103 A.D. 530 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The rapid transit commission, under authority conferred upon it by what is known as the Rapid Transit Act
“ § 62. The commissioners of appraisal appointed in pursuance of this act shall receive as compensation the sum of ten dollars per day for each day actually employed. They may employ the necessary clerks, stenographers and surveyors. The counsel to the corporation or other principal legal adviser to said city shall, either in person or by such counsel as he shall designate for the purpose, appear for and protect the interests of the city in all such proceedings in court and before the commissioners. The fees of the commissioners and the salaries and compensation of their employes, and all other necessary expenses in and about the said proceedings provided for by this act, and such allowance for counsel fees as may be made by order of the court, and all reasonable expenses incurred by said counsel to the corporation or other principal legal adviser of said counsel designated by him for the proper presentation and defense of the interests of said city before said commissioners and in court, shall be paid by the comptroller or other chief financial officer of said city out of the funds referred to in the last preceding section. But 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 said city is situated upon five days’ notice to the counsel to the corporation, or other chief legal adviser of said city. Such allowance shall, in no case, exceed the limits prescribed by section thirty-two hundred and fifty-three of the Code of Civil Procedure.”
It seems to be apparent from the text of the section that the
With respect to the award of costs, we are of the opinion that there is no authority in law to award them. It has been the uniform ruling of the Special Term of the Supreme Court in the first judicial district that costs are not allowable in condemnation proceedings, and, therefore, that section 3240 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not control. The cases are not reported elsewhere than in the New York Law Lotornal, but they are numerous. There is no authority in the Rapid Transit Act for an allowance of costs. But it is said that the Court of Appeals has approved the contention that an award of costs may be made in a proceeding by eminent domain to acquire property. (Matter of City of Brooklyn, 148 N. Y. 107.) The only question involved in that proceeding related to the right of the Supreme Court to grant an extra allowance, and the court held that inasmuch as that right depended specifically
We do not regard this as a binding declaration by the Court of Appeals, that in all condemnation proceedings which take place in the city of RTew York property owners are entitled to costs against the city. No such heavy burden is imposed upon the city by proceedings taken under special acts, and we do not construe this remark of the learned judge who wrote the opinion oí the Court of Appeals in the matter referred to as establishing the hard and fast rule that such property owners are entitled to costs in such a proceeding as this.
If the parties are not entitled to costs, that conclusion disposes of their right to the disbursements for compensation of expert witnesses which wore awarded by the order of the court below. If it were necessary to pass upon the question, we should incline to the opinion that these disbursements could not be taxed and that the witnesses would not be entitled to anything more than the ordinary fees allowed those who are subpcenaed to testify upon a trial. Matter of Town of Hempstead (36 App. Div. 331; affd., 160 N. Y. 685) does not sustain the respondents’ claim. There the expert witnesses were appointed by a justice of the Supreme Court under authority given by section 3 of the General Municipal Law
The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Ingraham, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
See Laws of 1891, chap. 4, as amd. by Laws of 1894, chap. 752; Laws of 1895, chap. 519; Laws of 1896, chap. 729; Laws of 1901, chap. 587, and Laws of 1902, chap. 583.— [Hep.
Laws of 1898, chap. 685.— [Bbp,