Keefe v. Annpaul Realty Co.

215 A.D. 301, 213 N.Y.S. 637, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10957
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 215 A.D. 301 (Keefe v. Annpaul Realty Co.) 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
Keefe v. Annpaul Realty Co., 215 A.D. 301, 213 N.Y.S. 637, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10957 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Kelly, P. J.

The order brought up for review struck out a paragraph in the amended complaint in which the plaintiff attempted to plead the granting of an injunction pendente lite in this identical action. This order should be affirmed, without costs.

The action was brought for an injunction restraining the defendants from interfering with an alleyway to be used as a fire exit connecting plaintiffs’, premises on Fifth avenue, Brooklyn, with Fifty-third street. The plaintiffs complained that the defendant realty company, which had purchased premises at the -southwest corner of Fifth avenue and Fifty-third street, across the rear or westerly end of which premises plaintiffs’ alleyway or fire exit was located, had so interfered with the alleyway by lowering the grade of the floor thereof and by other encroachments therein as to destroy its use by plaintiffs or the occupants of their property on Fifth avenue to which the alleyway or fire exit was appurtenant.

Prior to June, 1912, the plaintiffs were the owners of a parcel of land and premises at the southwest corner of Fifth avenue and Fifty-third street, known as 5302 and 5304 Fifth avenue, with a frontage of approximately seventy-five feet on the west side of Fifth avenue and a depth of one hundred feet. On June, 4, 1912, the plaintiffs conveyed the corner lot, 5302 Fifth avenue, to Glass and Lieberman, the deed containing a reservation as follows: “ Reserving and excepting, nevertheless, to the parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns forever, the right to the use of the five feet wide alleyway, across the rear or westerly extremity of the above described premises, for use as a fire exit from the premises known as No. 5304 5th Avenue, immediately adjoining the above described premises on the south.” In 1924, Glass and Lieberman, who had organized the defendant Annpaul Realty Co., Inc., conveyed the premises 5302 Fifth avenue to that corporation. A building was erected on said corner let fronting on Fifth avenue and ninety-five feet in depth, leaving the alleyway five feet in width open to the sky.

The defendant Annpaul Company had also acquired a lot on the south side of Fifty-third street adjoining the corner lot on the rear, and said defendant began the erection of a building on this Fifty-third street lot and planned to connect this new building with the building on the corner. Defendant’s plans contem[303]*303plated roofing over the existing alleyway. There was a door at the south end of the alleyway opening into the first floor of the plaintiffs’ premises, 5304 Fifth avenue. Fifty-third street west of Fifth avenue slopes down hill to the west; the grade of the alleyway was thus below the door and there was a step in place affording access between the door and the alleyway. While it would appear that the plaintiffs under their reservation of this alleyway had a right to insist that it be kept open for access to the upper floors of the building by ladders or fire escapes, that question is not involved in this appeal, because the plaintiffs are not here raising any question as to the roofing in or covering of the alleyway provided the use of the alleyway as a means of access to the existing door is not interfered with. The original plan of the defendant called for not only roofing over the alleyway, but also for changing the level or bed of the alley by excavating and lowering it several feet below the original level, and connecting it with Fifty-third street by a flight of steps. This proposed change would have made the floor or level of the alleyway several feet below the door connecting it with plaintiffs’ premises. The plaintiffs thereupon brought this action to restrain such interference with the alleyway, and, after hearing, an injunction pendente lite was granted restraining the defendant from erecting any structure or building upon the aforesaid alleyway and from interfering with or obstructing such alleyway in any manner, except that said defendant might build above such alleyway provided that by doing so such alleyway shall remain five feet in width and that the location thereof as well as the grade and floor level thereof should remain as it was at the time the defendant acquired title to its corner lot, and that ample head room should be left to permit of the use of the alleyway as a fire exit, and provided that the doorway and the use thereof in the rear northerly wall of the plaintiffs’ premises on Fifth avenue should not be in any way obstructed, shut off or interfered with to its full height. There is no dispute about the facts so far or as to the physical condition of the property prior to defendant’s interference, or as to the temporary injunction. The learned trial justice has found all these facts. He has also found as matter of fact that plaintiff Pierce Keefe is still the owner of 5304 Fifth avenue, that said property is of substantial value and that such value is substantially enhanced by reason of the rights reserved by plaintiffs, their heirs and assigns, in the alleyway leading from the rear of 5304 Fifth avenue to Fifty-third street. And he made conclusions of law at request of the plaintiffs, that they were justified and warranted in commencing this action and in applying for and obtaining the preliminary injunction above referred to, and that such preliminary injunction “ was properly [304]*304and necessarily applied for and granted.” The defendant company did not appeal from the order granting the temporary injunction. It proceeded to alter its plans so as to avoid the contemplated drop in the floor level of the alleyway with the steps leading up to Fifty-third street at its outer or northerly end.

If the defendant had complied with this temporary injunction there would have been no occasion for proceeding further in the action, but when the defendant changed its original plans as directed by the court, the level of the alleyway was not restored to its original condition but was altered in such way that it was an incline running from the sidewalk grade on Fifty-third street to the plaintiffs’ building, so that, when it reaches plaintiffs’ building, the floor of the alleyway is from three feet nine inches to four feet below the door entering plaintiffs’ premises, and in roofing in the alleyway defendant seriously limited the head room. Prior to defendant’s interference with the alleyway, access to it from plaintiffs’ building was had by means of the door referred to, a step was in place between the door and the floor of the alleyway, and the alleyway was open to the sky. Under defendant’s present construction the step is entirely removed, there is the drop from plaintiffs’ door to the level of the alleyway already referred to, defendant has opened a new door from the alleyway into its Fifty-third street building immediately adjoining plaintiffs’ property, so as to effectually prevent the placing of any step or other means of communication between the alley and plaintiffs’ door, and in roofing over the alleyway defendant has so obstructed the head room as to render it practically useless and dangerous for use as a fire exit. Persons obliged to use this alleyway as at present constructed for a fire exit would be first compelled to jump some four feet, the distance between the floor of plaintiffs’ premises and the floor of the alleyway, and then to reach Fifty-third street as best they might. If the alley was graded up from Fifty-third street back to the level of the floor of plaintiffs’ building, the head room at the door would be between three and four feet. Fire exits are very important in times of conflagration.

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Bluebook (online)
215 A.D. 301, 213 N.Y.S. 637, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keefe-v-annpaul-realty-co-nyappdiv-1926.