Rock v. Belmar Contracting Co.

141 Misc. 242, 252 N.Y.S. 463, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1814
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 Misc. 242 (Rock v. Belmar Contracting 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
Rock v. Belmar Contracting Co., 141 Misc. 242, 252 N.Y.S. 463, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1814 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of lands adjoining the new Granville-Hartford State highway. The defendant built the road. The complaint alleges that the defendant trespassed upon [243]*243plaintiff’s lands, opened a stone quarry thereon and wrongfully operated the quarry and took therefrom and converted a large quantity of rock. By stipulation in writing the defendant admits the trespass and conversion. The issue tried and submitted is the amount of damages.

The defendant used in the road about 24,000 cubic yards, loose measure, of stone, most of which came from the quarry on the plaintiff’s property and the balance from the same outcropping of rock that extended southerly from plaintiff’s lands into the right of way appropriated by the county from plaintiff’s property. The quarrying operations upon plaintiff’s land covered an area of about one-half acre. The ledge quarried was from nine to twenty-seven feet in height above the State road level, 133 feet east and west and about 182 feet north and south. This half acre of rock was of no value for farm purposes. The value of plaintiff’s little farm was not reduced to any appreciable extent by the removal of this rock. The county appropriated from plaintiff’s farm, for right of way purposes, a narrow strip of about an acre, including a small portion of the rock ledge. Plaintiff accepted payment therefor at the rate of fifty dollars per acre.

Plaintiff’s ledge of rock was very advantageously located for defendant’s purposes, being both at the side of and near one end of the road. The quality of the rock in the ledge had been approved by the Highway Department" as suitable for road purposes. There was no market for the stone, except with defendant. If the State road had not been built the quarry would not have been opened. The defendant claims that there were two or three other quarry sites available along the road, which it might have acquired for small amounts. Plaintiff contends that his quarry was the only one having suitable rock. Without doubt plaintiff’s quarry site was the best located. If there were other quarry sites available it does not appear how much the right to operate them would cost. While the defendant was the only prospective purchaser, nevertheless there was its special market for a quarry site, because it was necessary for the defendant to acquire a site and crush its stone in the vicinity of the road. The cost of hauling the crushed stone from Comstock, where a small quantity was obtained in the beginning for bridge purposes, or from other quarries located miles away from the construction work, was prohibitive. The State when advertising for bids, notified the prospective bidders that local rock was obtainable.

The plaintiff urges that he has proven $12,000 damages and asks to have this sum trebled. The defendant asserts it should pay on the same basis as the county, which would be twenty-five dollars. [244]*244Twelve thousand dollars would be a dozen times the value of the whole farm for taking rock on an half acre thereof. Such an amount seems excessive and if trebled outrageous. Twenty-five dollars for practically all the stone that went into twelve miles of State road also offends common sense.

Plaintiff bases his claim upon the rule invoked under certain circumstances in a trespass action that the value of the thing separated from the realty is the measure of damages where it has a value after removal and the land has sustained no material injury because of the removal. Stone, coal and other minerals, clay, sand, logs, etc., come within this rule. (Worrall v. Munn, 53 N. Y. 185; Dwight v. Elmira, C. & N. R. R. Co., 132 id. 199.)

In Barton Coal Company v. Cox (39 Md. 1) we find: Plaintiff is entitled to recover the value of the coal immediately upon its conversion into a chattel by a severance from the freehold, without abatement of the cost of severance. * * * such sum per ton, as the jury may find the said coal so mined was worth, when first severed from its native bed, and before it was put upon the mine cars, without deducting the expense of severing said coal from its native bed.”

In Hartshorn v. Chaddock (135 N. Y. 116, 121) one may read: If my neighbor remove from my land, by means of trespass, a load of sand or gravel, the act might have no appreciable effect upon the value of the property as a whole, and yet I would be entitled to damages, but in that case they would be measured by the value of the sand or gravel removed, and expense of repairing any injury caused by its removal.”

Dwight v. Elmira, C. & N. R. R. Co. (132 N. Y. 199) states: The rule is undoubtedly as stated by the learned judge in the Whitbeck case, (36 Barb. 644) that a recovery may be had for the value of thing destroyed, where it has a value which may be accurately measured without a reference to the soil in which it stands.”

The trees were cut down and taken from premises belonging to and in the possession of the plaintiff, situate on a mountain in the town of Day. Their removal from that place constituted the conversion, and their value at that place at the time of conversion is the measure of damages.” (Johnson v. Kathan, 88 Hun, 456; Disbrow v. Westchester Hardwood Co., 164 N. Y. 420.)

The case of McCruden v. Rochester Railway Co. (25 N. Y. Supp. 114; affd., 151 N. Y. 623), at page 117 reads: “ The timber undoubtedly belonged to the plaintiff * * *. When it was cut down, even if it had been left upon the ground * * *. But the timber lying there would still be the timber of the plaintiff. [245]*245If some other person had taken it away, no doubt such other person would be liable to the plaintiff for its value. I cap, see no good reason why the defendant should be relieved from such liability because it committed what may be called a 1 double trespass ’ and took away the wood after it had injured the freehold by cutting down the trees.”

In Brown v. Sax (7 Cow. 95) it was held where the defendant converted trees of plaintiff and sawed them into planks that the measure of damages was the value of the planks.

The party whose property has been tortiously taken is entitled to the enhanced value until it has been so changed as to alter the. title, is a doctrine as old as the year books. In this court it has been held that the owner of timber may reclaim it when made into shingles. (Betts v. Lee, 5 Johns. 348.)

In the foregoing cases the court dealt with material such as coal, sand, gravel, logs, plank, shingles, that had a general market value. In this case the blasted rock had no general market value. There was no one to buy it or use it except the road contractor. The contractor was in the market to buy solid rock — a quarry site. Defendant had no desire to purchase blasted or loose rock It. wanted to do the quarrying itself.

The plaintiff might argue that, there being no diminution in the market value of the farm and there being no general market for the loose rock, we must measure the plaintiff’s damages not by his loss, but by the wrongdoer’s gain. It is an elementary policy of the law that the wrongdoer shall not profit by his own wrong.” (Underhill v. Schenck, 201 App. Div. 46; De Camp v. Bullard, 159 N. Y. 450; Stebbins v. Frisbie, etc., Knitting Co., 201 App. Div. 477;

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Bluebook (online)
141 Misc. 242, 252 N.Y.S. 463, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-v-belmar-contracting-co-nysupct-1930.