Kohlasch v. New York State Thruway Authority

482 F. Supp. 721, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9809
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 7, 1980
Docket76 Civ. 4395
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 482 F. Supp. 721 (Kohlasch v. New York State Thruway Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kohlasch v. New York State Thruway Authority, 482 F. Supp. 721, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9809 (S.D.N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, owner and lessee respectively of real property in the City of New Rochelle (the “City”) seek damages from the City for injuries resulting from the discharge onto their property of drainage carried from City streets through a drain constructed by the defendant on land adjacent to plaintiffs’ property. In addition, plaintiffs seek permanent injunctive relief against a continuation of such conduct.

This action is the latest in a series of efforts by the plaintiffs to secure the requested relief. Initially, they filed a complaint in this Court naming only the New York State Thruway Authority as defendant. In that complaint they alleged various causes of action and theories of jurisdiction, including: injury to a navigable channel of water crossing plaintiffs’ property, for which the Court’s admiralty jurisdiction was invoked; the taking of property without due process of law or just compensation, a cause of action alleged under the federal question and civil rights statutes; and common law torts, for which the plaintiffs sought to invoke the Court’s pendent jurisdiction. After filing a third-party complaint against the City, the Thruway Authority moved to dismiss the complaint against it. In an opinion dated October 17, 1978, this Court dismissed all causes of action against the Thruway Authority except those alleging obstruction of plaintiffs’ navigable waters; the latter were cognizable within the Court’s admiralty jurisdiction. 1

While their action against the Thruway Authority was pending, plaintiffs filed a complaint in the New York State Supreme Court alleging causes of action against the City arising out of the same circumstances. Shortly thereafter, on June 2, 1978, the plaintiffs filed the present complaint in this Court against the City. Like its predecessor complaint against the Authority, this complaint alleges damages to maritime interests; due process claims grounded on an alleged unconstitutional taking of property; and a variety of state law torts, principally sounding in trespass. The basic injury alleged by the plaintiffs remains the same, although here the injurious acts are attributed to the City, acting either alone or in concert with the Thruway Authority.

The City does not dispute plaintiffs’ assertion of admiralty jurisdiction over the fourth, fifth, ninth, and tenth causes of action to the extent that they allege maritime injury. However, it has moved to dismiss the remaining six causes of action for failure to state claims upon which relief may be granted. In doing so, it urges the Court to apply the rationale of its previous opinion to the present situation. This sug *723 gestión disregards the unique features of the Thruway Authority, and the obvious differences between it and the City. 2 The Court reaches the same result it did in its earlier opinion, albeit for somewhat different reasons.

A. Unconstitutional Taking

In order to state a cause of action for unconstitutional taking, plaintiffs must show that their property was taken under color of state law, without due process or just compensation, and that no “adequate provision” to compensate for the taking exists under state law. 3 Here they have failed to do so.

The power to condemn is a sovereign, not municipal function. 4 However, in New York that power has long been delegated to cities and to municipalities. 5 The City of New Rochelle is both. Specifically, the City is empowered under New York law “to acquire by purchase, if [it] is able to agree with the owners on the terms thereof, and otherwise in the manner provided by the eminent domain procedure law, real property within or without [its] limits for the construction, maintenance and operation of drainage channels and structures for the purpose of flood control . . ..” 6 In short, it has the power to condemn; and when it exercises that power, it acts under color of state law. 7

From its very inception New York law has provided an appropriate method for the enforcement of just compensation in condemnation cases. The New York State Constitution, paralleling the Federal Constitution, requires such compensation, 8 and the New York statute under which municipalities must act when they condemn land creates the appropriate judicial mechanism. 9 Moreover, New York state courts have long been available to provide full relief to those damaged by such takings. 10 This is true even in cases of a de facto taking, as long as the plaintiffs can show a “physical entry *724 by the condemnor, a physical ouster of the owner, a legal interference with the physical use, possession or enjoyment of the property or a legal interference with the owner’s power of disposition of the property.” 11 The physical entry alleged here is precisely the kind of intrusion for which the New York state courts already offer a remedy. Indeed, for more than one hundred years those courts have explicitly recognized that the occupancy of land for the purposes of maintaining drainage ditches, and the consequent injury, are “interference[s] with the proprietary interests of the owner as entitle[] him to the just compensation made necessary by the [New York] Constitution as a condition precedent to the taking of private property for public use.” 12

Plaintiffs are in a position to obtain complete relief, including both compensation and injunctive relief, in their pending action in the state court. Here they seek, not to bypass the state courts as they did once before, 13 but instead to proceed against the City on the same causes of action in both forums. New York law contains “adequate provision” for these plaintiffs to obtain just compensation in the state courts. Thus, plaintiffs’ claims of unconstitutional taking fail to state a federal cause of action. Accordingly, the second and seventh claims are dismissed.

B. Pendent Jurisdiction over State Law Claims

Plaintiffs urge the Court to exercise its pendent jurisdiction over the four remaining state law claims, on the theory that both these and the admiralty claims “derive from a common nucleus of operative fact.” 14 Assuming that this assertion is true, and that the admiralty claims in fact are substantial, the Court has power to hear the state law claims. However, that power need not always be exercised: “It has consistently been recognized that pendent jurisdiction is a doctrine of discretion, not of plaintiff’s right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
482 F. Supp. 721, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kohlasch-v-new-york-state-thruway-authority-nysd-1980.