51 N.Y.S. 576 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This is an appeal from an order made at special term, confirming the report of the commissioners of estimate and assessment in the above-entitled proceeding. By their fifth separate report they represented to the court that there had been taken, for the purposes of the improvement with carrying- out which they xyere charged, a part of a block of ground situate in the Twenty-Third ward of the city of New York, and bounded by Third avenue, Lincoln avenue, the Southern boulevard, and the Harlem river. The Third avenue front of the premises was taken by the commissioners to be used for an approach to a bridge across the Harlem river. The parcel taken is known on the commissioners’ map as “No. 37, in Block 1795, of the Twenty-Third Ward.” The commissioners estimated the value of the land taken, including the buildings and improvements thereon, at $112,250. Of this amount, they awarded $9,750 to lessees or tenants, and the balance to the owners of the fee of the land thus taken. It appears that the preni
“We cannot suppose that the legislature would nullify the covenants between-landlord and tenant without providing for a just and equitable adjustment of their respective interests under the contract in the award of damages.”
There is no reason why the same rule should not apply where-part of the demised premises only is taken. The statute says that the rent shall be so apportioned as that the part thereof justly and' equitably payable or that ought to be paid for such residue, and no more, shall be determined or -paid or recoverable for or in respect of the same. In commenting upon this provision of the-statue, Judge Nelson, in Gillespie v. Thomas, supra, said:
“The part only of the rent - justly and equitably chargeable upon the remainder of the demised premises is enjoined upon the tenant, which seems to imply that the annual value of that portion of the premises of which he is-deprived shall be abated.”
The apportionment seems to relate merelv to the ascertainment of what rent shall be paid by the tenant for the untaken portion, of the land, regard being had to the rental value of the part taken-■In the opinion last quoted from Judge Nelson also says:
“The statute, then, which provides that the rent ‘shall be so apportioned as-that the part thereof justly and equitably' payable or that ought to be paid for such residue’ of the premises, when taken in connection with the other provisions of the act, in my judgment clearly means nothing more nor less than a common-law apportionment. In order to determine what would be a -just and-’ equitable part of the rent to be paid for such residue, it is necessary to ascertain and abate what would justly and equitably belong to the part taken in su ratable apportionment, according to value.”
The provision of the statute under consideration, therefore, relates only to the ascertainment of how much shall be paid by the tenants for the residue of their term in the untaken property. Are-
It is further urged by the learned counsel for the lessor’s representatives, that the statute terminates all the covenants of the lease in such a way as to deprive the tenants of any other benefit than that of an apportionment of the rent, and that the terms of the statute are incorporated in the lease by operation of law precisely as if there had been an express stipulation between the parties contained in the lease. That is undoubtedly so, but the statute reads into the lease no other or further or wider term than that of the act itself, and with the same effect, which is that the covenants of the lease are terminated pro tanto, subject to the rights of either party as they exist at law. If I am right in the foregoing view of the case, it follows that the lessees were entitled to some award of substantial damages not included in the apportionment of rent. Upon an examination of the whole evidence, I am not satisfied that they were entitled to any more than the commissioners allowed. They are not entitled, as against the lessor, to everything in the way of damage they may sustain, irrespective of the detriment the lessor may suffer by the taking of the property and the destruction of the term. The entire value of the lessees’ term is not to be carved out so that the whole burden will come exclusively upon the landlord. The latter, it is true, gets compensation for the property taken, but there may be resulting losses that are not covered by the actual
I think the order appealed from should be affirmed, without costs. All concur.