that they may remove them at the end of the term or terms, or sooner; but Briggs & Webb agree that in case of a sale of the demised premises by the lessors, the lessees declining to purchase, they, the lessees, would

“ Surrender the possession of said premises, and remove their buildings and property therefrom at the termination of said term.”

[746]*746Anri this, and a similar provision in respect to the extended or renewed term of five years, is all the lease ■contains upon the subject of the removal or ownership of any buildings or machinery placed upon the premises by the leases.

Nevertheless, I think that, inasmuch as the lease provides that the premises shall not be used “for any other purpose than ice houses, harvesting ice, or uses necessary for or adapted to the business of ice dealers,” and as the lessees expressly agreed, as above stated, to remove their buildings and property from the premises, it was the understanding of the parties, and such is the legal effect and construction of the lease, taken as a whole, that the buildings and machinery which the lessees should, for the purposes of their trade, place upon the premises, should remain their property, and that they should have the right to remove them at the expiration of the term, and that the lessors acquired no right to or interest in such buildings or machinery. It is entirely clear from the lease itself, that when it was executed, both the parties understood and intended that the lessees would erect on the premises buildings and machinery to be used by them in carrying on their trade as ice dealers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. St. Rep. 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-city-of-buffalo-nysuperctbuf-1886.