McElroy v. Borough of Ft. Lee

46 F.2d 777, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2491
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 1931
DocketNo. 4433
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 777 (McElroy v. Borough of Ft. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McElroy v. Borough of Ft. Lee, 46 F.2d 777, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2491 (3d Cir. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

Robert L. McElroy and Lula McElroybrought .this suit to recover the value of land which, they say, the Borough of Fort Lee unlawfully took from them for street purposes. The court directed a verdict for the defendant and the plaintiffs appealed.

There are two questions of law arising from two claims for damages. The first is easily disposed of. It arises under paragraphs 5, 7 and 9 of the complaint wherein the plaintiffs concede power in the defendant to change the grade of streets upon making compensation to owners of lands abutting on the streets, aver that the defendant so changed the grade of one street on whieh their lands abutted and allege that it has not compensated them for the resulting damages.

When both sides rested, the plaintiffs neither presented points nor otherwise asked the court to charge the jury that they were entitled to damages for the changed grade, nor, so far as we can find, did they cite to the court any statutory law giving them a right to damages. Except perhaps a state statute — said to be repealed — which provided for damages to the owner of buildings on lands abutting on a street whose grade had been changed, there, seemingly, is no law. However that may be, there is no evidence that any buildings were on the plaintiffs’ land. Therefore the directed verdict in so far as it affected damages resulting from change of grade was right.

In all deeds in the chain of title, running through many years and including the plaintiffs’ deed at the time of the alleged appropriation of their land by the Borough, there was a reservation in these words:

“This conveyance is made subject to the right and privilege hereby expressly reserved to take so much of the easterly part of the said first described tract of land as may be necessary or required to straighten old Palisade Avenue as contemplated by the said party of the first part (Hudson River Realty Company, a corporation of New Jersey), by extending New Palisade Avenue as laid out and shown on said Section No. 1 of the Map of Palisade the Property of the Hudson River Realty Company, northerly from the northerly end thereof as laid out on said map across said tract until it intersects or runs into Old Palisade Avenue as now in use by the publie, said New Palisade Avenue to take the place of the part of Old Palisade Avenue, so straightened and to be used for the same purposes.”

This reservation was first inserted in a deed made by the Hudson River Realty Com[779]*779pany. As the same reservation reappeared in each succeeding deed, it would seem on first view that the reservation in each deed was made by and ran to each grantor who, accordingly, had he wished, could take for street purposes so much of the reserved premises as would be necessary to straighten Old Palisade Avenue by extending New Palisade Avenue northerly to a point of juncture with Old Palisade Avenue. But no grantor of title so construed the reservation; certainly none acted under the reservation, perhaps for the reason that, except the first, each grantor in succession had the reservation as it appeared in each preceding deed running against him, thus leaving the right to take property for street purposes either in the Realty Company, the original grantor, or, by its dedication, in the Borough which eventually tojok land named in the reservation, yet not avowedly by force of dedication but ostensibly through condemnation proceedings initiated under an ordinance authorizing the proceedings. The trouble is that the Borough, in straightening Old Palisade Avenue, did not open up the new street on the land described in and covered by the ordinance but, under proceedings condemning other land, laid out the street close to it yet on land different from that of the ordinance. On these facts, which are not disputed, the plaintiffs assign error to the court in directing a verdict for the defendant.

At the argument on appeal and later in our study of the case we found that the main discussion revolved around questions of dedication to the Borough and rights reserved to the grantors in the deeds to take lands for street purposes. We realize that to sustain the judgment on a verdict directed for the Borough it must appear somewhere or somehow that the Borough could lawfully take the excepted land for street purposes, and that its right lawfully to do so was acquired in one of three ways, namely; by dedication, title, or condemnation proceedings. As the Borough never had title by deed and as it took by condemnation proceedings land different from tbe land covered by the ordinance authorizing the proceedings, we addressed to the attorney for the defendant a letter asking for a further brief on two questions which we propounded as follows:

“Laying aside the matter of dedication for the present,
“(1) If the Borough relies upon title, how did it acquire an interest in or a right under the reservation appearing in the several deeds beginning with the one from the Realty Company to Smith?
“(2) If it relies upon condemnation proceedings under a valid ordinance passed before plaintiffs acquired title, how does the Borough justify appropriating land (here in suit) for road purposes which is not the land covered by the ordinance authorizing the condemnation proceedings ?”

The defendant’s answers to these questions were elaborate but not convincing. Therefore we shall ourselves search for the defendant’s claimed right through dedication, title and condemnation. '

Before passing upon the lawfulness of the Borough’s act we shall inquire into the right of the plaintiffs to recover, if the act was unlawful, in view of the Borough’s contention that the plaintiffs are not now the owners of the land for whose taking they claim damages. It is true that they do not now own the land but they were owners of this or adjacent land at the time the property was taken and, if unlawfully taken, they were the parties injured and for sneh an injury they have the right to sue for damages*.

The right of compensation is a personal one and does not run with the land. 20 C. J. 1185. The owner of the land at the time the right is invaded or the trespass committed is entitled to recover and the subsequent vendee of such an owner takes the land subject to the right of his injured predecessor to exact and receive the compensation. Kindred v. Union Pacific Railroad, 225 U. S. 582, 32 S. Ct. 780, 56 L. Ed. 1216; Central R. Co. of New Jersey v. Hetfield, 29 N. J. Law, 206.

Returning to the three main questions and taking them up in inverse order, it is clear that the Borough appropriated for street purposes land other than the land of the ordinance. Therefore it cannot justify undier the condemnation proceedings. It stands in relation to the land taken as though there had been no such proceedings. Henee its right, if any, must be found in title or dedication.

Tbe most it could have had was an easement in the large tract, conveyed from time to time, and a corresponding right to take that part of the tract which was reserved for the defined purposes. If it had such an easement it must have acquired it by deed or dedication.

If an easement, how did it acquire it? Certainly not by deed for the Borough ap[780]*780pears nowhere in the chain of title. No owner of the land at any time conveyed to the Borough an easement or any other interest in the land.

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Bluebook (online)
46 F.2d 777, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelroy-v-borough-of-ft-lee-ca3-1931.