Whitney v. . the State of New York

96 N.Y. 240, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 487
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 96 N.Y. 240 (Whitney v. . the 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
Whitney v. . the State of New York, 96 N.Y. 240, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 487 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

¡Miller, J.

The appellants presented to the Court of Claims a demand for damages which rests upon the ground that as assignees or heirs at law they are the owners in fee and hold title to a piece or parcel of land situate in the city of Binghamton, which was formerly taken by the State upon appraisal duly made for the purpose of constituting a portion of the Chenango canal.

It appears that on the 1st day of July, 1839, the land in question, containing forty-two one-hundredths of an acre, was owned by Lewis Squires and Joseph B. Abbott in connection *243 with other lands upon which there had been a hotel, which was destroyed by fire and which was being rebuilt with a canal frontage at the time. Proceedings were instituted before the canal board by which these lands were appropriated for the use of the Chenango canal, and an appraisal was had by the canal appraisers, pursuant to statute, and the damages were appraised at $2,500, audit was determined that the benefits conferred by the construction of the canal upon the owners of the property were greater than the damages sustained by them by the appropriation of the land for canal purposes, and no damages, over and above said benefits, were appraised to the owners of the land. The State entered upon and took possession of the land and constructed and operated the canal until June 4,1878, when by an act of the legislature the State released to the city of Binghamton these premises, together with the remainder of that portion of the Chenango canal lying within the limits of the city, and authorized the city to take possession of and use the same for a public street, to be known as State street, in said city. The premises in question are forty-eight feet in width upon Court street, and the claimants allege their value to be $400 per fro,nt foot, amounting in all to $19,200, and they claim in this proceeding that the State is liable either to return and surrender said premises to them, or pay them the market value of the same. The claimants aver other acts of the legislature providing for the entire abandonment of the Chenango canal by the State and for the disposition of its lands, and they complained particularly of the donation, of the lands by the State to (he city of Binghamton under the act of 1878. They also allege that the municipality of Binghamton proceeded to lay out a street, to fill in, grade and otherwise change the relative status of the canal surface, so as to completely destroy the basement of the hotel, and to impose large assessments and onerous charges and burdens upon claimants as owners of the residue of the premises.

The Court of Claims dismissed the complaint as against the State on the ground that the papers filed did not constitute a *244 valid claim against the State, and refused to take testimony in regard to the same.

The claim of the appellants is founded on the ground that the State, after taking the land and paying no consideration therefor, except in the prospective benefits to be derived from the construction of the canal, abandoned the same and released to the city of Binghamton its right to the land taken, and authorized the city to take and use the same for a public street. We are unable to see any legal principle upon which the State could be made liable to the claimants for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the abandonment of the canal. The State took possession of the land in question, by virtue of chapter 32 of the Laws of 1833, for the use and purpose of a water-way or canal designated as the Chenango canal. The damages accruing to the owners, by reason thereof, were ascertained by the canal appraisers in pursuance of the provisions of 1 Revised Statutes (7th ed.), page 642, section 46, which make it the duty of the appraisers to make a just and equitable estimate and appraisement of the damages and benefits resulting to the persons interested in the premises so appropriated from the construction of the work for the purpose of making which such premises shall have been taken,” 'and a determination was made in pursuance of law by virtue of which the State took possession of the premises. (See § 50, 1 R. S., supra.) No question is made but what the statute's, in respect to the taking of lands for canal purposes, were fully complied with, and that the State became possessed of and entitled to the same according to law. The act of the appraisers in fixing the amount of the damages sustained by the owners of thé laud was an adjudication of all damages arising from the taking of the land, and upon well-settled principles would seem to be conclusive against the parties interested in the same. Section 46, which requires an equitable estimate and appraisal of the damages, evidently means any injuries which might be sustained bj^ reason of the taking of the land and included every species of damages arising therefrom. It not only embraced the loss which might be sustained at the time, but all future, prospect *245 ive and contemplated losses which might be incurred. It was the duty of the appraisers to look at the facts and circumstances surrounding the case, and in view of them to determine what would be a just and equitable estimate of the damages without reservation and having due regard for any contingency which might happen. Their decision included an estimate of all damages of every name, nature and description, and when it was actually made according to law no other claim could exist for damages. By the taking of the land and the appraisal of the damages arising from the same, the State made no guaranty or covenant that the canal would be used for any period of time, or that it should never be abandoned. Uor is there any ground for the assumption that the canal appraisers, in fixing the amount of damages which the owners sustained, and in considering the probable benefits which might accrue by reason of the construction of the canal, based their estimate upon the theory that the canal was to be used and operated for all future time: It is a legitimate inference that they considered that the time which it might be used might depend upon unforeseen contingencies, and that in the progress of improvement the period might arrive when, as a means of transportation, the canal would be useless and of no account. Whether this be so or otherwise can make no difference, as the appraisal and estimate constituted one entire matter, to be made at the time upon just and equitable principles.

The rule is laid down by Dwight, Commissioner, in Burbank v. Fay (65 N. Y. 64), that the benefits and advantages intended by the statute to be taken into account by the canal appraisers were not those derived from a direct use of the canal, but referred to the indirect advantages obtained by the owner of the adjacent property, growing out of the rise of values, etc., occasioned by the construction of the canal. Under this rule there is no ground for claiming that the disuse of the canal, in consequence of its failure to answer the ends for which it was constructed, thus rendering its abandonment necessary, furnishes any reason for an additional claim for damages against the State, The owner of the land received the benefits arising' from the *246 construction of the canal by the increased value of the property adjoining and the advantages accruing from its proximity to the canal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 N.Y. 240, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-the-state-of-new-york-ny-1884.