Livingston v. Mayor

8 Wend. 85
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by139 cases

This text of 8 Wend. 85 (Livingston v. Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston v. Mayor, 8 Wend. 85 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1831).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered :

By the Chancellor.

There seems to be a very little dispute as to the facts _ in this case. But an important question arises as to the rights of the plaintiff in error, as against the persons to whom he had conveyed certain building lots in the city of New-York. His counsel have also raised and argued several constitutional objections to the mode in which damages are directed to be assessed by the laws regulating the laying out and altering streets in that city, which it will be necessary briefly to consider.

Some twenty or thirty years since, the plaintiff in error was the owner of a tract of land in New-York which was laid out into city lots, and delineated on the city map, with streets running through the same in different directions, in the manner in which city and town plots are usually laid out and delineat[98]*98ed. A great portion of these lots, lying in different parts of the tract,'were sold by the plaintiff from time to time to various individuals for building lots ; and in the conveyances were described as bounding on the streets adjacent thereto, as laid down on the city map. It does not appear by whom the original plan or allotment of this tract was made ; neither does it seem to be very material. The streets laid down upon the map were not public highways, but there can be no doubt that the lots were sold by the plaintiff and purchased by the grantees with reference to the city map, and under the expectation that they were ultimately to be used, as building lots. . The plaintiff, in his affidavit says, that in consequence of the reservation of particular portions of the land for streets, whenever the corporation of the city should see fit to open the same, he bounded all the lots which he disposed of upon the said streets1’ adjoining the same, in every case reserving to himself the ground appropriated for the streéts, and all the advantages and emoluments which might accrue when the streets should be assessed and valued by the corporation. I presume the plaintiff did not intend to swear that each conveyance, executed by him, contained such reservation in express terms, but that such is his opinion of the legal effect of the conveyances of the lots bounding them by the streets. The commissioners of estimate and assessment came to a different conclusion as to the legal effect of the conveyances, and they accordingly reported that the plaintiff was the owner of the several pieces of land appropriated for streets, but subject to the easement or right of way over the same in the parties entitled to lands and premises bounded by and fronting on these streets.

It cannot be necessary to examine the question, whether by implication of law, a legal right of way was granted to the purchasers of lots bounded on these streets ; neither do the principles of construction, applicable to grants of property in the country, apply to conveyances of city lots. The right of way as a mere rural servitude, is confined to a. convenient passage from the property granted, to the public road or highway. As this is all that is usually wanted for the use of the premises granted, although the lot is bounded upon several roads, the law gives to the grantee nothing more than convenient passa[99]*99ges to and from the premises granted; but upon the same principle on which the law implies a grant of a convenient way as incident to a lot or farm in the country, the grant of a building lot in the city, described in the conveyance, or in the town plot to which it refers, as bounded by streets or alleys of a certain width, implies a right in the grantee to have the street kept open in front of his lot for the benefit of light and air, as well as for a mere passage to and from the premises; lf it is bounded by a street or alley in the rear, the grantee is entitled to have that kept open also for the same purposes of light and air, as well as for a necessary passage to the rear of Ms building, or to his garden or stables. Where the owner of city property has sold portions of the same for building lots, with reference to a city plan, a court of equity would not permit him to shut up the streets adjacent to the lots granted, without an express or implied reservation of such a right. It is therefore not very material to inquire whether the right to have these streets kept open for the benefit of the plaintiff’s grantees was a legal right, implied by the terms of the grant, or whether it was a mere equitable right, arising from the situation and nature of the property granted. I am inclined to think, however, if the lots are conveyed as bounded by these streets, or with reference to the city map, which showed they were bounded by streets of a particular width, the grantees acquired a legal right as against the grantor, to have those streets kept open for the benefit of the property granted ; and in either point of view, the plaintiff had no equitable claim to charge his grantees or their assigns with the full value of these streets, estimating them as building lots. All that he had any right to claim was the value of the streets to him, subject to the right of his grantees to have them permanently kept open; in other words, the mere value of the legal title, subject to this easement, or urban servitude. If this is all the damrge he is entitled to claim, I presume it will not be disputed that his damages by having the property converted into public, instead of private streets, is merely nominal.

But it is said that the law which authorizes the taking of private property in the city of New-York for a public street is unconstitutional, on the ground that thclegislature cannot author[100]*100ize private property to be taken for public use without the intervention a jury. If the plaintiff is right on this point, then no damages could be awarded to him, and his right to the street remains as it was before the commencement of these proceedings; and all the streets which have been laid out in the city of New-York for the last 20 years are wholly unauthorized and invalid, except, in those cases where the owners, of the land have voluntarily given up their property for the use of streets. I apprehend, however, this court will not arrive at such a conclusion. The assessment of damages by commissioners, instead of a jury, is supposed to be in violation of those amendments of the constitution of the United States which provide that no person shall be deprived of his property without due process of law; that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation ; and that in suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved. I have formerly had, occasion to examine the question how far these amendments of the constitution of the United States were restrictive upon the power of the individual states; and the conclusion at which I arrived was, that all the amendments adopted by congress at its first session, and afterwards sanctioned by the requisite number of states, were intended to be restrictive upon the government of the United States and upon its officers exclusively. See Jackson v. Wood, 2 Cowen, 818, n. b. The preamble which was prefixed to these amendments, as adopted by congress, is important to show in what light that body considered them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Wend. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-mayor-nycterr-1831.