Saratoga & Schenectady Railroad v. Schenectady Stove Co.

66 How. Pr. 43
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 66 How. Pr. 43 (Saratoga & Schenectady Railroad v. Schenectady Stove 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
Saratoga & Schenectady Railroad v. Schenectady Stove Co., 66 How. Pr. 43 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

Westbrook, J.

The commissioners appointed by the court to appraise the property needed by the Saratoga and Schnectady Railroad Company have, by their report now presented for confirmation, found the value of the property sought to be taken to be §43,672.50. They further find that the Schenectady Stove Company is the owner in fee of such property, subject only to two mortgages held and owned by the executors of the last will and testament of Lyman Sanford, deceased, the amount due upon which the report specifies.

The Railway Company, being dissatisfied with the appraisal and being about to appeal therefrom, asks that a portion of the award, in and by the order confirming it, be directed to be deposited in some designated depository pending the appeal. To this the owner of the property objects, and insists, [44]*44that as there is no dispute as to the persons entitled to receive the money, nor any disability on the part of either to receive it, no order for confirmation of the report should be made containing a provision which shall prevent such persons, or any of them, from immediately obtaining the sum awarded.

The question thus presented is, has the court power to confirm the award of the commissioners, and to direct the deposit of the money found by the commissioners to be the value of the property sought to be acquired, or any part thereof, pending an appeal, when there is no dispute in regard to the parties, or persons entitled to receive it?

By the seventeenth section of the general railroad act (chap. 140 of Laws of 1850) it is provided that in the order of confirmation of the report of the commissioners, the court shall also direct to wdiom the money is to be paid, or in what bank and in what manner it shall be deposited by the company.”

The nineteenth section of the same act provides: “ If there are adverse and conflicting claimants to the money, or any part of it, to be paid as compensation for the real estate taken, the court may direct the money to be paid into the said court by the company, and may determine who is entitled to the same, and direct to whom the same shall be paid ; and may, in its discretion, order a reference to ascertain the facts on which such determination and order are to be made.”

The eighteenth section of the act requires “ a certified copy ” of the order of confirmation to be recorded at full length in the clerk’s office of the county in which the land described in it is situated,” and declares, “ thereupon, and on the payment or deposit by the company of the money to be paid as compensation for the land, and for costs, expenses and counsel fees, as aforesaid and as directed by said order, the company shall be entitled to enter upon, take possession of, and use the said land for the purposes of its incorporation during the continuance óf its corporate existence, by virtue of this or any other act; and all persons yvho have been made parties to the proceedings shall be divested and barred of all [45]*45right, estate, and interest in such real estate during the corporate existence of the company as aforesaid.”

Provision is further made in.such eighteenth section for an appeal, in which the court shall have power to order a new appraisal, which,- when made, “ shall be final and conclusive on all the parties interested.” If by such second appraisal the amount awarded shall.be increased, such increase “shall be a lien on the land appraised, and shall be paid by the company to the parties entitled to the same, or shall be deposited in the bank, as the court shall direct.” If, however, the amount awarded by the first report shall be reduced on the new appraisal, the amount of such reduction “ shall be refunded to the company by the party to whom the same may have been paid, and judgment therefor may be rendered by the court on the filing of the second report, against the party liable to pay the same.”

The counsel for the railroad company contend that section 17 (quoted above) expressly confers upon the court the power to order the deposit, because it provides that the order of confirmation shall ■“ direct to whom the money is to be paid, or in what bank, and in what manner it shall be deposited by the company.” The counsel for the owners of the land, on the other hand, insists that this section shall be read in connection with section 19, and that such power to order the deposit only exists when there is a dispute as to the parties who are entitled to receive the money, and that in this case the deposit should not be directed, as there is no question whatever concerning the individuals entitled to receive the payment.

If the provisions of section 18 (also hereinbefore stated), which give to the corporation initiating the proceedings the right of occupancy of the land upon the recording of the certified copy order of confirmation, and “ the payment or deposit by the company of the sums to be paid as compensation for the land,” are. considered, it will be seen that the effect of the order, if made in the form asked by the railroad company, [46]*46will be to give and award to the railroad company the possession of the land without making compensation to the owner. This cannot be done without a violation of the constitution of the state, which expressly declares (art. 1, sec. 7): “ When private property shall be taken for any public use the compensation to be made therefor, when such compensation is not made by the state, shall be ascertained by a jury, or by not less than three commissioners appointed by a court of record, as shall be prescribed by law.”

This provision assumes that the right to take the property shall only exist when a “ compensation ” is “ made therefor ” at the time of such taking, for the ascertainment of .the amount of which provision' is also made. This is, perhaps, made more clear by giving to the- word “when” one of Webster’s definí-, tions, which is, “at the time that,” and substituting such definition in the reading for it so as to read thus: “At the time that private property shall be.taken for any public use the com-. pensation to be made therefor * * * shall be ascertained by a jury, or by not less than three commissioners, as shall be prescribed by law.” A slight transposition of the words makes the thought still more manifest. The compensation to be made for private property at the time that it shall be taken for public use shall be ascertained, &c. This view of the constitution is not at all impaired by the concession that in cases where there is a dispute as to who is entitled to the award, the court may order a deposit of the money, and that the title given by the statute will in all such cases vest in the applicant before actual payment, for this is upon the principle, well stated by the superior court of the city of New York, through Jokes, J., in Strong agt. The New York Rubber Company (1 Sweeny, 78, 87), “ that if certain and ample provision be made by law, so that the owner can coerce payment of the compensation adjusted and awarded to him, through the judicial tribunals or otherwise, without any unreasonable or unnecessary delay, the constitutional requirement for the making of just compensation is sufficiently satisfied.” It is [47]*47also true, however, as the learned judge further says, that as

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Related

Matter of the N.Y. Cen. H.R.R.R. Co.
60 N.Y. 116 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Strang v. New York Rubber Co.
1 Sweeny 78 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1869)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 How. Pr. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saratoga-schenectady-railroad-v-schenectady-stove-co-nysupct-1883.