162 A.D. 469 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The premises of the petitioner are situated on the east side of Attorney street between Broome and Delancey streets. Attorney street between Broome and Delancey has been for upwards of a century a lawful public highway extending from Division street to Houston street, actually open and in public use. For some time after the construction of the Delancey Street Bridge Attorney street continued unobstructed under the bridge until the city closed, discontinued and abandoned, by proceedings duly instituted for that purpose, that part of the street in the block between Broome and Delancey where it so passed beneath the bridge." Said closing took effect on July 16,1908. The resolution closed and discontinued a portion of Attorney street beginning at a point distant 61 feet southerly from the center line of the bridge and thence northerly to a point distant 122 feet. The city thereupon erected a retaining wall across the entire width of the street. The petitioner alleges that access to and from her property from the north and the easements of access, light and air, formerly possessed by her therein, became extinguished; and the street in front of her premises became a
The city avers that between the northerly line of the premises of petitioner and the southerly line of the bridge structure there is a street twenty feet in width extending through the block from Attorney street to Ridge street; that said twenty-foot street extended from Clinton street, which is one block west of Attorney street along the bridge structure several blocks eastwardly; that this twenty-foot street was paved and the sidewalks laid and that the work was accepted by the department of highways on December 1, 1908; that the said twenty-foot street is in general use by the public for pedestrians and vehicular traffic; that the distance along said street from Attorney street to Ridge street is two hundred feet and from Attorney street to Clinton street also two hundred feet; that the premises of the petitioner are improved with two five-story brick tenements and a two-story brick building in the rear, access to the latter improvement being obtained from the twenty-foot street; that from the records of the board of assessors it appears that petitioner applied to the said board pursuant to the provisions of chapter 460 of the Laws of 1904 for an award for damages alleged to have been sustained by her premises by reason of the change of grade in Delancey street, incident to the construction of the East River or Williamsburgh Bridge, and said board awarded her $2,250 for said change in grade of Delancey street.
Petitioner’s replying affidavit sets up that the twenty-foot street referred to is known by the bridge department as a “ south clearance roadway,” and was acquired by the city of
In denying her application the learned Special Term said: “ In my opinion chapter 1006 of the Laws of 1895 contemplated a remedy to the abutting owner only where actionable damage was sustained. The petitioner’s property did not abut upon the part of the street closed and right of access by way of Broome street has not been impaired. Therefore any damage suffered was damnum absque injuria. In the absence of controlling authority in this State, I think the considerations of public policy which support the doctrine applied in Massachusetts should be adopted in the construction of the present statute.” (Citing cases.)
While no portion of the petitioner’s property abuts on the portion of Attorney street which has been closed, yet the street has not been kept open upon the whole block upon which her property was situated. It is true there has been constructed immediately adjacent to her property a twenty-foot street, giving her a corner lot and access to her rear tenements from said new street, but I think it clear that she has no absolute rights to the maintenance and continuance of this street. In street opening proceedings, section 990 of the Greater New York charter provides: “The title acquired by the city of New York to lands and premises required fpr a
deprivation of the street as existing, the property owner would be entitled to have proceedings instituted to ascertain the compensation to which he was entitled, it seems clear that he is in a position to ask the aid of the court to compel the corporation counsel to perform the duty imposed upon him by law of instituting the necessary proceedings to obtain the necessary appointment of the commissioners. It is no answer that the strip taken is narrow and the damage inflicted small. The question
In Reis v. City of New York (188 N. Y. 58), where the city had closed a portion of Hawthorne street in the city of Brooklyn and erected a hospital thereon and a property owner instituted an action in equity to restrain the continuance, maintenance and further erection of such obstruction, the court said: “ It is to be noted that none of the property of the plaintiff abuts upon that part of Hawthorne street which it is proposed to close. * * * It is not intended to close any portion of Hawthorne street upon which any of her property abuts or any portion thereof which is opposite a block in which she owns property. * * In Matter of Twenty-ninth Street (1 Hill, 189), the grantor had sold lots and bounded the purchasers by Twenty-ninth street as it was laid down on the city map of Hew York. ‘ He could have intended nothing less by his deeds,’ said Bronson, J., ‘than a declaration that Twenty - ninth street was, and, so far as he was concerned, should remara a public highway. I do not say that this dedication will extend to all his lands in the site of the street, however remote from the lots sold; but it will, I think, extend to all his lands in the same block, or, in other words, to the next cross street or avenue on each side of the lots sold. The parties must have contemplated an outlet both ways.’ I think the private easement of the plaintiff in the present case extended no further. She was entitled, in the first place, to have that part of Hawthorne street kept open upon which her own property abutted. * * "x" Inasmuch as Hawthorne street remains wholly open in front of those blocks upon which plaintiff’s property is situated and opens into cross streets at both ends of each block * * * I am of opinion that the plaintiff has not been deprived of any private easement * * "x".”
It would seem that property situated on a block upon an ancient public street is entitled to have access from each end of that block. As the street has not only been discontinued for a portion of the very block upon which the petitioner’s property is located, but has been permanently and physically obstructed by the wall erected a few feet to the north of her property and
It follows, therefore, that the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellant, and the motion granted, with fifty dollars costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with fifty dollars costs.