Sautter v. Utica City National Bank

45 Misc. 15, 90 N.Y.S. 838
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 Misc. 15 (Sautter v. Utica City National Bank) 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
Sautter v. Utica City National Bank, 45 Misc. 15, 90 N.Y.S. 838 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

Genesee street, in the city of Utica, extends in a southerly direction from the Mohawk river to and beyond the city limits. Its width, as actually used, from building line to building line, is from ninety-seven and two-fifths to ninety-seven and nine-twentieths feet. On either side from Bagg’s square to the Erie canal, the street is and for many years has been occupied by buildings for business purposes, as shops, stores, banks and offices, substantially, in a line and fronting upon the margin of the street. The title of the. abutting owners extends only to the street line. It is the most important business street of the city.

The street does not appear to have been laid out by the local authorities, nor is it recorded in any book of highways of the city, or of the village or town which preceded it. It [17]*17was originally a “ State road ” created. by an act of the Legislature (L. 1794, ch. 29), passed March 22, 1794, entitled “An Act for laying out and improving a road from old Fort Schuyler, to the Genesee River.” The act appointed commissioners to lay out the road and directed that it be laid out six rods wide, but they were not required to open and improve the same above four rods in width, and the whole when laid out should be considered as a public highway, and not altered by the commissioners of highways of any town or county through which it should run.

The law also provided for the payment of damages where any part of the road should be laid out through inclosed or improved lands.

In February, March and April, 1902, the defendant bank acquired title to three parcels of land, each nineteen feet wide and sixty-five feet deep, extending from the westerly margin of Genesee street to Burchard street. They were then occupied by buildings and numbered 108, 110 and 112, and had been used as stores for many years — the store No. 112 having been occupied by the plaintiff as tenant for twenty-three or twenty-four years for the sale of boots and shoes at retail.

November 5, 1901, plaintiff’s wife, Beata Sautter, purchased the premises next southerly of No. 112, being No. 114. The lot was nineteen feet front and sixty-five feet deep, and the building thereon had been for a long time before used as a store. During the spring and summer following, the plaintiff, or his said wife, erected a four-story building, having walls of the frontage and depth of the lot.

The first floor was fitted for a boot and shoe store, with plate-glass show windows in front and a glass door in the center. At the second story was a bow window extending cut in front of the wall and over the sidewalk, a distance of two feet three and one-half inches. There was also a sign twelve feet and two inches long, about two feet wide, suspended seven and one-half feet above and across the sidewalk. Both bow window and sign were removed before the trial of this action.

In September, 1902, the plaintiff moved his stock of [18]*18goods into said store, where he has since carried on and still continues his said business.

Rovember 4, 1902, said Beata conveyed said premises to the plaintiff.

The defendant bank, about the time it acquired title to said parcels, Nos. 108, 110, 112, procured plans and specifications and made a contract with the defendant, Stanard, for the erection of a banking house and office building thereon of stone, brick and terra cotta, having steel beams, girders and joists, fifty-seven feet front, sixty-five feet deep, and one hundred and fifty feet high, divided into ten stories, for $113,900 — the first floor for a banking house, to bt occupied by the Utica City Rational Bank, and the other floors for offices. The buildings on said lots were removed during the spring and summer following and the work of construction begun.

As designed and subsequently constructed, the front wall is built upon the building line of the street. There are builc into and made a part of the front wall five columns, each resting on a pedestal, one-half being in front of the face, and the other half, apparently, within the wall and extending up thirty-one feet, where it is surmounted by a cap or scroll stone. The base stone of the pedestal extends twenty-three and three-sixteenth inches from the face of the wall, is fifty-five and one-half inches wide, and eight and one-fourth inches thick. From this stone up to a point of five feet three-fourth inch above the sidewalk, the pedestal varies in size. The projection of the stone, next above the base, is seventeen and three-eighth inches from the wall, and is capped by a stone about eight inches thick, projecting nineteen and thirteen-sixteenth inches, and on top of this is another stone six and one-fourth, inches thick and projecting seventeen and seven-sixteenth inches. From the pedestal up, the column is constructed of stone one foot eight inches thick, half round, representing a diameter of thirty-nine inches at the bottom and tapering to thirty-three inches, giving a radius and consequent projection, varying from nineteen and one-half to sixteen and one-half inches. One of these columns stands at the southeast corner of the build[19]*19ing, next to, but not upon, nor overhanging, the plaintiff’s north line.

On the 30th of October, 1902, the side and rear walls had been built up to a height of twenty-five feet above the ground — the front basement wall to the surface with two courses of cut stone on top and above the sidewalk. All of the stone for the first two stories had been cut and delivered, except five scroll or cap stones for the tops of the columns. The large pier stones had been delivered on the ground and were ready to he set. All of the steel work, beams, girts and joists, of proper dimensions, were in the yard of the contractor.

On that day, the plaintiff’s counsel, Mr. Lindsley, a friend, Mr. Martin, and the plaintiff’s son, Samuel, called on the bank officers and objected to the occupation of the street inside the boundary line thereof; the objection being specially pointed to certain front steps, and two ornamental pillars upon which it was proposed to put electric lights. They were invited to call the following day when the architect would be present. Pursuant to this invitation, Mr. Martin and Mr. Samuel Sautter visited the bank officials a second time, and it was then decided to omit the posts and steps, as then planned. There was conversation about the columns, but no assent by the plaintiff’s representatives that they be built, so as to project from the wall in the manner stated:

Said columns add to the strength and ornamentation of the building, and are in keeping with its general construction. A change at that time eliminating them would have made necessary an entire revision of the front, and would also have occasioned an additional expense of about $9,600.

The work was continued until the seventh day of Hovember following when this action was brought, and a temporary injunction obtained from Mr. Justice Scripture, restraining the defendant from proceeding with said building further easterly than the easterly line of the face of the main part of the buildings known as Nos. 106 and 114 Genesee street.” Subsequently the injunction was so modified by the justice granting it as to permit a continuation of the work to com[20]*20pletion as it now is, the said modifying order providing that nothing therein, and the other orders made in said action, should affect the ultimate rights of the parties at the trial ¡thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Misc. 15, 90 N.Y.S. 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sautter-v-utica-city-national-bank-nysupct-1904.