131 N.Y.S. 633 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
This is an appeal from an order made at Special Term in Kings county which confirmed a report of commissioners in condemnation proceedings. ' The proceedings were begun by the rapid transit commissioners, appointed under chapter 4 of the Laws of 1891, as amended, to acquire such rights in certain lands in the borough of Brooklyn, and land under water abutting the borough of Brooklyn, as were necessary for the construction of a branch of the municipal subway system, which, crossing under the bed of the East river, entered the borough of Brooklyn at the foot of Joralemon street in said borough, thereby connecting Brooklyn with the subway system in Manhattan. An amended map was filed to define and explain the precise locations in which these necessary rights were sought to be obtained. On this map certain parcels of water-front property are shown and numbered from 1 to 10 inclusive, of all of which the New York Dock Company, a corporation and a party to these proceedings, claimed an ownership in fee. By written stipulation between the petitioners and the New York Dock ' Company, the petitioners entered into immediate possession of certain of the parcels shown on said map for the purpose of constructing the subway in question. As a consequence of this entry into immediate possession and the. carrying on of the work of construction, very considerable damage was done to the property and business of the New York Dock Company which was temporary- in its nature. The commissioners of ■ estimate took proofs of the. elements and extent of this temporary damage,-as well as those offered to prove damages to the dock company resulting from the permanent occupation by the subway as constructed. In making their award the commissioners did not state separately the items of temporary and
It is urged on this appeal by the legal successors to the petitioners that, in making an award on the theory that the New York Dock Company owned a fee in all the parcels so enumerated in their report, the commissioners proceeded upon an erroneous theory, and that, therefore, their determination as to damages must be reversed.
The record before this court is quite voluminous, but the real point of controversy, considering the only question raised on this appeal, may be stated and considered within reasonably brief limits. The substantial question of title is confined to the lands under water at the • foot - of Joralemon street which underlie the slip or basin between two piers owned by the dock company and known as piers 17 and 18. These lands are claimed by the dock company in fee, while the petitioners contend that that portion of them which has been taken for, and is now occupied by, the constructed subway was in fact owned in fee by the city of New York. The- claim of the dock company is based upon a grant made by the State in 1902 and upon a claim of title arising out of circumstances existing before the grant of 1902. These circumstances will be examined first.
There is no question that the dock company was the owner
It is argued, however, that the section of the statute above quoted did not apply to Joralemon street, as that is said not to have intersected the shore line, nor to have extended from high-water mark, and that, therefore, its lines could not be “ projected ” out into the waters of the East river, in the meaning of the statute.' This argument is of supreme importance, because the route of the subway as constructed lies largely ■ within limits, between piers IT and-18, which would form extensions of boundary lines of Joralemon' street from the shore line out into the river. The argument is based upon a further contention that Joralemon street actually ends ábove high-water mark, or the shore line, and that the dock company owns two parcels of land intercepting its further progress to high-water mark. It is then argued that the lines of the street cannot be considered as “ projected ” into the water of the river, because such lines would pass through private property in order to reach high-water mark. This interpretation of the statute seems too narrow. The statute applies by its express terms to
It is suggested that' the construction of the subway was not such a purpose as would fall within the main purpose of whatever grant had been made to the city of New York by section 83 of its charter, as aforesaid, which grant is declared to he made for the general purpose of “navigation, intercourse and commerce.” The subway is devoted to the carriage of passengers between the boroughs of the city. The word “commerce ” has been held to embrace the carriage of passengers for hire. “That the transportation of passengers is a part of commerce is not now an open question.” (Passenger Cases, 7 How. [U. S.] 401; Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. [U. S.] 1.) If, however, the construction of the subway can be held to he not within the purposes of the grant made by section 83 of the charter, that objection is to be availed of only by the State, and is not open to the dock company, for the Commissioners of the Land Office had no power to grant to it in fee what had already been granted to the city of New York in fee. The grant made in 1902 to the dock company must, therefore, be deemed to have excluded such lands under water in the slip between piers Hos. 17 and 18 as were included within the pro
Jenks, P. J., Hirschberg, Burr and Thomas, JJ., concurred.'
Order reverséd, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and matter remitted to- the commissioners, in accordance with opinion. Order to be settled before Mr. Justice Carr. .