109 N.Y.S. 652 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
On the 14th day of May, 1906, an order appointing commissioners under the provisions of section 486 etseq. of the Greater New York charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466) was entered, and the commissioners subsequently took the oath of office, entered upon their duties and completed the work of fixing the damages or compensation to be paid to the owners of real estate as described in the statute under which the proceeding ivas taken. The awards aggregated the sum of $75,837, and no complaint is made as to these awards. In addition to these awards the court at Special Term granted $65 costs and disbursements, including witness fees, and a five per cent allowance on the amount of the award, to each separate parcel. These costs and allowances aggregated $5,994.46. Each of the several commissioners was allowed $10 per day for each day of service as set forth in affidavits, and the questions on appeal relate to these costs and allowances.
Section 496 of the Greater New York charter provides that the commissioners shall make a report, setting forth the sums which have been awarded to the various owners or persons having an interest in each parcel, and that they “ shall also recommend such sums as shall seem to them proper to be allowed to the parties or attorneys appearing before them, as costs, counsel fees, expenses and
Ho one would seriously question that here was ample authority for the payment of the costs, counsel fees, expenses and disbursements, including the reasonable compensation for witnesses; no one does question it upon this appeal. It is urged, however, that these provisions of the. statute have been repealed by the provisions of section 5 of chapter 725 of the Laws of 1905, and this is the important question to be determined upon this appeal. In determining this question we are, as in all cases involving the construction ana effect of statutes, to reach the intention of the Legislature. The city of Hew York is authorized to take real estate for the purposes of its water supply under the power of eminent domain. By the provisions of section 507 of the charter it is authorized to agree upon the price to be paid, but it does not appear to be obliged to attempt such an agreement as a condition of exercising the power to
“ In all such proceedings the commissioners of appraisal appointed thereunder shall receive as compensation such fees and expenses as may be taxed by the court upon notice to the corporation counsel. The corporation counsel of the city of Hew York'shall either in person or by such assistants or other counsel as he shall designate for the purpose, appear for and protect the interests of the city' in all such proceedings in court, including the taxation of fees, compensation and expenses and proceedings before the commissioners. The fees of the commissioners and the salaries and compensation of their employees, and their necessary traveling expenses, and all other necessary expenses, in and about such proceedings to be had for acquiring title or extinguishing claims for damages to real estate, and such allowances for counsel fees as may be made by order of the court shall be paid by the comptroller of the city of Hew York out of the funds provided in such proceedings. Such fees and expenses shall not be paid until they have been taxed before a justice of the Supreme Court in the judicial district in which the lands or some part thereof are situated upon eight days’ notice to the corporation counsel of the city of Hew York. Such allowances shall in no case exceed the limits prescribed, by section three thousand two hundred and fifty-three of the Code of Civil Procedure.”
Clearly this language, taken in connection with the unrepealed provisions of section 496 of the Greater Hew. York charter, is sufficient to justify the order of the court here under review. It may be conceded that section 5 of chapter 725 of the Laws of 1905 supersedes section 508 of tile Greater Hew York charter, but section 5 is still to he construed in connection with the provisions of law remaining, and if any effect is to he given to the recommendation required of the commissioners in section 496, that recommendation must be deemed to come within the provision for the payment of “all other necessary expenses in and about such proceedings, * * * and such allowances for counsel fees as may be made by
We are of opinion that the restriction in the act of 1905 on the amount of the allowance limited the extra allowance to five per cent, and that the court did not err in this matter. It was not necessary that the case should be difficult and extraordinary; the provisions of section 496, in the matter of allowances, is without limitation, except in their discretion ; the provisions of section 5 of the act of 1905 limited the court to an allowance within the limitations fixed by the Code of Civil Procedure, which is, generally speaking, five per cent.
The court allowed the commissioners ten dollars per day for the amount of time which they claimed under their several affidavits. The city of Hew York contends that this was error; that the provisions of section 5 of chapter 725 of the Laws of 1905 govern in this matter. We are inclined to the opinion that this is true, and yet we cannot see wherein the city of Hew York is aggrieved. The statute provides that the commissioners “ shall receive as compensation such fees and expenses as may be taxed by the court upon notice to the corporation counsel.” The court has taxed the fees and expenses at ten dollars per day, and none of the commissioners feels aggrieved, so far as this record shows. Wherein is the city of Hew York aggrieved? True, the court might have made the compensation larger, or it might have made it smaller, but the city is not here complaining of the amount; complaining of any abuse of discretion, but it urges that the court erred because it awarded, under a mistaken idea of the controlling power of section 508 of the
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
Jenks, Gaynor, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
' Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.