13 N.Y.S. 908 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1890
The action is in equity, to enjoin the maintenance and operation-of defendants’ railway along the street in front of plaintiffs’premises, and incidentally to recover past damages caused by such maintenance and operation. Shepard v. Railway Co., 117 N. Y. 442, 448, 23 N. E. Rep. 30; Henderson v. Railroad Co., 78 N. Y. 423, 430. At the close of plaintiffs’ case, and again on the conclusion of all the evidence, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint as a suit in equity for injunctive relief. The motion was denied, and defendants excepted; but the question presented by the motion recurs now upon the final determination of the case. The special grounds of the motion were loches on the part of the plaintiffs in instituting their action to restrain the construction and operation of the railroad, and acquiescence by plaintiffs in such construction and operation. The railroad was constructed and put in operation in front of plaintiffs’ premises on Sixth avenue the 5th day of June, 1878, and wras constructed and put in operation in front of plaintiffs’ premises on Eighth avenue “at various times between June 1, 1878, hnd January 1, 1879.” Plaintiffs’ ancestor, owner of the properties -at the time of the construction of the railroad, opposed its construction; but it is not apparent what specific measures of opposition he took, nor that he presented any formal objection to the construction and operation of the railroad. In 1885 the plaintiffs, in whom the title to the properties then resided, contributed money to the erection of an elevator in front of their premises on Eighth avenue, in connection with defendants’ station, for the purpose of facilitating access to the railroad; and July 29,1885, at a yearly rental of one dollar,-leased the elevator to the railway company for a period of fifty years, the railway company covenanting “at its own expense and charge to operate said elevator for the public use during the term of said lease, to meet all trains stopping at said station on its road,” etc. In fact the connection of plaintiffs with the erection and lease of the elevator was indirect, and through
As to the specific act of acquiescence on which the defendants rely, namely, the construction and lease of the elevator by plaintiffs, it suffices to say that, even were the act in itself operative and effectual as an acquiescence, it was transacted in 1885, two years before plaintiff’s rights were ascertained and settled, (Id.,) and so does not preclude plaintiffs from a relief which they did not then know to be open and accessible to them.
But defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for insufficient proof of title to equitable relief, and so moved severally in respect of the premises in Sixth avenue and in Eighth avenue; and the question is, do plaintiffs show a right to enjoin the maintenance and operation of defendants’ railway in front of either of their properties? It is fundamental and a familiar rule of equity jurisprudence that an injunction issues only to intercept a substantial injury, and that this extraordinary remedy will not be applied to prevent even a con
1. As to the Sixth-Avenue property, plaintiffs produce expert evidence that the property is of less value than before the construction of the railroad; but defendants present equal evidence of the same sort that the property is of greater value since the construction of the railroad. Here is no preponderance of proof for plaintiffs. Then plaintiffs attempt to corroborate the testimony of- their experts by evidence that adjacent properties in the same street have fallen in value since the railroad; but this is met and repelled by conclusive proof that still other properties in the same street, in the presence of the same railroad, have increased in value three and four hundred per cent. Again, plaintiffs give evidence that in some streets and avenues not affected by the railroad property has risen in value; but this again is overcome by proof that in some streets and avenues where the railroad runs property also has increased in value. Finally plaintiffs give evidence which might warrant the inference that their property would have been more largely enhanced in value but for the presence of the railroad, but the inference is rebutted by the conceded fact that the locality of the plaintiffs’ property is of the most disreputable and repulsive character, and that this cause accounts for the slight improvement in its value. And so the evidence of the respective parties is so balanced by opposing probabilities that I cannot find that plaintiffs have
—Ancl thus it appears that all the Sixth-Avenue property has increased in rental value since the operation of the road from 12 to 40 per cent. The inference is irresistible that its fee value has increased in a corresponding ratio; and such, in my opinion, is the weight of the positive testimony. I conclude, therefore, that as to their Sixth-Avenue property plaintiffs have shown no injury, but the contrary rather.
2. As to the Eighth-Avenue property, the case is still more clear and conclusive. It appears by uncontradicted evidence that before the construction of the railroad in Eighth avenue plaintiffs’ property there was agricultural land, wholly unimproved, and occupied only by shanties and stables. The property was built and opened for occupancy in 1887. The rent received for the year 1887 was $1,956; for 1888, $4,512.50; for 1889, $4,890; and for the first four months of 1890, $1,900, or at the rate of $5,700 for the year. The testimony of the experts as to this property shows that the lots upon which it was built were worth, at the time the elevated railroad was opened, and up to 1885, about $5,000 for the corner lot, and $3,000 for the inside lots, and that the corner lot is worth to-day about $17,500 to $20,000, and the inside lots are worth between $12,000 and $14,000. And the undisputed evidence demonstrates that this vast improvement and enormous increase in the value of plaintiffs’ property are due chiefly, if not exclusively, to the operation of defendants’ railroad in immediate proximity to the property; and yet I am asked to award plaintiffs thousands of dollars for injuries inflicted on this property by defendants’ railroad. To my mind, the claim is untenable and unjust. Upon all the evidence, I am of opinion that plaintiffs have shown no injury entitling them to equitable relief, and it follows that the complaint must be dismissed. Mann v. Fairchild, *41 N. Y. 106; Heywood v. City of Buffalo, 14 N. Y. 534-540; Bradley v. Aldrich, 40 N. Y. 504; Wheelock v. Lee, 74 N. Y. 495; Arnold v. Angell, 62 N. Y. 508.