Rauenstein v. New York, Lackawanna & Western Railway Co.

32 N.E. 1047, 136 N.Y. 528, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 893, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 624
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 1047 (Rauenstein v. New York, Lackawanna & Western Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rauenstein v. New York, Lackawanna & Western Railway Co., 32 N.E. 1047, 136 N.Y. 528, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 893, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 624 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The only difference between the facts of this case and that of the Ottenot case (119 N. Y. 603, but fully reported in 28 N. Y. St. Rep. 483) is that Ottenot’s premises were on the opposite side of Commercial street, and the embankment in the street did not extend so as to entirely cover his side of the street; a fact, however, which can have no bearing upon the legal aspect of the question presented. *531 Though the members of this court did not all concur with the opinion which was delivered in the Ottenot case, they concurred in the result reached, on the ground of there being another remedy, as, also, because of error in the admission of evidence as to damages.

That other remedy was referred to in the opinion as being given by a certain provision of the city charter, providing for compensation to abutting owners, under certain conditions, where damaged by alterations in the grade of a street. Therefore, while the members of the court failed to concur with the opinion, in the general discussion of the question of the defendant’s liability to plaintiff, all did agree that the defendant was not liable in damages, inasmuch as the construction in Commercial street was a change in the grade of the street, for any injury from which a remedy was given under the provisions ■of the city’s charter. The position, then, is this: the concurrence of views in the Ottenot case being that there was a change in grade of the street, and, hence, no liability on the part of the company, can we now sustain this reversal by the General Term without overruling the Ottenot decision, and, likewise, the decision of the Second Division of this court; which held the present case disposed of by the Ottenot case? If we are prepared to do this, we must still go further, and hold that the rule laid down in Conklin v. N. Y., O. & W. R. Co. (102 N. Y. 107) is no longer authoritative.

The General Term opinion holds what seems to me a rather strange view of our recent decision in the case of Seining against this same defendant (128 N. Y. 157). It was supposed by that court that its effect was to so far modify previous views with respect to the legality of the structures in Water and Commercial streets, as to leave the general question open to further examination, notwithstanding the Ottenot case. Proceeding, thereupon, to consider the decisions in the Conk-ling case (supra) and the Uline case (101 N. Y. 98), a distinction was deemed to exist between them and the Buffalo cases; in that the railroad, in the former cases, was a lawful .structure, whereas, in these cases, on the strength of the view *532 taken of the opinion in the Reioving case, the construction in Water street was such an illegal appropriation of the street and so unauthorized an act as to constitute the structure a nuisance; not only as to property owners upon the street, hut as to those upon Commercial street, who were injuriously affected by the raising of the grade of the street to meet the railroad grade. The Reining case has been quite misapprehended by the court helow. That case is no more controlling upon the disposition of the present one, than was the Ottenot case upon the Reining case; as was remarked by Judge Abdbews, who wrote in the Reining case. The plaintiffs in that case were property owners upon Water street and their right to recover compensation was placed upon the ground that the railroad company had practically excluded them from the use of the street, by the presence of the railroad upon the embankment, and had thus invaded a legal right belonging to the abutting property owner. The reasoning of the decision was that, while it was quite probable that the general interests of Buffalo and of the public were promoted by the appropriation of the street, it by no means followed that a lot owner, whose property is injured, should hear the loss for the public benefit. The learned judge said that the public cannot justify such an appropriation of a street by a municipality in aid of a railroad enterprise; ” and that “ the legislature cannot legally authorize structures for railroad purposes to be erected (in streets) * "* which practically exclude the abutting owners, * * * without compensating them for the injury suffered.” Again, referring to the power conferred in the city charter with respect to streets, he held that the city cannot, under guise of exercising this power, appropriate a part of a street to the exclusive, or practically to the exclusive, use of a railroad company, or so as to cut off abutting owners - * * without making compensation, etc.” The opinion pointed out, clearly, the distinction between the case of a change of grade in the street, merely, and the case then at bar; where the object of the elevation of an embankment in the street was to subserve the *533 railroad use, which was practically, if not wholly, exclusive. It was because of that distinction that I concurred with Judge Andrews, in his opinion; conceiving that a property owner not abutting upon Water street had no right to complain of a change of the grade in his side street, which a new and lawfully authorized use of Water street had rendered necessary-in the interests of the general public. The Reining case has not modified any existing rule of law, as laid down in the Uline, GonTcling and Ottenot cases. It did not hold that the embankment in Water street for the railroad accommodation was illegal, or that it constituted an invasion of the rights of any one; save as to those of property owners abutting on Water street. It distinctly recognized the existence of the railroad and of this embarkment as being under lawful authority; but for injuries occasioned to the property rights, within the principle of the decision in the Story case, an abutting owner could not legally be deprived of his right to compensation by the legislature.

As the Reining case, in no sense, overruled the Ottenot case, the question is to-day the same as it was when we had decided the Ottenot case, and I do not believe we could, with any appearance of consistency, sustain this plaintiff’s right to recover compensation from the railroad company, when we denied it in the other case. Ror do I think we can overlook the fact that the GonJding case is a controlling authority upon the case before us. The opinion in the Conikling case was concurred in by all the members of the court. There the railroad company, in crossing a highway, constructed its road through a deep cutting; over which it built a bridge, to which, by embankments on either side of the cutting, the highway was graded up, so as to permit the continuance of the public travel as before. The plaintiff’s property abutted on one of the embankments, and he also owned the fee to the center of the highway so changed, but his right to compensation was, nevertheless, denied ; the grounds for the decision, in substance, being that a change of grade invades no private right, and, whatever the inconveni

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 1047, 136 N.Y. 528, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 893, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rauenstein-v-new-york-lackawanna-western-railway-co-ny-1893.