Langdon v. Mayor of New York

4 Silv. Ct. App. 271, 45 N.Y. St. Rep. 191
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Silv. Ct. App. 271 (Langdon v. Mayor of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langdon v. Mayor of New York, 4 Silv. Ct. App. 271, 45 N.Y. St. Rep. 191 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Maynard, J.

—Upon the trial of these actions at special term all the material facts, except the amount of damages and the value of the plaintiff’s rights, were stipulated, and it was agreed that, if the court should decide that the plaintiffs were entitled to judgment for the relief demanded in the complaint, the question of the amount of damages and of the value of plaintiff’s interest in the premises should be reserved, and be thereafter ascertained in such legal manner as the court might direct. The trial court held that no property rights of the plaintiffs had been invaded by the defendants, and directed judgment for a dismissal of the complaint in each case upon the merits.

The general term reversed these judgments and ordered a new trial. The defendants thereupon appealed to this court and gave the usual statutory stipulation for judgment absolute, if the orders granting a new trial should be affirmed. The decision of this court upon that appeal was favorable to the plaintiffs, 93 N. Y. 129 and conclusively determined the extent of their rights, and directed judgment absolute against the defendants. When the remittitur went down, the usual formal order was entered making the judgment of this court the judgment of the supreme court and directing that execution might issue for the plaintiffs’ costs, when taxed and inserted in the judgment, and for such other amount as the court might adjudge to be recoverable against the defendants. Subsequently, upon the motion of the plaintiffs made at general term upon the stipulation of the parties, a judgment was entered fixing the rights of the plaintiffs, and [273]*273ordering a reference to take proofs as to the value of the property appropriated by the defendants, and the amount of past damages, and to report the testimony taken with a statement of the facts deemed to have been proven, and reserving all other questions until the coming in of the, report, when either party might apply for further relief at the foot of the judgment.

This practice was authorized by the concluding paragraph of § 194 of the Code, which provides that when judgment absolute has been ordered in this court and the remittitur sent down, an assessment of damages, or any other proceeding requisite to render the judgment effectual, may be had in the court below. The referee reported the testimony, with his opinion that the value of the property appearing therefrom to have been taken by the defendants in each case was $75,062 or $1,000 per lineal foot of bulkhead, and that the past damages in the one case amounted to $42,998, and in the other case to $36,693. This report was set aside and a new reference ordered upon the ground, stated in the opinion at the general term, that the referee had improperly taken into consideration the benefits which might accrue from the erection of platforms and sheds by the permission of the dock department under chapter 249 of the Laws of 1875.

As the granting of such privileges was entirely discretionary, and highly improbable after the adoption of the plan for the improvement of the river front reported by General McClellan, engineer in chief of the department in 1871, they were no longer to be regarded as a lawful element of value or of damages. A second reference was interrupted by the death of the referee, and a third referee appointed, who was authorized to take proofs and report as to the same facts, and upon the hearing either party was to be at libertóte read the testimony of any witness examined upon the former references, or to call any such witness for further examination, and to read any documentary evidence offered on the previous hearings, and any testimonv or evidence so [274]*274offered should be subject to any legal objection thereto upon any other ground than the absence of the witness or of the original documents offered.

The referee reported the testimony taken, with his findings, to the effect that the value of the plaintiffs’ property in each case, at the time of its appropriation, was $7,506, or at the rate of $100 for each lineal foot of water front, and its annual income value $375. Interest upon the value of the property was allowed by way of damages.

The testimony of the witnesses upon the question of value was widely variant, and proceeded upon irreconcilable lines of difference. Upon the part of the plaintiffs they were persons more or less familiar with the former market and rental value of this kind of property and they testified, after an exhaustive examination as to their qualifications and the grounds of their opinions, that, in their judgment, its market value in 1877, at the time of its appropriation by the defendants, ranged from $865 to $1,500 per foot, and its annual rental value from $46 to $50 per foot. These estimates of value did not include any increase on account of platforms or sheds erected, or for the erection of which permission might be obtained from the dock department, under the “ Shed Act ” of 1875, but did include the possibility of the exclusive use of the bulkheads in connection with the adjoining piers by steamship companies, under the act of 1885.

The evidence on the part of the defendants was mainly confined to the amount of wharfage actually collected for the use of plaintiff’s property at and immediately preceding the time of its appropriation by the defendants, and the estimate of witnesses of the annual income to be derived from it; and it was this testimony which was adopted and followed by the referee in arriving at his conclusions upon the subject of value.

The application of this rule limited the consideration of the question to the actual present productiveness of the property, which might be dependent upon a variety of causes [275]*275not affecting its intrinsic value, and which did not therefore afford a safe or reliable criterion of its worth to the owner. If the sovereign power in the exercise of the right of eminent domain could take the property of the citizen at a valuation based upon the net income realized from it, it is feared that a very large part of the ■ farm property of the state could be acquired by it at a purely nominal consideration. But it is the potentialities of a given piece of property, both developed and undeveloped, which constitute its chief element of value. The general term took this view .of the evidence when the report of the referee came up for confirmation, and, while not willing to adopt the opinion of plaintiffs’ witnesses, and characterizing it as a “ greatly exaggerated estimate of the value of these privileges,” it also discarded the evidence of the defendants, and declared that their estimate of value “ was on the other hand ridiculously small.” The court then called attention to evidence offered and excluded, which might have afforded a fair ground upon which to base a correct judgment. This rejected evidence consisted of a report of the dock department showing that the defendants had bought other property of a similar character at various places upon the North river front, and paid therefor prices averaging about $600 per lineal foot of front. Because of the exclusion of this proof, the court set aside the report of the referee, and directed a further hearing before him for the introduction of additional testimony upon which a judgment might be rendered.

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Related

Langdon v. . Mayor, Etc., of City of N.Y.
93 N.Y. 129 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
In Re the Petition of Thompson
28 N.E. 389 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
Kingsland v. . Mayor, Etc., of New York
18 N.E. 435 (New York Court of Appeals, 1888)
Board of Commissioners of Pilots v. Clark
33 N.Y. 251 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Silv. Ct. App. 271, 45 N.Y. St. Rep. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langdon-v-mayor-of-new-york-ny-1892.