Shaw v. Manhattan Railway Co.

79 N.Y.S. 915

This text of 79 N.Y.S. 915 (Shaw v. Manhattan Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Manhattan Railway Co., 79 N.Y.S. 915 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, J.

The action was brought to restrain the maintenance and operation of the elevated railroad opposite certain property which belonged to the plaintiff’s testatrix, situated on the southeast corner of Fourth avenue and Forty-Second street, New York City. The property includes the whole frontage on Fourth avenue between Forty-First and Forty-Second streets, with a depth of 130 feet on both streets. The action was originally commenced by Julia A. Shaw, who died after the commencement of the action, and her executors were substituted in her place. The plaintiff acquired this property by various conveyances. It is now used, however, as one [916]*916building for a hotel, and the complaint originally described the whole property as belonging to the plaintiff, and asked the court to enjoin the maintenance and operation of the elevated railroad on Forty-Second street, upon which the property as a whole abutted. Although there was but one cause of action alleged in the complaint, by a stipulation between the parties the case was tried upon the theory that there were two causes of action,—one based upon the ownership of a piece of property on Forty-Second street, commencing about 64 feet east of Fourth avenue, and extending on Forty-Second street 66 feet; and the other based upon the ownership of the property on the corner of Fourth avenue and Forty-Second street, about 64 feet on Forty-Second street. The first cause of action was dismissed, and the court awarded judgment restraining the defendant from" operating its road in front of the corner property, except upon payment of the sum of $25,000 as the value of the easement appropriated by the defendant, with an award for rental damages. The plaintiff appeals from the dismissal of the first cause of action, the defendant from the award made upon the second cause of action.

The plaintiff’s testatrix acquired title to this property by separate conveyances. She purchased the southeast corner of Forty-Second street and Fourth avenue (for which she has recovered judgment) in July, 1880. Her grantors had acquired title to the property in 1873. This property had a frontage upon Fourth avenue of about 75 feet, with a depth on Forty-Second street of about 64 feet. Upon this piece of property there was erected prior to the construction of the elevated railroad a hotel building, which was known as the “Westchester House,” and which at some time seems to have been conducted as an independent hotel. Upon the remainder of this property there was erected a hotel called the “Grand Union Hotel.” This property was acquired by the plaintiff’s testatrix on September 13, 1877, by a conveyance from one Hayes. It was admitted by the parties, however, that in the year 1875 James Shaw was the owner of the property fronting on Forty-Second street; that the construction of the elevated railroad was commenced in Forty-Second street in August, 1878, and that Forty-Second street in front of the premises in suit was opened under The act of 1813. In relation to what is known as the first cause of action, which was acquired by the plaintiff’s testatrix in the year 1877, and was owned by James Shaw in the year 1875, and as to which the complaint was dismissed, there was introduced in evidence an instrument which the defendant claimed was a consent to> the construction and operation of this road in front of this property, and the question upon the plaintiff’s appeal was whether the plaintiff was estopped by that consent from maintaining this action. This instrument was as follows:

“We, the undersigned, owners oí land' bounded on Forty-Second street (south side), Third to Lexington avenue, hereby respectively consent to the construction and operation of an elevated railway over, through, and along said street; the said railway to be constructed and operated by either the New York Elevated Railroad Company or the company to be organized under chapter 606 of the Laws of 1875. Dated New York, October, 1875.”

To this instrument was annexed a list of the owners of property, describing them by block and ward numbers, with the names of the [917]*917owners and the valuation of the property. At the bottom of this list, opposite Nos. 67, 68, and 68}4, was the name of James E. Sha.w as the owner, and there was written under the column headed “signatures,” and opposite to this property, the following: “I am in favor of an elevated road over the middle of the street, but not on the sidewalk. [Signed] James E. Shaw.” The court below held that by this instrument Shaw consented to the erection and maintenance of the railroad, and the plaintiff was thereby estopped from maintaining this action to restrain the elevated railroad from operating its road in front of this property; and it is the correctness of this decision which is challenged by the plaintiffs upon their appeal.

The question as to the effect of this consent, if it had been signed in the form in which it was presented for signature, was presented to the court of appeals in the case of White v. Railway Co., 139 N. Y. 19, 34 N. E. 887. The former part of the consent in that case was the same as in this, and there the owner of the property signed the consent. It had in that case been held in the court below that this consent, being obtained to comply with the provisions of the constitution and law which required the owners of property abutting on a street to consent to the construction and operation of a railroad before the same could be constructed and operated, did not have the effect of devesting the abutting owners of their easement of light, air, and access in the street; and that view was disapproved by the court of appeals. Judge Peckham, after discussing the nature of the easement that an abutting owner has in the street, saj^s:

“Whatever the means by which the easements were created, they are in their nature the same as if they had been created by grant. The owners thereof cannot be devested of them without their consent unless they are compensated therefor. Although it may generally be said, under the authority of the cases cited, that an easement in the nature of an interest in the land, of another can only be created by a grant, yet, after it has been created, and while it is in existence, it may be abandoned, and thus extinguished, by acts showing an intention to abandon and extinguish the same. * * * They had an easement in it only, and their consent purported to carry no title to land. There can be no question that they had the right to release, abandon, or otherwise extinguish that easement, and upon such terms as they should think fit. The question before us is whether they have done so, and to what extent by the execution of the paper proved upon the trial.”

And it was held that the unrestricted execution of this instrument was such an extinguishment of their easement. Upon that question the court say:

“When, therefore, an abutting 0wrier consents in writing to the construction and operation of an elevated railroad in the street fronting his property, what other possible meaning can be placed upon such an act than that he voluntarily abandons his easement of light, etc., in the street to the extent to which it will necessarily be affected by the building of the road? The act is capable of but one construction, as it seems to me. He might have consented conditionally,—as, for instance, that a majority should also execute such consent, or upon payment of a certain sum, or upon condition of the payment of such damages as he might prove he would sustain from the existence of the road. In this case, however, there is absolutely no condition stated or claimed.

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Related

White v. Manhattan Railway Co.
34 N.E. 887 (New York Court of Appeals, 1893)
Foote v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.
42 N.E. 181 (New York Court of Appeals, 1895)
Ward v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.
46 N.E. 319 (New York Court of Appeals, 1897)
Snell v. . Levitt
18 N.E. 370 (New York Court of Appeals, 1888)
Heimburg v. Manhattan Railway Co.
56 N.E. 899 (New York Court of Appeals, 1900)
Herzog v. New York Elevated Railway Co.
27 N.Y.S. 1034 (New York Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y.S. 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-manhattan-railway-co-nyappdiv-1903.