44 N.Y.S. 159 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
Lead Opinion
The court dismissed the complaint in this action on the merits, and directed judgment for the defendant on a counterclaim, and this appeal is from that judgment. The action was brought to com
In the decision of the court below it is stated as the ground of the judgment directed to be entered that the easterly wall of each of said buildings has been unlawfully erected partly upon St. Nicholas avenue and unlawfully occupies a portion of St. Nicholas avenue, and that said walls project into and encroach upon said avenue to the extent of seven and one-half inches; that the buildings erected upon the plaintiff’s land are a material part of said real estate, and that by reason of said encroachments upon said St. Nicholas avenue the owner of said buildings is and will be liable to be compelled to remove the said encroaching walls; that by reason of said liability the plaintiff’s title to said lands and buildings is incumbered and is not good and marketable; that by reason of said encroachments the plaintiff was not at any time since the making of the contract alleged in the complaint and is not able to perform said contract on his part, and has not been able and is not able to convey a good and marketable title in fee simple to said lands and buildings, and that the plaintiff is not entitled to the performance of the contract. Thus the question before the court below and now to be considered by us relates to bay windows, such as those pertaining to the plaintiff’s houses, and which project beyond the street line, being lawful structures, and to the right to build or maintain stoops to houses beyond that street or building line. It is evident that this is a question that can arise only between the municipal authorities and the owner of a building fronting on a public street (Adler v. Met. Elev. R. Co., 138 N. Y. 173; Griffith v. McCullum, 46 Barb. 561), for the so-called obstructions are not of such a character.as to constitute a public nuisance affecting a private right. In view of the ordinances of the common council of the city of New York and of the acquiescence of the authorities of the city in the allowance of constructions such as those connected with the plaintiff’s houses, the possibility of the owner ever being molested is so exceedingly remote that the objections become technical only and not substantial.
Prima faoie, any obstruction in a highway is unlawful; but it is
It is also urged by the plaintiff that an express permission to build the houses in question with the bay windows, constructed as they are, was given to the plaintiff by the commissioners of public parks of the city of New York, and that St. Nicholas avenue, at the point at which these houses are erected, was under the jurisdiction of the park commissioners. If that be so, it ends the whole contest with reference to the bay windows, for it was expressly decided by the Court of Appeals in the case of Wormser v. Brown (149 N. Y. 163) that the commissioners of public parks are invested with full authority to allow the construction of bay windows on any street within 350 feet of the boundary line of any park or public place under their jurisdiction. It is shown in this case that the property in question on St. Nicholas avenue is within 350 feet of the westerly end of a certain tract of land which the commissioners of public parks may take for a projected Colonial park; and it is declared by the act authorizing that park that so much of a certain designated area of land as may be taken by the commissioners for it is a public park. (Laws of 1894, chap. 56.) We do not think it can be said, however, that the westerly side of St. Nicholas avenue was, at the time the contract was made between these parties, or is at the present time, within the jurisdiction of the commissioners of public parks. The park has not been laid out; its area has not
But the right of the plaintiff to build the bay windows, and the stoop or portico, is founded in the law; for the fair inference from the statutes of the State and decisions of the courts is that it is within the poiver of the common council to pass appropriate ordinances regulating the subject of the fronts of buildings facing on public streets, and to grant permission to owners of buildings to occupy a certain space for certain purposes beyond the building line, if those constructions do not in reality interfere with the free use of those parts of the public streets to be kept clear of obstructions as public highways. Ordinances of the common council of the city of New York permit the construction of bay windows not extending beyond the house line more than one foot. The ordinance adopted May 21, 1895, allows bay windows, oriel windows or other windows, to be maintained on any building theretofore constructed, or thereafter to be constructed, and section 8 of chapter 24 of the ordinances of 1866 provides that no person or persons shall construct or continue any platform, stoop or step in any street in the city of New York, which shall extend more than one-tenth part of the width of the street, nor more than seven feet. Sections 192 and 193 of the revised ordinances of 1890 provide that no area in front of any building in the city of New York shall extend more than one-fifteenth part of the width of any street, nor in any case more than five feet from the inner wall of such area to the building. Section 201, article 10, chapter 6, of the revised ordinances of 1880 provides that no person or persons shall construct or continue any cellar door which shall extend more than one-twelfth part of the width of any street, nor more than five feet into any street. All these ordinances of the common council it was within their power to enact, and from them the inference is plain that, except as forbidden, the several constructions referred to are permitted. By section 86 of the Consolidation Act (Laws of 1882, chap. 410) there
Reading these ordinances together, and in connection with the power conferred upon the common council by the 86th section of the Consolidation Act, authority to build the bay windows under proper permission can be inferred. And so with reference to the building of the stoop on St. Nicholas avenue. Section 86, as said before, recognizes a stoop line, and the ordinance above referred to in that connection authorizes the building of stoops within that line, and not only the fact of the city’s consent is shown, but the authority to give that consent is also made to appear. But it is said that subdivision 4 of section 86 of the Consolidation Act applies and places an interdict upon the common council granting authority to build these bay windows and the stoop or portico. That subdivision of the section provides that the common council shall have no power to authorize the placing or continuing of any encroachment or obstruction upon any street or sidewalk, except the temporary occupation thereof during the erection or repair of a building on a lot opposite the same. This subdivision of section 86 must be con
Hone of the objections taken to the marketability of the title to the plaintiff’s property are well founded, and the ruling of the court below was erroneous, and the judgment must be reversed and. judgment for specific performance of the contract as demanded in the complaint directed, with costs in the court below and in this court to the plaintiff.
Williams, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. The power to regulate areas gives no power to devote the same to other purposes than those of an area, such as filling up, in whole or in part, by permanent building. Such a rule would enable the common council to authorize the extension of all buildings into the street.
Judgment reversed and judgment for specific performance directed, with costs to plaintiff in this court and in the court below.