153 Misc. 395 | New York Court of Claims | 1934
This claim is for the appropriation of four hundred and ninety-three one-thousandths acres of land for railroad grade elimination purposes and damages alleged to have been caused by the work of construction in polluting a spring located on property of the county of Delaware, but the waters of which claimants had reserved in their instrument of conveyance. Before the construction the water from the spring was clear, but afterward it was roily in rainy weather and unfit for use in claimant’s summer boarding house. The value of the land taken has been agreed upon at $200, and this is the only amount, in our judgment, for which the State is hable. The spring in question was entirely fed by subterranean waters, the sources and channels of which were
The claim is prosecuted under the Grade Crossing Elimination Act (Laws of 1928, chap. 678) which, while allowing damages to property not acquired, does not permit the creation “ of any liability not already existing in law” (§6). No such liability existed and claimants’ right to damages for the pollution of the spring can be sustained only upon the theory of negligence. There is no sufficient proof that the work of construction was not performed in a reasonably proper manner. Claimants rely in that regard almost entirely upon testimony that the spring contained pure water before the work was done, and that the water was unfit afterward. Such testimony is not sufficient to charge the State with negligence.