Lent v. New York & Massachusetts Railway Co.

29 N.E. 988, 130 N.Y. 504, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 592, 85 Sickels 504, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 954
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 26, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 988 (Lent v. New York & Massachusetts Railway Co.) 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
Lent v. New York & Massachusetts Railway Co., 29 N.E. 988, 130 N.Y. 504, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 592, 85 Sickels 504, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 954 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Brown, J.

It is provided by section seventeen of the General Bailroad Act in reference to the taking of land for railroad purposes that upon the report of the commissioners of appraisal being made, the railroad company shall give notice to the parties to be affected by the proceeding for the confirmation of such report and the court shall thereupon confirm the same and make an order containing a recital of the substance of the proceedings, a description of the real estate, and a direction to whom the money shall be paid, or in what bank and in what manner it shall be deposited.

Prior to 1876 it was provided in section 18, that a certified copy of the order confirming the report should be recorded at full length in the clerk’s office of the county in which the land described in the order was situated, and thereupon and upon payment or deposit of the sum to be paid as compensation for the land and for costs, etc., the title should vest in the company.

Under the section quoted this court decided in the Matter of the Rhinebeck, and Connecticut R. R. Co. (67 N. Y. 242), that the confirmation of the report created reciprocal rights between the company and the land owner and put it beyond the power of the company thereafter to abandon the proceedings and that the order of confirmation operated as a judgment binding both parties. This result followed the conclusion drawn from the construction given the sections of the statute *508 quoted, that from the date of the order confirming the report the duty of the company to pay the award was absolute, and that it was not necessary in order to conclude the corporation that the title to the land should have become vested in it.

By chapter 198, Laws of 1816, section 18 was amended by adding thereto the following: “ If the company shall neglect to have such order recorded and make the payment or deposit as herein provided, for the period of ten days after the date of such order, any party to such proceedings and interested therein may, at his election, cause a certified copy of the order to be recorded as aforesaid, and thereupon the moneys therein directed to be paid, with interest thereon from the date of said order, shall be a debt against the company, and the same shall be a lien on such real estate, and may be enforced and collected by action at law or in equity in the Supreme Court, with costs.

“Except, nevertheless, the company may abandon such proceedings by filing within thirty days after notice in writing of such recorded order, in the office of such clerk, a notice of its determination to do so, and paying the reasonable costs and expenses of such party to be ascertained and adjusted on motion by the court making such order. But, in case of such abandonment, the company shall not renew proceedings to acquire title to such lands, without a tender or deposit in the court of the amount of said award and the interest thereon.”

This amendment effected a material change in the law in respect to the question raised upon this appeal.

The company was no longer concluded by the order confirming the report. Their duty to pay did not then arise nor did their right to discontinue the proceedings then cease. The duty to pay as well as the land owner’s right to sue for the award was made to depend upon the recording of the order.

“ Thereupon ” is the language of the act; that is upon the recording of the order “ the moneys therein directed to be paid * * * shall be a debt against the company and the same shall be a lien upon such real estate and may be collected by action at law or in equity in the Supreme Court.”

*509 And the right to discontinue the proceedings did not end until thirty days after recording of the' order, or thirty days after notice in writing that it had been recorded by some other party to the proceedings.

Under the section as amended, title to the land vested in the corporation upon the recording of the order and payment or deposit of the award. But no debt was created against the corporation until the order was recorded, and if the company neglected to have that act performed, any other party to the proceedings could cause it to be done, and thereby establish the company’s liability to pay the award.

E follows that ho cause of action existed against the corporation in favor of the land owner for the amount of the award until the original or a certified copy of the order was recorded, and hence an allegation of that fact was essential in the complaint.

The complaint, while it did not expressly allege that the-order had been recorded, did state that it had been “ entered,”" and we are of the opinion that this term was used by the pleader as synonymous with the word recorded. This is manifest by the last line of the paragraph to which order or its record plaintiffs beg leave to refer.”

The words “ entered ” and “ entry ” are frequently used as-synonymous with “ recorded ” in the law’books. (Code O. P. § 1236). All through the statutes, Code and rules, the word “filing” describes the indorsement on a paper of the date when left in a public office, not for record, but for safe keeping. The word entry ” or entered ” describes the duty of a public officer when something more is required than filing. When we speak of entering a satisfaction of judgment we-mean that the satisfaction piece ” or execution is filed and the appropriate words written in the docket indicating that it has been paid. If one should plead that a satisfaction of judgment had been duly entered it would imply that the clerk had done his whole duty. The law requires orders made on notice and in special proceedings to be entered, that is, recorded in an order book. Judgments are to be entered —recorded — in a. *510 judgment book. If a pleader should aver that a judgment or order had been duly entered, I think it would be held on demurrer to be equivalent to averring that the judgment or order had been recorded, that the clerk had done his whole duty.

It remains to consider the question, whether giving to the word “ entered ” the interpretation that wehave, the complaint states a cause of action. The efféct of the recording of the order was to create a debt against- the defendant, and in that respect its liability is analogous to a liability arising upon the maturity of a contract for the payment of money, and the question is presented whether an allegation of non-payment is essential and material to the cause of action.

The Code (§ 481) provides that a complaint must contain a plain and copcise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action and the general rule deduced therefrom is that whatever facts are essential to be proven to entitle the plaintiff to recover upon the trial must be alleged m the complaint.

It does not admit of controversy that upon an ordinary contract for the payment of money, non-payment is a fact which constitutes the breach of the contract and is the essence of the cause of action, and being such within the rule of the Code it should be alleged in the complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 988, 130 N.Y. 504, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 592, 85 Sickels 504, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lent-v-new-york-massachusetts-railway-co-ny-1892.