Pecksport Connecting Railway Co. v. West

45 N.Y.S. 644
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 45 N.Y.S. 644 (Pecksport Connecting Railway Co. v. West) 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
Pecksport Connecting Railway Co. v. West, 45 N.Y.S. 644 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

FORBES, J.

This is a special proceeding, commenced on the part of the plaintiff, to acquire the right of way, for railroad purposes, through certain lands and premises owned by the defendants in their representative capacity, and also as heirs at law and devisees. Under proper steps and proceedings, commissioners were appointed to appraise the land in question. The real dispute in this case is, what is the damage done to the farm, and what is the value of the 14.4 acres of land set forth in Schedule B? This strip of land runs across what is known as the “Home Farm,” and belongs to the Peck estate. Something like nine days’ time was spent by the commissioners in a personal examination of the premises, taking evidence with reference to the value and the situation' of the land in question, and in drafting and making their decision. The whole quantity of land comprising the farms is about 354 acres. The roadbed runs through that section of land known as “Lot or Division Ho. 2.” The commissioners awarded, as damages to the home farm, the sum of $4,525. This piece of land, so taken by the plaintiff, includes a gravel bed which was taken for the purpose of building and constructing its roadbed. All other questions, in relation to other lands, having been settled by an agreement, the only question of importance in this case arises in relation to the receipt in evidence of certain estimates of value made by the different witnesses on the trial, on the part of the defendants. So far as the main question of the value of the property is concerned, I think the correct rule of damages was adopted by the commissioners. Seven witnesses were called on the part of the defense: Mr. Payne fixed the value of the whole farm, before the land in question was taken, at $19,470; the remainder of the farm, taking out the 14.4 acres of land, he fixed at the value of $13,600, the difference being $5,870. Mr. Burchard put the value of the whole farm at $21,240; the remainder at $16,320. Mr. Buell put the value of the whole farm at $17,700; the remainder at $13,600. Mr. Lilly put the value of the whole farm at $18,585; the remainder at $13,770. Mr. Albe put the value of the whole farm at $16,000; the remainder at $11,000. Mr. Chase put the value of the whole farm at $17,700; the remainder at $13,260. Mr. Brown put the value of the whole farm at $17,700; the remainder at $12,900. It will be seen, therefore, that the defendants’ witnesses put the general average damage at $4,849. Taking the evidence of Payne, Albe, Lilly, and Burchard, a number equal to the number of witnesses -produced on the part of the plaintiff, they make a total estimate of $20,605, which would make a general average, under their estimate, of $5,151 as damages sustained, taking the difference between the value of the land without the road and the value of the land after the construction of the [646]*646road. It will be seen that this estimate is considerably in excess of the amount fixed by the commissioners, as it is also considerably in excess of the value fixed by the four witnesses on the part of the plaintiff. On the cross-examination of the defendants’ witnesses, in testing the accuracy of their estimates of what they claimed to be the actual measure of damages sustained by the defendants, the plaintiff’s attorney elicited the fact that their estimates were based, in part, upon the fact that the defendants’ barns are located upon the public highway, and that heretofore their stock had been in the habit of going for water in the winter to a certain place upon the highway known as the “Bridge at the Feeder,” where the feeder has its junction with the Chenango Canal. It is claimed that the defendants will be deprived of this right, from the danger of the cattle being injured by straying a few rods beyond the watering place, and the liability of their being there injured by the plaintiff’s passing trains at its road crossing. The witnesses estimated this damage, under the cross-examination, at from $300 to $1,350. A fair estimate of the average of this assumed damage, I think, may be put at $800; not above that figure.

The plaintiff’s attorney assigns as error the reception of this evidence by the commissioners, and its retention in the case by their refusal to strike that portion of the estimate made by these witnesses out of the case at the close of his examination of the witnesses and also at the close of the case. The supposed error is based upon the theory that these damages are too remote and are contingent, and that the defendants have no right to use the public highway for the purpose of watering their cattle at the place designated; and that, therefore, the commissioners had no right to take into consideration that portion of the evidence of estimated damages in assessing the amount to- be awarded to the defendants. I am not confident of the correctness of this proposition. Defendants were the owners of the land on both sides of the street prior to the taking of the land in question, and still own the same. The plaintiff’s right of way across this land does not touch the highway spoken of until after the watering place is reached at the bridge, but it does cut across the continuation of the highway a few rods north of the bridge and watering place. I do not think it can- be said, as matter of law, that where the owner of lands on both sides of the public highway permits his cattle to use the highway as a lane, for the purpose of reaching the legitimate object of watering them, this can be denominated as “suffering his cattle to run at large in the public highway.” Nor do I think that it can be successfully claimed that if the cattle were to go to water unattended, and some of them should pass on a few rods beyond the watering place, while the others were drinking, it must be construed by the court as a violation of the statute against cattle running, at large., A violation of that law could only arise from utter inattention to them, or carelessness in letting the cattle wander, or from a design, on the part of the owners, not to restrain the. cattle, -after they had been let into the highway for a legitimate purpose. If this theory of the defendants’ right to water their cattle, at a place used from time immemorial, is correct, it seems to me that, within the [647]*647authorities, it is an element of deprivation of defendants’ natural rights which may be the subject of loss to the defendants, and therefore an element of damage. In case an accident should happen to any of the cattle thus wandering upon the" public highway, it would be very doubtful indeed whether the defendants could recover any damage from the railroad company for their injury; certainly such damage cannot be recovered unless the company is grossly negligent, or should willfully run down and destroy the stock. All of the later authorities seem to hold that the commissioners have the right to take into consideration, in estimating damages, any circumstance or condition which might reasonably be liable to produce any injury to the landowner. For instance, the liability of fire spreading upon the premises, and doing damage to the landowner’s crops or buildings, is a legitimate consideration in estimating the damages sustained in the building of the road, and no recovery can be had for injuries of that character, for the reason that it is considered as a part of the damage estimated; and no further damage can be recovered, unless, possibly, in the operation of the road, there is gross carelessness, on the part of the railroad company, in the running and operation of its trains. The same may be said with reference to the liability of cattle to get through fences which the railroad company is bound to build and reasonably keep in repair.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 N.Y.S. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecksport-connecting-railway-co-v-west-nysupct-1897.