Orchard Grove of Dutchess, Inc. v. State

1 Misc. 3d 810, 772 N.Y.S.2d 201, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1324
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedSeptember 24, 2003
DocketClaim No. 100686
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Misc. 3d 810 (Orchard Grove of Dutchess, Inc. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orchard Grove of Dutchess, Inc. v. State, 1 Misc. 3d 810, 772 N.Y.S.2d 201, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1324 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

[811]*811OPINION OF THE COURT

Stephen J. Mignano, J.

The claimant is the owner of a 22.06-acre parcel of land adjoining the westerly right-of-way of the Taconic State Parkway (hereinafter Taconic) in the Town of East Fishkill (see exhibit 11) . Claimant seeks damages as a result of an April 15, 1999 appropriation by the New York State Department of Transportation pursuant to section 30 of the Highway Law and .the Eminent Domain Procedure Law, not of lands, but of any right of “access” that the property has to the Taconic.

While somewhat complex, the essential facts of the matter are undisputed. On April 15, 1999 a taking map and description were filed with the Dutchess County Clerk under map No. 1025 and parcel No. 1034. The appropriation filing described by metes and bounds depicted the same 9.534-acre portion of the right-of-way of the Taconic which was described and depicted in map No. 83, an appropriation map filed in 1936 by the Taconic State Park Commission.

The 1999 filing indicated that its purpose was not to secure any additional lands but was “to prohibit access” and that

“The purpose of this map is to fully prohibit the right of access to and from abutting property where same had heretofore been allowed to adjacent owners under Map No. 83 for the Taconic State Park Commission, a certified copy of which was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Dutchess County on March 28, 1936” (see map and description attached to amended claim).

On March 26, 1936, under its map No. 83, the Taconic State Park Commission appropriated the 9.534-acre parcel in fee simple absolute from the claimant’s remote predecessor-in-interest, Cornelius W. Garrison. The taking was a roughly rectangular area, 350 feet wide by 1,200 feet long from south to north through the Garrison property. The 1936 appropriation was for the purpose of creating the right-of-way, laying out and constructing the Taconic.

The lands appropriated in 1936 were part of a 120±-acre former dairy farm (see exhibit 10) but as of March 26, 1936, the premises had not been “used for dairy or farming purposes . . . for a period of about eight years [the period of Garrison’s ownership] [and] the buildings on the premises were not in good condition and all of them were in need of repair” (exhibit 10 IN 11, 12) .

[812]*812The 1936 parkway right-of-way appropriation effectively divided the property into two segments. One 22±-acre parcel lay to the east of the parkway corridor. The remaining larger segment, 90± acres, lay to the west of the parkway right-of-way.

A claim was brought as a result of the 1936 appropriation and resolved in this court. I

In subsequent years, the Taconic was constructed oh the lands appropriated as a limited access, restricted-use roadway with public access only at interchanges or intersections with public roadways. I

Claimant’s property is a portion of Garrison’s 90±-acre tract on the west side of the parkway right-of-way. It isj located a fairly uniform distance of 100 feet from the easterly edge of the southbound travel lanes of the Taconic.

A dirt and gravel lane,1 at least 100 feet long and approximately 12 to 16 feet wide, leads from the southbojund travel lanes of the Taconic to the westerly edge of the right-of-way through the landscaped buffer area. In the years since the construction of the Taconic in 1939, it intermittently has served as an access driveway to the former Garrison, novf Orchard Grove, property from the Taconic.

The driveway begins at a point directly opposite Bogardus Lane, an improved, two-lane, paved roadway of thé Town of East Fishkill, which intersects the Taconic at grade from the east. Prior to 1999, a paved median roadway also extended east to west from the northbound travel lanes to the southbound travel lanes of the Taconic permitting unrestricted crossing and turning from Bogardus Lane. It is not known if Bogardus Lane was a public road of the Town of East Fishkill in 1936: when the initial appropriation was made or whether any part of ¡Bogardus Lane, even assuming it was a town road, reached what is now the claimant’s property.

The testimony of the current and former Superintendents of Highways for the Town of East Fishkill, Dennis Miller! and Kenneth McKeown,2 was offered at trial on the issue of whether Bogardus Lane west of the Taconic was a town road. The testimony established that Bogardus Lane West was never p^tved and [813]*813widened like the segment of Bogardus Lane on the east, but that the town highway workers have plowed snow from Bogardus Lane West from time to time to allow the resident of what is now claimant’s property to gain access to the Taconic. Without reference to any maps or official records of the Town from the time of the 1936 appropriation, the superintendents referred to the driveway as a westerly spur or cul-de-sac of Bogardus Lane. Neither could say how or when Bogardus Lane became a town road.

In 1994, Orchard Grove of Dutchess, Inc., as contract vendee, applied to the New York State Department of Transportation (hereinafter DOT) for a highway access permit to allow the enlargement and improvement of the dirt and gravel driveway. Claimant sought to widen the driveway to 50 feet, install drainage facilities and pave its length to provide an access roadway to the 22-acre property from the travel lanes of the Taconic. Improvement of the access was necessary to the success of an application the claimant had made to the Planning Board of the Town of East Fishkill to allow subdivision of the parcel into an 18-lot residential development.

DOT, which assumed jurisdiction over the ownership, operation and management of the Taconic as successor to the Taconic State Parkway Commission, denied the application. In a letter dated June 20, 1995 from J.W. Wickeri, Permit Engineer, the claimant’s principal was told that

“It is the Department’s position that the additional turning movements and cross traffic generated by the development of this 22± acres will jeopardize the safe operation of this intersection; we therefore, have concluded that we will not grant approval to improve the westerly leg of Bogardus Lane as proposed, but will proceed to acquire the property or the rights of access to the Parkway via Bogardus Lane” (see exhibit 5).

Despite denial of the needed driveway/access permit, the seeming frustration of the planned subdivision, and DOT’s advice that it would acquire the property rather than permit the access sought, claimant purchased the property on June 5, 1997. Claimant’s appraiser, Donald M. McGrath, Jr., offered evidence of the value of the claimant’s property as a potential subdivision with access to the Taconic and the value of the lands [814]*814without such access. A total of $365,000 in damages iis claimed (see exhibit 11).

Lee Ann McCollum testified at trial on behalf of claimant. She testified that she was employed by Crystal Clear Abstract Corp. and her experience included conducting title searches for over 25 years including over 17 years of experience: as a title examiner.

Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Misc. 3d 810, 772 N.Y.S.2d 201, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orchard-grove-of-dutchess-inc-v-state-nycivct-2003.