Mooney v. New York Elevated Railroad

13 A.D. 380, 43 N.Y.S. 35
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 A.D. 380 (Mooney v. New York Elevated Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mooney v. New York Elevated Railroad, 13 A.D. 380, 43 N.Y.S. 35 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

This action was begun on the 1st day of December, 1890, to secure an injunction and damages on account of the construction, maintenance and operation of the defendants’ elevated railroad in front of premises which, at the date of the commencement of the action, the plaintiff alleged belonged to him. This allegation of ownership was put in issue by the answer. This is the third time that the question of Cohen and Scallion being made parties to the action has been before this court. The first time was upon the defendant’s appeal from final judgment. It then appeared that subsequent to the commencement of the .action, and in 1891, the plaintiff had conveyed a part of the premises to David Cohen, and the remainder to Francis Scallion, who were not parties to the action ; and a motion having been made to dismiss the complaint upon this ground, as far as the impairment of fee value was concerned, the plaintiff’s counsel moved and obtained permission to [382]*382bring in Cohen and Scallion as parties plaintiff, and thereafter damages were, awarded to both Cohen and Scallion by the judgment. This judgment was reversed upon the 'ground that, under the Code and Rules of Practice, such a “ summary injection of parties into an action ” was not authorized. (4 App. Div. 30.) The second time the question was before the court upon a motion to make Cohen and Scallion parties plaintiff, which having been denied below, the order to that effect was affirmed on appeal. (10 App. Div. 625.) Thereupon a motion was made to bring them in as parties defendant which Was granted, and it is from this order that the present appeal is taken. '

So far as Cohen is concerned, he was the owner of the property between April 5, 1891, and October 13, 1891, a period of six months and eight days. He neither had nor claimed any interest in the property itself either at the commencement of the action or at the time of the motion. Nor does plaintiff ask or seek to recover herein any past damages to which he might be entitled. The only claim-against the defendants which Cohen could advance is one for past damages during the period of his ownership. This is not a matter in which the plaintiff has or claims any interest, and even if acquired by assignment or otherwise, it cannot be regarded as within the scope of the present controversy. (Oehler v. New York Elevated R. R. Co., 4 App. Div. 152.)

With respect to Scallion, who at the present time owns the fee, another and more difficult question is presented, one which has been many times mooted and indirectly involved in these litigations, but has never been squarely passed upon, viz.: Whether after the commencement of an action, where the grantor voluntarily conveys away the fee,-the grantee or the one to whom he’subsequently conveys, is a proper’or necéssary party to the action.

It is conceded that the plaintiff here is not entitled to equitable relief, because, as an incident to the fee which he has parted with, that right’passed to the grantee, who now holds the legal title to the property. It has been held in these cases that the easements are appurtenant to the property and cannot be severed, or exist separate and distinct from the fee itself. So that it must be regarded as settled -by authority that, neither by a reservation in a deed nor by agreement, could one who had parted with his title to the fee maintain [383]*383an action for equitable relief upon the ground of the impairment of the easements, but that such right would pass to his grantee. With respect to the damages which might he awarded as the outcome of the suit, instead of an injunction, this could be the subject of a contract or agreement between the parties which could be enforced.

In Pegram v. Elevated R. R. Co. (147 N. Y. 135) it appeared on the trial that the plaintiff had conveyed to a third person, not a party to the action, the fee, reserving a right to the damages which had been or might thereafter be caused to the property by the railroad, together with the right to use the grantee’s name either in a release of the easements in the street to the railroad company or in any suit against it. It was held that the plaintiff was deprived of the right to relief by way of injunction against the company, or by an award for damages to the property subsequent to his conveyance ; and Judge Or at, writing the opinion, in speaking of the effect of such a reservation, says : “ If it could be assumed that the language of the reservation in the deed was sufficient to assign easements appurtenant to the property, such assignment would. be absolutely ineffectual. The easements of an abutting owner in the street which are invaded by the construction, maintenance and operation of an elevated railway, are appurtenant to his premises, and as it was said in the Kernochan Case (128 N. Y., at page 568), in the nature of things they are indissolubly annexed thereto until extinguished by release or otherwise. They are incapable of a distinct and separate ownership.’ The right to enjoin the continuance of the trespass by the defendants upon those easements could not be reserved upon the sale of the property. The right could only be possessed and enforced by its owner. * * * There need be no question as to the right of the parties to agree to make such a reservation as this; but the effect of it, while certain in so far as it could not sever the easements from the land, 'was a question between them, in the disposition of which the concern of the defendants was that in any action relating to a damage to the property for invasion of its easements, the legal owner should be bound by the result. The defendants ■clearly are entitled to have the holder of the legal title to the abutting property bound by a decrée, which permits them, as a condition ■of being relieved from the injunction, to acquire the legal right of maintenance and operation by the payment of the sum of money [384]*384fixed by the court as the due compensation to be made. If the plamtiffs had brought in■ Schortemeier as a party .defendant in' the action, the court would hme been in a position to adjust the equities and rights of all the parties, and to render a complete decree, which would have been bi/nding upon each. The equities created or arising between the plaintiffs and Schortemeier through the reservation in the deed can only be effectively adjusted by his presence as a party to an action which had that as one of its objects.”

We have here an expression favorable to the view that had the owner of the fee been joined as a party, the court would have been in a position to render a complete decree. 4And in this very action, upon the appeal from the judgment, where the1 grantees of the plaintiff were made parties plaintiff, the presiding judge, writing the opinion, said (4 App. Div. 31): “ It is undoubtedly true that by bringing in the grantees as parties defendant, as is suggested in the case of Pegram v. The Elevated R. R. Co. (147 N. Y. 135), the court would have been in a position to adjust the equities and rights of all the parties and to render a complete decree which would have been binding upon each.”. In the Pegram case the point involved was as to the right of the plaintiff, who had parted with the fee pendente

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Related

Stokes v. Manhattan Railway Co.
47 A.D. 58 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)
Hutton v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.
19 A.D. 243 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 A.D. 380, 43 N.Y.S. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooney-v-new-york-elevated-railroad-nyappdiv-1897.