198 A.D. 97 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The claimant filed four claims against the State, one claim being for the land appropriated for the Barge canal, and three claims being for injuries to crops and the loss of use of land prior to the statutory appropriation. Although items of land damages were included with the claims for loss of crops and the use of the land, by agreement of counsel in open court those items were abandoned and the claim for land damages presented under the general claim for land appropriated; also all the claims were held to be tried together, after the statutory appropriation should be made by the State.
The claimant is the owner of two farms in Montgomery county in the Mohawk valley. One of the farms, called the Dufel farm, contains 160 acres, 100 acres of which is flat land ‘ bordering upon the river; the other farm, called the Zeilley farm, contains 133 acres, of which 33 acres is flat land bordering upon the river. In 1912, under the Barge Canal Act, chapter 147 of the Laws of 1903, as amended, the State
Claim No. 2789-A is for crops and loss of use of land upon the two farms in 1915; claim No. 14722 is for loss of the crops and use of the lands on the Dufel farm, and claim No. 14723 is for similar loss on the Zielley farm in 1916; and claim No. 15161 is for land damages under the appropriation.
The State objects to the award under claim No. 15161 on the ground that the measure of damages for the taking of land adopted by the court was erroneous. The appellant entirely mistakes the rule applied by the court. The value of the land in the year 1912 wa’s not considered. The State had taken physical possession of this land in 1913; but it did not make its actual appropriation, so that the claimant could be paid therefor, until March 29, 1917. There was no_ actual diminution at the time in the value of the farm by this statutory appropriation. The damage had been done largely by the previous taking and use of the land by the State. If the claimant was required to literally prove the value of the farm immediately before the statutory appropriation and immediately after the statutory appropriation, to establish his damages, the two values must have been practically the same. The rule adopted by the court is the usual and proper rule to be applied in such ca'ses, as follows: “ The difference in the value of these farms on the day of the appropriation and immediately before the fact of the appropriation, * * * if they had not then been subject to being overflowed and were not overflowed, and the value of the property as it was immediately after the appropriation ;«and that * * * does not involve the question of time; it is a-difference in condition.” This is the language of the court and states the rule which the appellant apparently contended for at the trial. It is not only the right rule, but one which the State should insist upon, because it permits thé State to avoid taking advantage of its own wrong.
The appellant also claims that there is a duplication of damages. It argues that the claimant has recovered for each
Complaint is made as to the amount of damages fixed under claims 2789-A and 15161. I have examined the evidence offered as to each of these claims, and the evidence sustaining the awards is entirely sufficient. For the purpose of fixing the land damages, the court actually inspected and tested the land. I find no error in the award made under either claim.
With reference to claims 14722 and 14723 it is objected that the notice of intention to file a claim was not filed “ within six months after such claim shall have accrued.” (Code Civ. Proc. § 264.) This presents the one difficulty in the case. In each claim it is alleged that the closing of the dam for the beginning of canal navigation caused the waters of the river to overflow the lands of the claimant, “commencing about May 1, 1916, and continuing to this date,” by reason of which claimant’s lands were injured, crops were injured and destroyed and claimant was prevented from occupying his lands and cultivating them. In each case the notice of intention to file a claim was filed November 27, 1916, and the claim itself was filed December 2, 1916. The obstruction of the river by the dam constructed by the State was not permanent. The dam was not a fixed structure, but was a series of gates, one or all of which could be raised at any time. At the close of canal navigation in the fall these gates were raised and at opening of navigation in the spring they were closed and the waters of the river above the dam impounded, and it was intended to hold them substantially at a fixed level. This, experience has taught, is not possible. Heavy rains increase the volume of water in the river, and the level
Section 264 of the Code of Civil Procedure applies to these claims. The conditions imposed by this section are jurisdictional and determine the status and right of the litigant, and the Court of Claims had no jurisdiction to hear and determine these claims except the notice was given as required by this section of the Code. (Buckles v. State of New York, 221 N. Y. 418, 424.) The question here is, when did these claims accrue? The position of the appellant is that each claim accrued on May 1, 1916; and, since the notice of intention to file a claim was not filed until November 27, 1916, more than six months had expired. These claims are not similar to negligence actions, causing personal injuries, in which the cause of action accrues when the wrongful act is committed and the accrual of the cause of action does not await a full disclosure of the injuries and their extent. Nor are the damages claimed occasioned by a permanent and fixed structure. In this case the wrong was a continuous, but varying, trespass during the canal navigation season, which is also the crop season each year. In Reed v. State (108 N. Y. 407) a similar question was decided. The State had constructed a reservoir as a feeder for the Erie canal. Water from this reservoir passed through gravel soil by subterranean channels and was discharged upon the claimant’s land. The court said (p. 414): “ The Statute of Limitations is not a bar to this claim. The claim cannot be maintained upon the theory of a permanent appropriation by the State for canal purposes of the land flooded. The cause of action is continuing, and arises from time to time as injury is inflicted upon the claimant’s property by fresh percolations and floods, and will continue until the cause thereof ceases to exist.” In Folts v. State of New York (118 N. Y. 406) the claim was for damages to land, growing trees, etc., in making repairs to the canal. The Statute of- Limitations there considered was section 2 of chapter 321 of the Laws of 1870, which required that the
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.