Townsend v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

56 Misc. 253, 106 N.Y.S. 381
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Misc. 253 (Townsend v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) 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
Townsend v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 56 Misc. 253, 106 N.Y.S. 381 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Betts, J.

Prior to December 31, 1881, one Jacob Handley owned certain dock premises on the Hudson river at Milton, in the town of Marlborough, in this county, at and from which several steamboats rented piers or docks and carried on a general passenger and freighting business; and on said December thirty-first, the Hew York, West Shore and Buffalo Eailway Company, the predecessor in title of the defendant, acquired a certain strip or portion through said premises by condemnation proceedings, for the' purpose of constructing and operating its proposed railroad, paying to said Jacob Handley therefor the sum of $10,500, and eventually constructed its road and operated the same over said land so acquired.

The defendant herein has succeeded to the rights of the said Hew York, West Shore and Buffalo. Eailroad Company; and the plaintiff herein has by devise succeeded to the rights of Jacob Handley in said property in question remaining in him after such condemnation proceeding and also the lands on the east and west of said right of way.

The plaintiff herein alleges in her complaint, in substance, that, since the acquirement of said premises from said Jacob Handley, additional burdens have been placed upon the same by defendant, not in contemplation of the parties at the time of the condemnation proceedings., The principal complaint is that the grade of the track and roadbed of said defendant has been raised between two and three feet above the track and roadbed contemplated by the parties at the time of the said condemnation proceeding, and that there is additional height above the tracks and roadbed as originally constructed. Various other lesser claims are made which will - be referred to later.

After this 1-and was taken by the railway company, a strip of seventy-five to one hundred feet, more or less,, in width along the entire river front was left in the ownership and [255]*255possession of Jacob Handley, on the east side of the railroad company’s right of way, and, later, of this plaintiff, which has since been put to about the same purposes that it was prior to the acquisition by the defendant’s predecessors of the right of way. It is used principally as a dock or landing place for steamboats. Other than this land the plaintiff also owns considerable land upon the west side of the defendant’s right of way. Crossing this right of way is a main highway leading from Milton to the Mary Powell dock of the plaintiff. There are also two other crossings constructed by defendant’s predecessor across this right of way which are used by the plaintiff and her patrons and tenants, one from this highway to the north side of a storehouse of the plaintiff at which steamboats land,= and the other farther south, from the southerly side of said storehouse, crossing to the 'west of the railroad lands and again coming on the lands of the plaintiff. upon the west side of said railroad lands.

A great deal of evidence has been taken in this ease, and the entire testimony submitted on the condemnation proceedings has also been, introduced.

The plaintiff claims that on many different occasions the defendant has raised the grade of its roadbed through the right of way until it has now reached a height of between two and three feet higher than the six feet above high water mark originally contemplated. That this has been done at various times and that, in 1900, an increase in such elevation was made of quite an extent by the defendant, soon after which this action was begun.

The defendant contends that no change had been made in the elevation of its tracks or roadbed except after settlements to bring the same up to the original grade, until, in the summer of 1900, when the track and roadbed were stone ballasted, raising the base of the rail, not to exceed five or six inches from, its original position; that the track over portions of its roadbed along the property of the plaintiff was over made or filled ground and that the continued operation of heavy trains caused the same to settle; that, 'from time to time, the tracks were raised to the original grade or level and that the only [256]*256time there was any material raise was at -that time in 1900; that, at the time this was done or about this time, the tracks for some four miles including this dock property were stone ballasted and it was all part of a general scheme of this railroad company to ballast its entire tracks which has been continued from time to time since at different places; and that this' was in accordance with improved railroad methods adapted by other trunk line railroads.

There was nothing in the original petition in the condemnation proceedings, the answer of the defendant Handley, the report of the commissioners, or the order confirming the same, which in any way referred to the proposed grade of the railroad. There was, however, testimony of an engineer of the then petitioner that the grade would be “ six feet above high water mark and on a level with the floor of the office; * * "x" about four feet fill on the easterly side.” The office was removed when the railroad was built. The owner, Handley, from his testimony at that time evidently considered that this raise of grade would be for the entire width of the right of way acquired, instead of that portion -required for the tracks and the short distance between them.

It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant’s predecessor, the Hew York, West Shore and Buffalo Bailroad Company, in taking said strip of land, agreed and bound itself that the grade of said railroad company as it passes through the said lands of the said Jacob Handley should not be at a grade or elevation to exceed the height of six feet above the usual high water line of the Hudson river and that, under such agreement, the defendant has no right to raise the grade above the said six feet. Ho such agreement was proven in this action or attempted to be.

It is further claimed by the plaintiff that the raising of this grade of the defendant’s roadbed makes the docks of the plaintiff more difficult, of access from the highway to the village of Milton by teams or wagons; that the grade is such now that the teams cannot draw as large loads to or from said docks as they did prior to said raise of grade; that the plaintiff and defendant are competitors in the freighting and forwarding business, and that obstacles placed upon the de[257]*257fendant’s tracks or right of way, or an additional elevation of them, enures necessarily to the benefit of the défendant. Some evidence has been given that a lesser weight can now be drawn from the docks of the plaintiff over one crossing than heretofore; but no testimony has been given, that I recall, that any customer of the plaintiff’s tenants (freighters and forwarders) has quit coming to said dock or stopped doing business with the plaintiff’s tenants because of any change of grade, actual, or alleged.

The customers and patrons of the plaintiff’s tenants exercise the right of passing over the highway to the Mary Powell dock; and plaintiff does not complain of any great change of grade there, but alleges that it is a more serious matter at the two so-called private crossings. Of course the defendant has the primary right of way across the property of the plaintiff, and the plaintiff’s right of crossing the defendant’s property at her two crossings must be used in subordination to the primary rights of the defendant therein in the reasonable use and operation of its railroad. The very term right of way,” as designating the property of the defendant, is illustrative of the character of the right it has.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 Misc. 253, 106 N.Y.S. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nysupct-1903.