In re the City of New York

74 A.D. 197, 77 N.Y.S. 737
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 A.D. 197 (In re the City of New York) 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 City of New York, 74 A.D. 197, 77 N.Y.S. 737 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

.No question arises upon this appeal as to any lands actually taken for and covered by the causeway or bridge structure. The property to which our attention is called was taken for other purposes in connection with the improvement, and the precise issue is whether for the taking of such property consequential damages should be awarded. By consequential damages we mean such as ai’e inflicted by the destruction of easements in and over streets which the property before such destruction enjoyed.

The respondents are owners of land on either side of the structural approach in West One Hundred and Forty-fifth street, and ón the north side of the causeway in East - One Hundred and Forty-ninth street and along River street south of One Hundred and Forty-ninth street. On River street no structure has been erected, all that has been done being to widen the street to .render the bridge more accessible. With respect to the land along West One Hundred and Forty-fifth street, a widening has also taken place, but none of the land has been used in the building of the causeway or inclined approach of the bridge. Had these strips of land not been taken;, there would still have been on either side of the causeway an unobstructed street surface from Lenox avenue to the river of about twelve feet in width, and thus the easements upon and over the street, although restricted in extent and character, would still be retained by the abutting owners. With the widening of the street, the abutters have been enabled to preserve almost unrestricted their easements of light, air and access. The side streets are not as wide as was originally One Hundred and Forty-fifth street, and opposite the property of the abutting owners there now, arises the masonry' wall of the inclined causeway. Some damage has thus been inflicted, but the street is preserved, access is insured, sewerare to be provided, and the situation is quite different than if the masonry wall had risen from the border line of the abutting owners’ property.

What has just been said applies equally to the land along the north side of East One Hundred and Forty-ninth street. There some of the land taken has been used and is now covered by the elevated causeway, and. had nothing more been - done the rule of damages applied would have been the correct one, for, then the [203]*203property line would extend up to the line of the causeway itself. Sufficient property, however, was taken in addition to make along the north side of the structure a street and sidewalk on the sides of these inclined approaches, and there is to be now from River avenue to the Harlem river a paved street, with suitable sidewalk and with sewer provided, assuring to the abutting owners all the usual street easements. In fact, the position in which these abutting owners, as well as those on East One Hundred and Forty-fifth street, find themselves is precisely the same as the position in which the property owners along the south side of East One Hundred and Forty-ninth street are placed by the building of the bridge. There the street surface in front of their property has been narrowed also and the masonry wall rises before them, but it is not contended that they have thereby suffered any consequential damages in addition to actual damages inflicted.

Unless the title acquired or to be acquired is such that, though apparently devoted to a street use, the city at any time, without the consent of the abutting owners and without making compensation, can change such use, divert the property to any other purpose, or actually sell it, no consequential damages can be awarded. In other words, the fee which the city acquires must be fee simple absolute.

Some of the respondents find comfort and apparent support in the claim that the city takes title in fee simple absolute by insisting that the land is to be used as an approach to the bridge, and that an approach to abridge is not a street. “ There is no mystic force in terms or charm in words.” The space leading to a bridge may be both a street and an approach, and it requires little reasoning upon the subject to conclude that a street may constitute an approach to a bridge and that an approach to a bridge may be something entirely different from a street. This is well illustrated in some of the bridges which have been built by the city.

Thus, with respect to the Washington bridge, where no streets existed and it was necessary to take property not alone for a bridge proper but for approaches thereto, there did not from such taking of the lands result the creation of a street in any such sense that it gave to those whose property abutted on such approaches easements over the same as though streets had been laid out. Again, in the Jerome avenue approach to the Macomb’s Dam bridge, extending over marsh [204]*204land, there were no streets and there was no necessity for them. The situation is entirely different, however, where streets have been laid out and the Legislature authorizes a bridge and causeway, the structure of which is to actually occupy the whole or a part of such streets. Thus, in the cases of the approach to the Third avenue bridge at One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street and the Willis avenue bridge, where streets on either side were provided for and the approaches were located in existing thoroughfares, awards were made on the theory that the lands remaining after part was t-alcen were to still enjoy easements of light, air and access, though to. some extent such easements were impaired by the erection of the structural approach. In such a case the abutting owners have easements which if interfered with or taken away- entitle them to compensation, and if totally destroyed so as to deprive the land remaining of all easements of light, air and access, there would necessarily in the award have to be included, in addition to the other damage, the consequential damage thus inflicted upon the land. by reason of the destruction of such easements.

. It would serve n'a useful purpose to continue a discussion as to when a street is not a street but is an approach to a bridge, because it tends to confuse- rather than clarify the subject. With respect to an improvement such as the construction of a bridge to be erected where formerly there were no streets, and where it is necessary to take the land in fee simple absolute and pay the full value thereof, the rights and interests of abutting owners in and to such property, Whether called a street or an approach to a bridge, are entirely different from what they are when a bridge is placed in the whole or part of a street already existent. To call the space which leads to the causeway a street or an approach is not controlling; but'in each instance the intent of the Legislature, the existing conditions when the bridge-plans were filed and the extent and character of the fee which the city must acquire are determinative of the damage suffered by property owners.

In this proceeding some of the property owners had easements upon streets, a part only of which have been taken, and some abut on land, the fee of which was taken for street purposes, and the question is, was the city- authorized to and will it acquire a title in fee simple absolute so that it may hereafter divert such lands from their [205]*205present use as streets and destroy the easements over them as streets which the abutting owners enjoy.

In condemning lands m imtitum for public purposes it is the duty of those upon whom such power is conferred to see to it that no more land is taken and no greater damage is done to what remains than is necessary for the- public use intended.

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Related

Wolfe v. State
23 A.D.2d 136 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1965)
Jafco Realty Corp. v. State
18 A.D.2d 74 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1963)
In re Clinton Street Police Station Site
123 N.Y.S. 198 (New York Supreme Court, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.D. 197, 77 N.Y.S. 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1902.