71 N.Y.S. 1013 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1901
The plaintiff is the lessee of a hotel on the northerly side of Union square in the city of Hew York. His lease expires in 1906. His premises have a frontage of 121 feet on Union square and 168 feet on Fourth avenue. The building is five stories in height, and contains some two hundred rooms, several restaurants, a café and bar. The park known as Union Square, as designated by law, extends to the northerly limit of the prolongation of the thoroughfare which, to the westward of Broadway and the eastward of Fourth avenue, is known as Seventeenth street. Laws 1832, chap. 89. So much of the Union Square as is laid out as a park is of oval shape, and so situated that there is in front of plaintiff’s hotel a paved place, used as a thoroughfare for vehicles, and about 150 feet in width. Seventeenth street, east of Fourth avenue and west of Broadway, is sixty feet in width, the roadway being about forty feet wide. The defendants are the subcontractors for the construction of that portion of the so-called Rapid Transit Subway or tunnel which runs from the center of Great J ones street to the center of Twenty-third street. Under a permit from the park department, they have erected from the paved place in front of plaintiff’s hotel the structure complained of in this action. They have inclosed with board fences a space 100 by 120 feet, in which they have erected buildings and placed boilers, forges and machinery to furnish power and appliances for the prosecution of the work under their contract. The inclosed space is also used as a storage place for tools and machinery, and as headquarters for the transaction of defendants’ business. The structure is so erected as to leave in front of plaintiff’s hotel a paved carriageway of the same width as is the carriageway of Seventeenth street east of Fourth avenue and west of Broadway. There is no doubt whatever that the erection and maintenance of the structures complained of have resulted, and will, during their continued maintenance, result in serious loss and damage to the plaintiff. The work upon which the defendants are engaged is an important pub-
The complaint must, therefore, be dismissed upon the merits, with costs.
Complaint dismissed, with costs.