66 N.Y.S. 6 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This action was brought to obtain a judgment declaring six dwelling houses erected by the defendant upon the east side of Riverside Drive, between Eighty-Second and Eighty-Third streets, in the city of New York, to be unlawful obstructions to the public highway, and an unlawful interference with, plaintiff’s easements of light, air, and access, and for a mandatory injunction against maintaining the same, with damages. Briefly stated, the material facts are as follows: The plaintiff is the owner of a lot situated on the northeast corner of Riverside Drive and Eighty-Sec- and street. She also owns a house and lot on Eighty-Second street adjoining the lot mentioned. The defendant owns the lot fronting on the drive lying north of, and adjoining, the plaintiff’s lot. Riverside Drive is a public highway, and a part of Riverside Park. The plaintiff’s lot is vacant. In the spring of 1898, the defendant began the erection on the east side of the drive, between Eighty-Second and Eighty-Third streets, and immediately adjoining plaintiff’s lot on the north, of a row of first-class private,dwelling houses, six in number, each having a swell front extending from the ground to the roof, five stories, and each projection being of different shape, and extend
Where the right to institute proceedings in invitum exists, the court has power, in an equitable action, to determine that the en
■Such rule, however, never applied to individuals or corporations not vested with authority to.invoke the power of eminent domain. Stowers v. Gilbert, 156 N. Y. 600, 51 N. E. 282. In such case the plaintiff elects, if he come into equity, to take, as his sole relief, the injunction for which he prays,- and such damage as he has sustained up to the time of the judgment, not exceeding six years. If he desires damages, he must seek them upon the law side of the court, and is therein limited to such as he has sustained up to the date of bringing his action, and for the continuous trespass he may maintain successive suits if he sustain damage therefrom. Covert v. City of Brooklyn, 13 App. Div. 188, 43 N. Y. Supp. 310.
These principles have been violated in this case, for here the court has denied the injunction, and proceeded to assess for the permanent damage sustained. In addition to this, the provision of the judgment confers authority, upon a contingency, to apply for farther damages, and continues the same in the plaintiff and subsequent grantees of the property. For such provision there is no authority. A judgment which a court is authorized to pronounce must be either final or interlocutory. It is difficult to determine in what category this one falls.. It is not final, because further damages may subsequently be granted. It is not interlocutory in a legal sense, because no interlocutory judgment granting this relief is authorized in such a case. It is evident that it is not a legal judgment, because it may not be sustained upon any legal principle of which we are aware. As the award was of damages and nothing else, it is also evident that the court was without power to assess them. The defendant was entitled upon such question to a trial by jury, and of it the plaintiff could not deprive the defendant by bringing his action in equity, nor could the court assume the function of assessing damages against the protest of the defendant. Libmann v. Railway Co., 59 Hun, 428, 13 N. Y. Supp. 378. The plaintiff may waive his right to a trial by jury by bringing his action in equity, but this fact does not deprive the defendant of his constitutional right in this respect.. Cogswell v. Railroad Co., 105 N. Y. 319, 11 N. E. 518.
The defendant made demand for a trial of the question by a jury,
For the reasons stated, the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event. All concur.