Terrace Hotel Co. v. State of New York

227 N.E.2d 846, 19 N.Y.2d 526, 281 N.Y.S.2d 34, 1967 N.Y. LEXIS 1517
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1967
DocketClaim 39895; Claim 40075
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 227 N.E.2d 846 (Terrace Hotel Co. v. State of New York) 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
Terrace Hotel Co. v. State of New York, 227 N.E.2d 846, 19 N.Y.2d 526, 281 N.Y.S.2d 34, 1967 N.Y. LEXIS 1517 (N.Y. 1967).

Opinion

Chief Judge Fuld.

In each of these two appeals, an owner of property in Sullivan County—Bardowitz and Terrace—• seeks damages against the State for its attempted appropriation of negative easements which would have barred billboards and advertising signs from the claimant’s land abutting the Quickway (Route 17). The Superintendent of Public Works, acting on behalf of the State, actually filed appropriation maps in 1958 *528 and 1959 purporting to appropriate the easements pursuant to section 30 of the Highway Law. The State’s right to act under its power of eminent domain was not questioned by either claimant and each brought suit for damages in the Court of Claims in June of 1960.

While these claims were pending, in July, 1961, our court decided Schulman v. People (10 N Y 2d 249, revg. 11 A D 2d 273) wherein we held that the Superintendent of Public Works was not authorized to condemn a negative easement barring the use of property for outdoor advertising purposes under section 30 of the Highway Law or any other provision of statute. Following that determination, the State moved to dismiss the appropriation claims of both Bardowitz and Terrace, and the Court of Claims granted the motions ‘ ‘ without prejudice ’ ’ to the filing of new claims for damages caused by the appropriation proceedings.

Shortly thereafter, each of the claimants filed a claim for damages — $8,000 by Terrace and $12,500 by Bardowitz — assertedly sustained by them, for trespass, the creation of a cloud on title and for the amount incurred for legal services in connection with the State’s discontinued appropriation of the easements. The Court of Claims dismissed the claims and, on appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed the judgments by a closely divided court.

In New York State Thruway Auth. v. Ashley Motor Ct. (10 N Y 2d 151, 158), we held that it was “ a constitutional exercise of the State’s police power ” for the Legislature, without providing compensation, to prohibit the erection or maintenance of “ advertising devices ”— i.e., bill-boards on lands adjacent to the New York Thruway (Public Authorities Law, § 361-a). Thi-s bind of land use restriction imposed pursuant to the exercise of the State’s police power is, as we noted in the Schulman case (10 N Y 2d 249, 254, supra), exactly the same as the negative easements of which these claimants complain. It is clear, therefore, that, if the Legislature had wanted to," it could have permanently acquired such easements over the claimants’ properties abutting the Quickway without paying anything for them at all. The Legislature, however, has specifically declined to pass the necessary legislation. (See Schulman v. People, 10 N Y 2d 249, 254, n., supra.) Nor did it authorize the Superintendent of *529 Public Works to acquire the negative easements by exercise of the power of eminent domain. (See Schulman v. People, 10 N Y 2d 249, supra.) Even so, the claimants are not entitled to damages for the three-year period, between the filing of the appropriation maps and our decision in the Schulman case, during which they were prevented from using their lands for advertising purposes.

If an authorized appropriation of these negative .easements would not have been a taking of private property for public use without just compensation (N. Y. Const., art. I, § 7, subd. [a]; U. S. Const., 5th Amdt.; see New York State Thruway Auth. v. Ashley Motor Ct., 10 N Y 2d 151, supra), the unauthorized nature of the appropriation should make no difference. In other words, for purposes of deciding whether State action was confiscatory, the crucial question is not the manner in which the taking occurred but, instead, whether a compensable property interest was taken. The fact that a government official acted without sufficient authority must be considered separately, on its own merits, as a possible and independent basis for holding the State liable in tort.

In our view, the appropriation of these negative easements was not confiscatory and is very different from the situation where a government official, acting beyond his authority, seizes property, such as a fee interest, which the State could never have validly acquired except upon payment of compensation. (See, e.g., Village of St. Johnsville v. Smith, 184 N. Y. 341; Folmsbee v. City of Amsterdam, 142 N. Y. 118; see, also, 6 Nichols, Eminent Domain [3d ed.], § 28.3, subd. [1].) Here, the State could have extinguished the claimants’ rights to erect billboards on their lands simply by enacting a statute to that effect. (Compare New York State Thruway Auth. v. Ashley Motor Ct., 10 N Y 2d 151, supra, with Scarsdale Supply Co. v. Village of Scarsdale, 8 N Y 2d 325.) It follows that the property interests which were temporarily seized are noncompensable, which is but another way of saying that the State is not constitutionally obligated to pay for them. (See New York State Thruway Auth. v. Ashley Motor Ct., 10 N Y 2d 151, supra; cf. Matter of Cromwell v. Ferrier, 19 N Y 2d 263; People v. Stover, 12 N Y 2d 462.)

*530 Nor does the fact that the Superintendent of Public Works acted without authority give rise to liability on the part of the State since his conduct was not tortious. Although the unauthorized filing of appropriation maps might, under certain circumstances, amount to a slander of title (see, generally, Ann., Recording of Instrument Purporting to Affect Title as Slander of Title, 39 ALR 2d 840), that cause of action requires allegations and proof of malice or spite which are missing here. (See Lovell Co. v. Houghton, 116 N. Y. 520, 528-529; Hovey v. Rubber Tip Pencil Co., 57 N. Y. 119, 125-126; see, also, Restatement, Second, Torts, Tent. Draft No. 13 [April 27, 1967], § 624.) The record establishes that the Superintendent of Public Works acted in good faith and in the belief that he was authorized by section 30 of the Highway Law to appropriate these negative easements. An indication of the reasonableness of his position may be found in the fact that, when the Schulman case was appealed, the Superintendent’s view was adopted by four of the Justices of the Appellate Division (11 A D 2d 273, supra) and was rejected in our court only by the narrowest of margins (10 N Y 2d 249, supra).

Of course, the situation would be different if there had been signs on these properties and the Superintendent had torn those signs down. But no claim has been made that any State officials actually did enter upon the lands and destroy existing structures. In fact, the record reveals that there never were any signs on these lands before the appropriations, nor have any been erected in the six years since we declared, in the

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.E.2d 846, 19 N.Y.2d 526, 281 N.Y.S.2d 34, 1967 N.Y. LEXIS 1517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrace-hotel-co-v-state-of-new-york-ny-1967.