22 N.Y.S. 790 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
The judgment will have to be reversed for error in the refusal of the referee to find, as fact, at the defendants’ request, that the easements of light, air, and access, the only property in the street pertaining to the plaintiffs’ land, taken for the use of the railroad, have only a nominal value in themselves, aside from any damage to the said land. Bookman v. Railroad Co., N. Y. App.) 33 N. E. Rep. 333; Sutro v. Railway Co., Id. 334. It is contended by respondent’s counsel that the refusal to find as requested would be material only in case that the evidence warranted a finding of benefits to the remaining property, which should be allowed as an offset against consequential damages, and the language of the opinion in the Bookman Case, above cited, is referred to in support of this contention. The opinion in the Sutro Case does not so limit the effect of the refusal to find; and in the case before us it cannot be safely affirmed that the referee did not, in estimating the damage to the plaintiff’s premises by the operation of the railroad, allow for more than nominal value with respect to the easements taken, apart from the abutting land. His refusal to find as requested, without any qualification as to the materiality of the finding, leaves us no option but to order a new trial. .
But, upon the evidence in the case, it would also seem that there was no sufficient proof of damage to the fee value- of plaintiff’s premises, nor of diminution of rental value, traceable directly to the construction, maintenance, or operation of the defendants’ railroad in East Thirty-Fourth street, between Third avenue and the East river. The plaintiff bought the house and lot in September, 1888,—nine years after the construction of the elevated railroad was commenced, and eight years after it went fully into operation. He purchased from one Rimoldi, for $11,000. Rimoldi had bought the premises about two years before (October, 1886) from Mrs. Moore, for $10,000. Mrs. Moore acquired the property in the year 1867, for $10,000, from Mrs. Bull. According to the testimony of plaintiff’s experts, values fluctuated greatly between 1867 and 1879, the date of the commencement of the elevated road, reaching their highest point in 1873, and then, on account of the panic in that year, falling steadily, down to 1877, when the lowest point was reached. The sales of this particular piece of property, therefore, afford no basis for ascertaining whether the price paid by the plaintiff in 1888, ($11,000,) or -that paid by Rimoldi in 1886, ($10,000,)