108 Misc. 70 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1919
This is a motion for a continuance during the action of a preliminary injunction restraining the defendants from adopting any resolution or taking any action rescinding, amending or otherwise modifying or affecting the bulkhead, pier head, channel, main channel or basin lines at and about Bergen Beach, Jamaica bay, city of New York, established by the commissioners of the sinking fund in July, 1917, and by the secretary of war in October, 1917, and from applying to the secretary of war for any change thereof and from prosecuting any such pending application. The papers presented upon this application are somewhat voluminous, but the question which I have to decide upon this motion will not require an elaborate discussion of the facts in the case. It will be necessary for the trial court which will hear this case upon the merits to determine judicially the facts which are involved in the dispute. That duty does not now devolve upon me. The only question which I am called upon to decide upon this motion is whether the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case. suEcient in law, in the absence of countervailing proof as disclosed by or in the opposing aEdavits, to render it probable that the plaintiff will succeed upon the trial.
The facts upon which the plaintiff relies may be summarized as follows: Prior to July 26,1917, Percy
Thereafter on October 22, 1917, the city of New York and Williams and Adams made application to the secretary of war for a change and modification of the "then existing government bulkhead, pier head, basin and channel lines, including said main government channel, and the secretary of war granted such application and established as the government lines thereof certain new lines which are shown on the map forming part of the agreement above mentioned. Thereafter, pursuant to a contract theretofore entered into, the said Williams and Adams, on November 26, 1917, conveyed the title in fee to said property to the plaintiff in this action, subject to the above mentioned agreement with the city of New York, all the covenants and conditions of which agreement this plaintiff assumed and agreed to fulfill and perform.
The deeds required to be executed under the provisions of the said agreement have not been executed or delivered on the part of the city of New York. The plaintiff alleges that the reason why the same were not executed or delivered by the city of New
Early in the year 1918 the new and present commissioners of the sinking fund took action upon a proposed new plan for the improvement of the water front and harbor of the city of New York on Jamaica bay and adjoining waters as a substitute for the former plan which was referred to in the aforesaid agreement, and announced that application would be made by them to the secretary of war for the rescission of the bulkhead, pier head and basin and channel lines, including the main channel line, provided for in the said agreement between the plaintiff’s said grantors, Williams and Adams, and the city of New York and adopted by the secretary of war on November 22, 1917. The plaintiff alleges in its complaint and in the moving affidavits many facts upon which it predicates the claim that, if the city of New York shall be allowed to rescind the agreement made with Williams and Adams, the plaintiff will suffer irreparable financial loss and injury which cannot be compensated in damages. In particular, the plaintiff claims that it and its predecessors in the title to Bergen Beach, immediately after the approval of the new lines and in contemplation of the carrying out of
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the city, just as any private individual, has no legal right to refuse to carry out the terms of its agreement, the other party to' the agreement not being in default and the agreement not having been entered into on the part of the city' as the result of fraud, mistake or any other illegal consideration. The plaintiff claims that it would be impossible to determine the pecuniary damage which it would suffer if the city were to be permitted to rescind the agreement.
While I am of the opinion, and have expressed it in various cases in which I have sat, that this court should use its power to grant injunctive relief very sparingly in litigation involving the exercise of discretion and judgment upon the part of the officials of the city of New York and should leave it to the voters and taxpayers of the city to remedy through the exercise of the elective franchise any official abuses on the part of officials, cases will arise at times wherein the court ought to intervene during the pendency of an action in order to prevent irreparable harm and injury which might result before the trial from official action
It is also settled law that where the damage resulting from a breach of contract cannot be adequately determined or there is a great uncertainty as to amount, equity will interfere and forbid the threatened injury. Dailey v. City of New York, 170 App. Div. 267, 274; affd., without opinion, 218 N. Y. 665.
In conclusion, therefore, and without any desire to prejudge the merits of this case in advance of the trial, I think that the plaintiff has shown sufficient facts to require a continuance of the temporary injunction pendente lite.
Motion granted, with ten dollars costs.