120 A.D. 700 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
The property which has occasioned this controversy is located upon Chrystie street in the city of New York. - It had a frontage of sixty-eight feet nine inches on .Chrystie street upon which there had been erected a building or buildings, and of this sixty-eight feet nine inches, the northerly fifty-two feet were taken "in this proceeding, leaving the owner sixteen feet nine inches. The owner of this property also owned a lot fronting on- Belancey street which was included in the property taken, and the commissioners awarded for No. 13 Belancey street and Nos. 145 and 147 Chrystie street, together, to the owner $49,500,- and to the lessee of this property the sum of $86,000, which was divided as an award for the buildings of $71,000, and for what was called the leasehold $15,000. To that report the owners filed .their objection that the award- made to the lessee on account of the unexpired term of the leases held by him on. properties .Nos.. 145 and 147 Chrystie street included in damage parcel No. 85 was greatly in excess of the fair market value of the unexpired term of said leases; second, that the.award made to the owners for the land included in the parcel designated
The property in question was,, at the time the title vested in the city,-owned by one Robert R:-Stnyvesant who' had on the 5th day of July, 1899,. leased it to Adolph Schlessinger by three leases for twenty-one years with covenants' for two renewals of twenty-one years each. These leases were identical in form and the rent reserved for the term was $1,650 a year, the .tenant tp pay all taxes, assessments and other charges. There is no question raised as to the value fixed by the commissioners upon the property, as a whole, but the owners-object to the award made for the value of the leasehold of $15,000 in addition to the award made to. the lessee for the value of the buildings erected upon the property. In'this discussion, therefore, we may assume that the total value of the land and .the buildings was properly fixed by the commissioners.
The commissioners ' awarded the landlord $49,500, but this included his interest in the Belancey street property." It would appear, from -the award and the testimony that' the commissioners fixed the value of the fee of the land of the Chrystie street property at $42,500, and of this amount awarded the tenant- $15,000 and the owner $27,500. • This would make- the total value of the Chrystie street property as fixed by the commissioners $113,500, of which the tenant was awárded $86,000 and the owner of the fee $27,500. Béfore the commissioners the owners conceded that the tenant was entitled to whatever award should be made for the build- - ings and the question as between the landlord and tenant seems to . have been, confined to the amount that, should be awarded to the
It is quite evident that the commissioners, largely, I think, as the result of the attitude taken by counsel for both the land and the tenant, applied an entirely wrong principle in determining this question. They considered that the buildings as distinct from the real property belong to the tenant and then proceeded upon some theory which is certainly not based upon any evidence before them to fix in addition to the value of the buildings some value in the lease as a lease without the buildings. Whatever may be said of the difficulty of ascertaining just what the tenant’s interest in this property as a whole was, it certainly .was much less difficult than'to ascer tain what was the value of á lease of this property as distinct from the occupation and ownership of it as it was occupied. But it seems to me perfectly clear that the only method which will do justice is to ascertain just what interest the tenant had in the lease as a whole, considering the rent he pays^the obligations that he has and will ■ assume under his lease and just what that interest is worth and what its market value" is, and that having been ascertained award that amount to him as the value of the property taken, the remainder, of course, to go to the landlord.
An examination of the authorities shows that this "is the rule that has been uniformly adopted when this question has"come before the
I have not been able to find any case in which this principle has been departed from, and I think it should' be applied in all cases where property subject to a lease is taken under the right of eminent domain. The.commissioners having first ascertained the valué of the property as- a whole are then -required to' apportion the amount thus determined among the several parties Who are interested in the property. Where the property thus taken is held under a lease the value to the lessee of his. estate in the property is to be determined, and that value is to be ascertained upon the. same 'principles that are applied in ascertaining the value of the property as a whole. What is to be ascertained is the fair market value'of the lease. Undoubtedly all the elements of a lease can be considered, and in addition the testimony, of experts who are to testify as to the' market value of the lease with the covenants, conditions and obligations imposed upon the landlord and the tenant,!-and it is this market value to which he is entitled. "
As the commissioners manifestly proceeded upon a wrong theory in determining these damages, I think the order appealed . from' must be reversed,-with ten dollars. costs and disbursements-,.to the -appellants, .and the report sent back to the commissioners to determine the value to the lessee of this lease as á whole in accordance with the principles, above indicated.
McLaughlin, Laughlin, Clarke and Scott,- JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with -ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellants, and report sent back to commissioners to determine value to the léssee of the lease as a whole in accordance with the principles expressed in opinion,