Matter of Ninth Ave. and Fifteenth St.

45 N.Y. 729
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.Y. 729 (Matter of Ninth Ave. and Fifteenth St.) 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 Ninth Ave. and Fifteenth St., 45 N.Y. 729 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Grover, J.

It was for the legislature to determine whether the expense of widening Ninth avenue and Fifteenth street, in the city of Brooklyn, should be paid by the city at large, or assessed upon the property benefited by the improvement; and in case of adopting the latter mode, to provide for the assessment of such property in proportion to the benefit received. (Litchfield v. Vernon, 41 N. Y., 123.) To effect this, section three of the act (Laws of 1869, vol. 2, 1659), provides that, before any assessment for such widening and opening is made, the park commissioners shall, by resolution, fix a district of assessment, beyond which the assessment to liquidate and defray the expenses and damages incident to said widening and opening and the subsequent improvement thereof shall not extend. Section two provides for the appointment of commissioners, by the Supreme Court, to estimate the expense of such widening and opening, and the amount of damages to be sustained by the owners of land and all other persons affected thereby, and to apportion and assess the same as directed by the act. Section four provides that the. commissioners shall estimate the expenses and damages occasioned by the said improvement. And after their report thereon shall have been confirmed, they shall apportion and assess the same as they shall deem just and equitable, upon the lands and premises in their judgment benefited by the improvement within the district so limited by the park commissioners, and that in making the assessment for *732 widening and improving Ninth avenue, they shall apportion and assess three-fifths of the expense and damage upon lands lying south-east of said avenue, and the remaining two-fifths thereof upon land lying north-west of said avenue. The only error of the commissioners complained of by the appellants, is the assessment in favor of the city of the value of the land taken from the park for the purpose of widening the street and avenue. This complaint is not that such land has been overvalued by the commissioners, if the city, as owner, was entitled to payment of the value, but they claim that the city was not entitled to such payment, but only to nominal damages at most, therefor. By the acts of the legislature, under which the lands included in Prosp'eet park were acquired by the city of Brooklyn, the city became the owner of such lands in fee, to be held by it for the purposes of a public park. The city cannot dispose of, or use the lands for any other purpose, without the sanction of the legislature; but with such sanction, the city may dispose of or use them-in any way it may deem proper. (Brooklyn Park Com. v. Armstrong, decided by this court, March, 1871, ante, p. 234.) No question is made by the counsel for the appellant, but that the legislature may authorize the taking of the land fronl the park for the purpose of widening the street and avenue. The statute provides for the assessment of the damages sustained by the owners of the land taken for the improvement, and others who may be affected thereby. The city was the owner in fee of the land in question, charged with a trust to use the same for a park only. The legislature provided for the payment of the expenses of the improvement by an assessment upon the land especially benefited thereby. From the act and the map produced, it appears that the lands of the city embraced in the park were subject to an assessment for benefit in like manner as those of any other owner. Its land only was taken for widening the avenue, and the act provides for the assessment of three-fifths of the expense upon the lands of the city embraced in the park and two-fifths upon the lands of owners upon the opposite side of the avenue. *733 This shows an intention of placing the lands of the city embraced in the park upon the same footing in respect to the improvement as those of any other proprietor. An assessment of the damages sustained by the city, by the taking the strip from the park for widening the avenue, must have been intended, otherwise there would have been no land to appraise, and the provision therefor would have been nugatory. It follows that the city, under the act in question, was entitled to compensation for the lands taken for the improvement. It is unnecessary to determine whether the legislature could have authorized the taking of the land from the park for a street without compensation, as it clearly has not done so. On the contrary, it has provided that compensation should be made for the lands taken, and that such compensation should be assessed upon and paid by the owners of the land benefited, including those of the city. This brings us to the question principally argued by the counsel for the appellant. He insists that, the lands being held by the city in trust for a park for the use of the people of the city, the only damages that could be assessed was the pecuniary loss, if any, sustained by the city by the change of the use to a street instead of a park, and that this at most was merely nominal. To sustain this position the counsel relies upon the well settled rule that, where lands are taken for public use, the owner is only entitled to compensation for the loss or damages caused to him by such taking. This principle has been applied where the land was already subject to a servitude in behalf of the public and an additional servitude was imposed upon it. It has accordingly been held in such cases that the owner of the fee was only entitled to compensation for the loss or injury, if any, sustained by subjecting the land to the additional servitude, or in case the fee was taken for public use, he was only entitled to the value subject to the servitude already charged thereon. This is so well settled that a citation of the authorities is unnecessary. It cannot be questioned that the intention of the act was to compensate the city for any loss sustained by converting park lands into streets, nor but that the legislature had *734 power to provide that it should be so compensated, but it was designed only to make compensation for the loss. To this extent only were damages to the city to be assessed. To sustain the position of the defendant’s counsel, it must be held as matter of law, that the lands embraced in the park, that can only be used for park purposes, are of no more value to the city than the same lands devoted to the public use "as streets. I am not aware of any principle upon which such a legal conclusion can be based. The lands embraced in the park have, under the authority of the legislature, been acquired by the city at very great expense for park purposes. To hold as a legal conclusion that such lands so to be used are of no more value to the city than the same lands laid out into and used as avenues and streets would be, I think, absurd. It must be so held, or the award of the commissioners in favor of the city must be sustained. If the city sustained any substantial loss by the taking of the land from the park and converting it into streets, it was for the commissioners to ascertain and determine the amount of such damages. Their report, when confirmed by the Supreme Court, became conclusive, unless some rule of law was violated by them. Even had this court the power to review the correctness of their determination as to the sum to be awarded to the city, there is nothing in the case showing any error committed by them in this respect. No such point was made by the counsel for the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.Y. 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-ninth-ave-and-fifteenth-st-ny-1871.