Matter of City of N.Y. (White Plains Road)

121 N.E. 354, 224 N.Y. 454, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 905
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 121 N.E. 354 (Matter of City of N.Y. (White Plains Road)) 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
Matter of City of N.Y. (White Plains Road), 121 N.E. 354, 224 N.Y. 454, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 905 (N.Y. 1918).

Opinion

Hiscook, Ch. J.

On September 20, 1899, Phebe V. S. Thorne and Harriet Y. S. Thorne were owners of premises abutting what 'was known as the Old White Plains road. On said date proceedings were instituted for opening a new road to take the place of that upon which their premises thus abutted and to close the latter and an order was made referring to the commissioners of estimate and assessment the duty of ascertaining the damages' suffered by said property owners by reason of such discontinuance. Said commissioners in due time entered upon the discharge of this duty and through quite a long period proceedings were conducted to ascertain the damages suffered by the above named and other property owners. Intermediate the commencement of the proceedings and the award finally made it is said' that the Thornes sold their land to petitioner, Domestic Realty Company, and on or about October 11, 1910, by an instrument absolute and unqualified in its terms they duly transferred and assigned to such petitioner all of their claims for damages to be recovered in the foregoing proceedings. This assignment was duly received in evidence by the commissioners and thereafter the assignee appeared by attorney in such proceedings and gave evidence in support of its right .to such damages under said assignment. Thereafter an award was duly made *458 to the Thornes as owners,” “ subject to an assignment to the Domestic Realty Company dated October 11, 1910.” On November 17, 1914, a demand was made upon the comptroller of the city of New York in . behalf of the assignee for the payment of the sum thus awarded with interest. Nothing seems to have been done in response to this demand until' May, 1917, when in reply to a letter from the attorney for the assignee calling attention to the fact that warrants had been prepared for his client which included no interest on the award, a letter was written by the comptroller that the demand for interest had been disallowed pursuant to an opinion of the corporation counsel.

April 4, 1917, the Domestic Realty Company duly executed an instrument which after referring to the above assignment and the award stated: “ Now, in consideration of the payment of the award with interest thereon by the City of New York or Phebe V. S. Thorne and Harriet V. S. Thorne, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, Domestic Realty Compnay hereby cancels and discharges said assignment.” Shortly before this date each of the Thornes executed an instrument appointing the Domestic Realty Company her attorney in fact and in her name, place and stead to demand, collect and receive from the city of New York the award of damages above referred to and on April 6, 1917, on presentation of the foregoing instruments and of affidavits there was collected and received from the city by said Thornes through the Domestic Realty Company as their attorney in fact, a warrant for the principal of the award which was recited to be in full payment of above account except our claim for interest if any.” Thereafter and in March, 1918, there was presented the present petition which recited in substance the foregoing facts except that of the cancellation of the assignment from the Thornes to the petitioner and the execution of the powers *459 of attorney by the former to the latter and the collection thereunder of the principal of the award, and on which application was made to compel the city to pay interest on the award. This application was entirely denied by the Special Term but the Appellate Division made a decision whereby it was ordered that the order appealed from be and the same is hereby reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted,' with ten dollars costs, to the extent of requiring payment to the petitioner of the sum of $830.63,” the latter being the amount of interest accruing on the award from the date when it was made to the date of confirmation and which was allowed in accordance with- our decision in Matter of City of New York (West 151st Street) (222 N. Y. 370).

The first question presented to us is of practice and is the one whether without permission an appeal lies to this court from the unanimous decision of the Appellate Division rendered since the amendment of section 190 of the Code, adopted in 1917, hmiting the right to appeal. As we construe the decision and order of the Appellate Division the latter is appealable without permission. We think that it in effect modified the order of the Special Term. It reversed it in part and while not explicitly thus so stating, otherwise affirmed it. This of course amounted' to a modification, and for purposes of simplicity in practice we have interpreted literally the provisions of section 190 allowing an appeal without permission from an unanimous order or judgment of the Appellate Division affecting the proposed appellant where it modifies the order or judgment on review before it. We have not limited the language of the Code by holding that a “ modification ” by the Appellate Division of an order or judgment would not be regarded as giving the right to an appeal without permission where such modification was in favor of the person who desired to appeal as in this case. It was feared that such an interpretation of the Code would *460 at times lead to complications and uncertainties which might better be avoided by a literal application of the section.

Passing by this question we come to a consideration of the appeal on its merits. If such decision were controlling we should be inclined to hold that the refusal of the comptroller to allow interest on the award was not well made. On this appeal the full argument in justification of such refusal is that the award was made to the Thornes as owners; that the only source of authority for any other action in making payment was the report of the commissioners and the order confirming the same and that the- comptroller had no such sufficient notice or knowledge of the assignment to petitioner as would have justified him in making payment on- its demand.

While the Thornes were the owners of the property at the time the proceedings were instituted which resulted in the award so that the latter was properly made in their name, they had before the award was made executed a full and complete assignment thereof and while the award was still made in their names as owners it was distinctly and specifically made subject to such assignment. We think that this fairly imported and notified the comptroller that an assignment had been made by the property owners to the petitioner of the award. If, however, there was any ambiguity in the meaning of this language it was readily removable by reference to the record of the proceedings leading to the award where the city had been represented by counsel and wherein there had been received in evidence and held to be valid by the commissioners a full and complete assignment of the award. It very likely is also true that the comptroller, if still in doubt, might have required the assignee and claimant to supply him with a duly authenticated copy of the assignment and an affidavit establishing its *461 validity and that it was still in full force and effect. No such request was made.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.E. 354, 224 N.Y. 454, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-city-of-ny-white-plains-road-ny-1918.