150 N.Y.S. 405 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1914
Objections are made by certain property owners to assessments for benefit in this proceeding on the ground that the “ block by block ” method was followed, but that another method ought to have been followed, which would result in relieving the objectors’ property of a portion of the assessments for benefit and throw that portion upon certain other sections of the street, where, owing to the fact that the abutting owners ceded the land in the bed of the street under section 992 of the Greater New York Charter, the assessments for benefit were very light. Belianee is placed upon various Special Term decisions, among others Matter of Blondell Avenue, 150 N. Y. Supp. 403, but the present case differs from the cases relied upon in that here no portion of the street in question is newly opened, but the improvement consists merely in widening and straightening the lines of a previously existing street. Consequently none of the abutting owners obtain street accommodation where none previously existed, but all obtain improved street accommodation. Moreover, that improvement seems to be approximately uniform throughout the length of the street. There is, therefore, no analogy between the case at bar and the cases so relied upon. It seems to me that where the property of one owner, whose property already abuts upon a street, is taken to provide a street for another owner whose property theretofore had no frontage on a street, the situation is broadly distinguishable from that where all owners affected already have frontage upon a street and additional strips of land are taken to widen that street and improve and straighten its lines. The making of an existing street wider and straighter is very much like opening an entirely new street, and, in the absence of exceptional features, justice will be done by charging to the property in each block the cost of acquiring the
Motion granted.