Uline v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

101 N.Y. 98
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 101 N.Y. 98 (Uline v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) 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
Uline v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 101 N.Y. 98 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Earl, J.

Oolonie street runs at right angles with and crosses Broadway in the city of Albany, and the defendant’s railroad crosses the two streets diagonally at the place of their intersection, and had crossed there for at least forty years before the trial of this action. The plaintiff owned three houses and lots contiguous to each other situate on the northerly side of Oolonie street and easterly of Broadway and of the railroad. The lot numbers are 85, 83 and 81, numbered in this order from Broadway. Lots 85 and 83 extend only to the northerly side of Oolonie street, while lot 81 extends to the center thereof. When the railroad was originally built the "two streets were somewhat raised. About the year 1874 two additional tracks were laid upon the defendant’s road where it crossed the two streets, one of which was upon the easterly [102]*102side thereof, and the road-bed was raised at its intersection with Broadway from two and a half to three feet. It does not appear that either of the tracks or any part of the road-bed was upon any of plaintiff’s land or that she received any damage whatever from them. But to accommodate the grade of Oolonie street to the grade of the railroad it became necessary to raise the street and sidewalks thereof, and the consequence was that the street and sidewalk in front of plaintiff’s lots were elevated about one foot, and all the damage of which plaintiff complains was caused by this elevation.

She alleged in her complaint that her lots extended to the center of the street; that the defendant entered upon her property (meaning her property in the street) and tore up the pavement, raised the street, sidewalks and gutters and so shaped the street and gutters as to pour the water therefrom down over the sidewalk into the basement of her houses by means of which her premises were made liable to be flooded with water, and had been flooded with water and were rendered damp, unhealthy and inconvenient of access, and her property therein had been injured, and the rental value, and the value thereof greatly depreciated. Many exceptions were taken at the trial on behalf of the defendant which its counsel argued before us and relied upon for a reversal of the judgment. But I shall notice those only which have reference to the rule of damages laid down by the trial judge. Upon the trial it was claimed on behalf-of the defendant that the plaintiff could recover only such damages as she had sustained up to the commencement of the action. On the contrary her counsel claimed that she could recover damages upon the theory that the embankment placed in the street in front of her lots was to be permanent, and that thus it was a permanent injury to her lots, and so the law was ruled by the trial judge.

A witness for the plaintiff was asked this question: “ What in your judgment was the value of these lots, 81, 83 and 85 Oolonie street, before the grade was raised ? ” This was objected to by defendant’s counsel as immaterial and incompetent, and the objection was overruled, and the witness answered that [103]*103each lot was worth $3,000, and was worth less after the change. Then he was asked this question: “ IIow much would it be worth since the change in the street? ” This was objected to by defendant’s counsel on the grounds that it was immaterial and incompetent; that a change of market value between 1874 and that time was no evidence of damages in this action; that the question assumes that the damage was permanent; that the proper measure of damages was any injury to the rental value of the premises prior to the commencement of the suit and the cost of restoring the street to its former condition, and that there was nothing in the complaint or in the evidence which rendered material any evidence as to the market value of the property either before or after the alleged wrongful act. The trial judge ruled that he would allow the plaintiff to prove how much the rental of the property had been impaired down to the commencement of the action, and the actual injuries which the property had sustained by the flow of the water into, upon and against it by reason of the change of the grade of the street by the defendant, and to this ruling plaintiff’s counsel excepted. Subsequently upon further argument on the next day the judge reversed his ruling and among other things .said: “Yesterday an inquiry was made of counsel as to the act of the defendant in constructing the additional tracks and in raising the bed of the road. I understood it to be conceded that the act was a pure trespass, that the dumping of the ground in the street was a trespass, and that the construction of the tracks was a trespass, and the running of the cars was a trespass, and I, therefore, held that no court would be justified in assuming that an act of that character would be permanent; therefore, that the permanent depreciation in value of the property could not be the basis of the damages, but only the depreciated rental during the time of the continuance of the trespass up to the time of the beginning of the suit, and the actual injury which the flooding had done to the property. I think if these facts be conceded, that the plaintiff can only recover the rental which she had lost and the actual injury to the premises down to the time of the bringing of the suit.” He then called attention to [104]*104the complaint and said that it did not charge that the defendant’s acts were illegal, or that they were apure trespass upon the street, and that the pleadings showed that the acts were legally done by the defendant under its charter; and further: “ If that proposition be sound how can the court act upon an assumption that here was a mere trespass committed by the railroad company upon a street, which they had no right to do ? My decision yesterday rested upon an assumption that purely and simply here was a trespass committed upon the street which the company had no right to commit, and which, because a trespass, the court could not assume would be of a permanent character. Upon that supposition, and upon that theory, it was held that the plaintiff could not recover as for a permanent injury to the property, but must be limited in her recovery to the damages which she had sustained by a loss of rental up to the time of bringing the action and to the actual injury done to the property.” Plaintiff’s counsel stated that “ they had never claimed this was a case of mere trespass; that as to two of the lots they did not own the'soil in the street and it could not be a trespass.” The trial judge then held that because the acts of the defendant in the street were not illegal or unlawful and, therefore, not a trespass, they might be regarded as of a permanent nature, and that the plaintiff could, therefore, recover for the permanent injury done to her property, and he overruled defendant’s objection to the question, and the witness answered that each lot immediately after the change was worth about $1,500. Similar questions put by plaintiff’s counsel to other witnesses were objected to by defendant’s counsel, the objections were overruled and the witnesses answered in substantially the same manner. Evidence offered by the defendant to show how much it would cost to restore the street to its former condition was, on the objection of the plaintiff, excluded.

At the close of all the evidence defendant’s counsel moved for a nonsuit upon the following grounds: “ (1) That no title has been proved in plaintiff in the property in question. (2) There is no proof of any interference by defendant with property in question. (3) Plaintiff has failed to make out a cause of [105]*105action.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.Y. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uline-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-ny-1886.