New York Dock Co. v. Flinn-O'Rourke Co.

121 Misc. 155
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 Misc. 155 (New York Dock Co. v. Flinn-O'Rourke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Dock Co. v. Flinn-O'Rourke Co., 121 Misc. 155 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

This is a retrial of this action after the reversal of the judgment rendered on the former trial. On the original argument in the Appellate Division the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered as to both defendants (198 App. Div. 376), but on reargument allowed by that court the complaint was dismissed as against the defendant Flinn-O’Rourke Company, and a new trial granted of the issues between the plaintiff and the remaining defendant. New York Dock Co. v. Flinn-O’Rourke Co., Inc., 200 App. Div. 871. The Court of Appeals, however, modified the judgment of the Appellate Division so as also to grant a new trial as to the Flinn-O’Rourke Company. New York Dock Co. v. Flinn-O’Rourke Co., Inc., 234 N. Y. 126.

The only question considered by the Court of Appeals was whether or not the complaint should have been dismissed as against the Flinn-O’Rourke Company, and a reading of the opinion of that court shows that the determination of that question was made solely on the pleadings and that the evidence was not considered. Each party to the action took an appeal to the Appellate Division, [157]*157the plaintiff from the whole judgment and the defendants from such parts of the judgment as they regarded as prejudicial to them respectively. The reversal by the Appellate Division, as modified by the Court of Appeals, was complete. The present trial is, therefore, a trial de novo, and nothing that was done or decided on the former trial has any binding force.

It was stipulated by the respective counsel that the case should be tried this time upon the record of the former trial, subject to such motions to strike out evidence as any party might make, and that any party might produce, subject to objection, such additional evidence as it chose. On the trial decision was reserved on certain questions of evidence. I have indicated on the stenographer’s minutes my rulings on these reserved questions, and the party against whom the ruling was made is allowed an exception in each instance.

In opinion of the Appellate Division rendered upon the original argument (198 App. Div. 376) the court, referring to the stipulation of December 9, 1914, under which the defendants originally entered upon the slip in question, and to the agreement of June 2, 1916, by which the defendant city of New York leased to the plaintiff lands under water lying in the slip, said: “After making the stipulation above mentioned, and while the condemnation proceeding was pending, the plaintiff entered into an agreement dated June 2, 1916, whereby the plaintiff leased from the city the lands under water in the slip and agreed to construct a pier over the same. The trial court has held that by entering into this lease the plaintiff has waived all claim to fee damages and all claim to rental damages from and after the date of such agreement. (See 107 Misc. Rep. 190.) The plaintiff, at the time of making the stipulation above mentioned, was under the Greater New York charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466, § 859) entitled to moor vessels at its piers and to collect wharfage and dockage therefor. Depending upon this stipulation, the plaintiff permitted the city to enter into possession of this property. By the stipulation the city agreed to ascertain and pay for plaintiff’s rights. Entering under this agreement, the city has so changed the situation that the plaintiff’s rights have been destroyed. Vessels cannot with safety be moved over the tunnel constructed under the slip. The city, wishing to further protect said tunnel, has leased the land under water in said slip to the plaintiff for the purpose of erecting a pier thereon. Can it be said that this lease destroyed or waived plaintiff’s rights? I do not so construe it. The plaintiff’s rights (except as a cause of action) had been extinguished. The plaintiff surrendered them to the city upon its promise to pay therefor. The execution of this lease was not a waiver. It was the recognition of an existing [158]*158condition. Plaintiff did not waive its cause of action, and that was all that existed at the time the lease was executed. If the city had entered without any agreement, the situation would have been different. Then the lease might have been considered a waiver. When, however, the plaintiff’s rights have been rendered worthless under an agreement to pay therefor, I cannot see that the situation is changed by plaintiff’s treating as defendant’s property the rights for which it promised to pay. If any other species of property were sold to the city upon a promise to pay therefor when the valu'e was ascertained, I think that the subsequent recognition of the city’s title would not be construed as a waiver of the seller’s right to the purchase money. It cannot make any difference because the subject of the sale is an intangible right. The city agreed to pay for these rights; it destroyed them; therefore, it should pay.”

From this I understand that, in the opinion of the Appellate Division, the plaintiff by entering with the city into the agreement of June 2, 1916, surrendered and abandoned any rights and easements which it may have had in and over the waters of the slip, and that the only right which survived this agreement was the right to recover the compensation which the city had by the stipulation of December 9, 1914, agreed to pay for such rights, if it should be judicially determined that there were any. From this it follows that at the time this action was begun the plaintiff had no cause of action for injunctive relief against either defendant, but only a cause of action for a sum of money against the city.

The plaintiff has not established a cause of action of any kind against the Flinn-O’Rourke Company, because that defendant was not at any time a trespasser upon the rights and easements which plaintiff claims it had in the slip; that defendant originally entered by permission of the plaintiff, and that permission was not withdrawn until March, 1917, after the plaintiff had relinquished whatever rights it had in or over the waters of the slip, save only the right to recover the stipulated compensation, and when, therefore, plaintiff had ceased to have any right to require said defendant to remove its structures from the slip. Assuming that the plaintiff might at any time after January 10, 1915, and prior to June 2, 1916, have required said defendant to remove its structures from the slip and cease its operations therein, and thereupon have treated said defendant as a trespasser, if it failed to comply with such demand, plaintiff did not take that course. The said defendant must be deemed, therefore, to have occupied the slip during the period between January 10, 1915, and June 2, 1916, by permission of the plaintiff, and hence said defendant is not liable to plaintiff for damages for trespass. This conclusion is not in conflict with [159]*159anything that was decided by the Court, of Appeals on the appeal to that court above mentioned; for, as already noted, the decision of that court was based solely on the pleadings, and no attempt was made to determine whether or not the plaintiff produced sufficient evidence to sustain its alleged cause of action against said defendant. I now decide that the evidence shows that the plaintiff has no cause of action against the defendant Flinn-O’Rourke Company.

The next question is as to the basis on which damages, if any, are to be determined. Plaintiff claims that it should have rental damages up to the time of the trial, and fee damages also. I think, however, the decision of the Appellate Division, from which I have quoted, disposes of that question.

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Bluebook (online)
121 Misc. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-dock-co-v-flinn-orourke-co-nysupct-1923.