210 A.D. 328 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
For upwards of sixty years prior to the improvement involved herein, Bailey avenue extended in a northerly direction from Abbott road to the north line of the city of Buffalo, a distance of five or six miles. In its course it intersected Seneca street and Clinton street at approximately right angles. In the block between those two streets, Bailey avenue was crossed at grade by the Pennsylvania railroad running east and west and by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad running northeast and southwest. These railroads intersected at grade just easterly of Bailey avenue. The Lehigh Valley railroad in the same block crossed Bailey avenue and the other two railroads by an overhead crossing.
On or before June 19, 1914, the grade crossing commissioners of the city of Buffalo adopted a plan for the elimination of those crossings, by which Bailey avenue was to be diverted from or just
Out of that plan grew three proceedings, known as No. 112, No. 120 and No. 125. Proceeding No. 112 related to damages for the land taken in connection with the diverted portion of Bailey avenue. Proceeding No. 120 related to damages caused by the closing of Bailey avenue and minor matters incidental thereto. Proceeding No. 125 related to damages caused by a change of grade in Seneca street between diverted Bailey avenue and original Bailey avenue.
We are not concerned here with proceeding No. 112. In proceedings Nos. 120 and 125 the petitions were made by the chairman of the grade crossing commissioners. Answers were interposed by certain of the parties, trial was had before Mr. Justice Cole, and the various questions of law thus arising were considered and determined by him in a written opinion. No formal decision was entered. Subsequently orders were made appointing three commissioñers to determine the compensations to be paid to the owners and parties interested in certain of the parcels as so determined. Hearings were had, testimony given and a report made, which upon the motion of the grade crossing commission was confirmed and a cross-motion to vacate was denied. From that report and the order confirming it and denying the motion to vacate, the appeals come here.
Certain preliminary objections to the appeals were interposed by one of the respondents, which may be briefly noticed and overruled. The city of Buffalo may perhaps be said to have been technically a necessary party as a tax lienor and in any event was a proper party. Likewise the railroads were proper though not necessary parties, and had a right to answer, demur and defend as an incident to their interest. (Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners, 166 N. Y. 76.) The grade crossing commissioners were properly petitioners; and the fact that they moved to confirm the report does not prevent their appeal. Section 12 of the Buffalo Grade Crossing Act (Laws of 1888, chap. 345, as amd. by Laws of 1890, chap. 255; Laws of 1911, chap. 358, and Laws of 1916, chap. 576) gives any party interested the right to move for confirmation, and section 14 (as amd. by Laws of 1890, chap. 255, and Laws . of 1911, chap. 358) says that “ either [any?] party may appeal.” The requirement is not, as in Civil Practice Act, section 557, that
In proceeding No. 120 six separate parcels of land, known as parcels Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 and 8, are involved. Because of varying physical facts, it will be convenient to divide those parcels into three groups and to discuss the questions before us in connection with each group.
I. Parcels 1, 2, 7 and 8. By the closing of Bailey avenue that portion of the block between Seneca street and Clinton street which lies between Seneca street and the southerly line of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western right of way was left as a dead end. ' No passage either direct or by means of an intersecting way was left to the north. To go north it is necessary first to go south to Seneca street, thence west about 400 feet to the point where diverted Bailey avenue began, and thence north over diverted Bailey avenue until original Bailey avenue was again reached north of the closed portion. These four parcels abut on that dead end. There was no change of grade; the street remains open in front; no part of the land was taken. But obviously they have been depreciated in value. The stream of traffic has been diverted. Access to and from the north is by a longer and roundabout route. Do those things constitute actionable damage?
The report of the commissioners says that “ they have not allowed any damages to the property owners by reason of the diversion of public traffic caused by reason of the improvement.” It is unnecessary, therefore, to discuss at length the question of whether such damages are actionable; but the subject will be briefly hereinafter referred to.
Whether the complete closing of the street to the north, under the circumstances here involved, constitutes actionable damage is to be considered in two aspects:
First, under the Buffalo Grade Crossing Act as it stood prior to an amendment made to section 12 thereof by chapter 576 of the Laws of 1916.
Second, under the amended section.
1. Section 12, so far as pertinent here, read, before the amendment, as follows: “ If the commissioners shall decide that it is necessary for the purpose of carrying out any plan * * * that any street shall be closed * * * and that any property may be injured thereby for wHch the owners or persons interested therein are lawfully entitled to compensation * * * the com
The interpretation of that section first came before the Court of Appeals in Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners (154 N. Y. 558), but the question was left open. The court said, in substance, that a literal construction of the words “ are lawfully entitled ” would confine the damages to such as were recognized by law when the act was passed, while a liberal construction, in connection with the entire act, would lead toward the meaning that the owners of land injured “ are lawfully entitled ” to compensation under the act.
In Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners (166 N. Y. 69) the court took the literal interpretation, saying, “ It refers to existing grounds for lawful compensation and adds this remedy.”
Relying upon that interpretation, appellants say that" under the law as it existed when the act was passed, the closing of the passage to the north alone did not deprive the owners of any vested right and did not cause an injury for which they were lawfully entitled to compensation. For this proposition they cite a line of cases going back to Coster v. Mayor, etc., of Albany (43 N. Y. 399). (See, among other cases, Fearing v. Irwin, 55 N. Y. 486; Kings County Fire Ins. Co. v. Stevens, 101 id. 411; Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners, 166 id. 69; Matter of Joiner Street [City of Rochester], 177 App. Div. 361; City of Corning v. O’ Neill, 180 id. 454.)
In Fearing v. Irwin (supra) the holding in the Coster Case (supra) is said (p. 490) to have been “ that, though one public way to property is closed, if there is another left, the property owner sustains no actionable damage.”
In Kings County Fire Ins. Co. v. Stevens (supra) it is said (p. 418) that “ the rule preserves access, but does not give two modes of access and a double right of way.”
The rule seems to have ossified into some such form, based on the theory stated in an early Massachusetts .case (Smith v. City of Boston, 7 Cush. 254) that an owner of land abutting on a street closed in one direction but open in the other may suffer damage greater in degree but not differing in kind from that of the general public; and hence not peculiar and special to himself.
Many of the cases which repeat the rule, and cite the Coster Case (supra), may be distinguished on the facts in that access in both directions was left, though by a longer and roundabout way. Such, for instance, seems to have been the fact in Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners (166 N. Y. 69).
However, respondents rely upon an exception to the rule applicable to cases where the closed street is a street dedicated by map or plot, and where the lot was sold with reference to the map, and bounded on the street there shown, thus giving rise to a private easement. Typical and apparently authoritative cases under this exception are Reis v. City of New York (188 N. Y. 58); Matter of Hoyt (162 App. Div. 469; affd., 213 N. Y. 651); Matter of City of New York (Sedgwick Ave.) (Id. 438, 442).
At this point it will be well to notice the decision of this court in Matter of Joiner Street (supra). The opinion apparently rejects the exception, which seems to be well established by the cases last above referred to. The actual decision, however, was in effect simply that upon the facts, there was no actual damage proved.
It is the claim of the owners of the four parcels in question here that the Ogden Land Company was the owner of the entire tract of land embracing the fee of the present Bailey avenue, and the land on both sides thereof, at the time of the filing of the map in 1844; that these lots are shown on the map as fronting on the road now known as Bailey avenue, between Seneca and Clinton streets, and that they were deeded with reference thereto. They contend, therefore, that they fall within the rule in the Reis and Hoyt Cases (supra), and that since no outlet to the north has been provided, they have suffered actionable damage.
Whether the road now known as Bailey avenue was dedicated by the map of 1844, or whether it had existed as a highway before that, is not entirely clear. Counsel for the city cites Wheeler v. Clark (58 N. Y. 267) as authority for the statement that no private easement can be inferred by reason of the subdivision of lands on each side of a public street; and hence argues that if the lots here were laid out with reference to Bailey avenue as a then existing public street, the exception to the rule does not apply.
But, as against this, the exception seems to have been extended to ancient streets by Matter of Hoyt (supra) and Matter of Corporation Counsel of City of New York (188 App. Div. 668).
The conclusion on this branch of the case is that the total closing of the street to the north, between the properties in question and the next intersecting street to the north, might, even under the act prior to amendment, constitute, as matter of law, actionable damage. Whether, as matter of fact, the value of these lots was depreciated by that deprivation of access, and if so, to what extent, will be dealt with hereafter.
The constitutionality of this amendment is attacked by the railroads. It is said to be invalid, first, as offending article 3, section 18, of the Constitution of the State of New York, relating to prohibited local bills. It is said that the amendment applies by its terms only to cases “ now under construction,” and that the only improvement to which it was then applicable was the Bailey avenue improvement. It does appear that there were two other jobs which were then being finished up. However, the constitutionality of a statute is not determined by matters outside of the statute, but from the statute itself. We have here a statute which on its face complies with the usual standards by which general laws are tested. We think this objection does not avail. (Kittinger v. Buffalo Traction Co., 160 N. Y. 377, 397.)
Second, under article 1, section 10, of the United States Constitution, as impairing the obligation of a contract; and under section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, as denying the railroads equal protection of the laws; and under the same section, as well as under section 6 of article 1 of the Constitution of New York, as depriving the railroads of property without due process of law.
It is necessary to say here that the work on the improvement was undertaken under the usual form of contract in effect April 8, 1915, made pursuant to the terms of the Buffalo Grade Crossing Act between the grade crossing commissioners and the three railroads.
If we are right in our conclusion that the damages resulting from the closing of the street were actionable before the amendment of 1916, then the constitutional objections, even though sound, are unavailing. But we think they are not sound, so far, at least, as the respondents are concerned, even on the assumption that the amendment made actionable damages for which theretofore there had been no remedy. The extent of the damages and the right to compensation did not depend on the contract, nor could they be. affected by the contract. Under section 9 of the
II. Parcel No. S. This parcel abutted upon that portion of Bailey avenue which was closed. It has been entirely deprived of ingress and egress. It, therefore, falls within the rule stated in Egerer v. New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co. (130 N. Y. 108). The objection that the proceeding here rests solely upon the 1916 amendment to section 12 and is concerned only with damages arising from the closing of the street between the premises and the next intersecting street, is without merit.
III. Parcel No. 6. This parcel is a considerable tract of land lying east of Bailey avenue and east of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western right of way. Prior to the improvement there was a frontage on Bailey avenue of about 182 feet. Except for the fact that the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western crossed the street about there, at a sharp angle, the street of course was open in front for its entire width.
Since the improvement a fence has been constructed along the easterly line of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western right of way, across Bailey avenue. While this does not actually take away any of the frontage of parcel 6 on Bailey avenue, it does narrow, and diminish the street area in front of that abutting portion of the parcel. It further appears that the owner of parcel 6 has title to the fee to the center line of the street. -By the terms
Counsel for the owner claims, therefore, (a) that a part of his land has been taken; (b) that the grade of the street has been raised; (c) that light, air and direct' access to the lot from the front has been interfered with by the closing of the street and the erection of the fence; (d) that the outlet to the north has been closed.
The objection is made by the railroads to a consideration of claims (a) and (b), upon the ground that the proceeding here relates solely to damages arising from the closing of the street. But the taking of the small triangular piece of land which was part of the street and the raising of the railroad tracks may be said to have been incidental to the closing of the street by the construction of the fence. Claim (c) is valid. The narrowing of the street interferes with the access to the lot and is direct damage. (People ex rel. Winthrop v. Delany, 120 App. Div. 801; affd., 192 N. Y. 533.) Claim (d) is of the same nature as that considered in connection with parcels Nos. 1, 2, 7 and 8, and is valid.
IV. Aside from the matters already considered, the point most strongly attacked by appellants is the amount of the awards made by the commissioners. .It is said that they are excessive, because the evidence shows that the chief factor in the depreciation of values, except as to parcel 3, was the diversion of public travel on Bailey avenue, which was not and could not properly have been considered. Whether that is an element which could have
To the effect that diversion of traffic is a proper element, see 13 R. C. L. 75; 2 Nichols Em. Dom. § 323; Park City Yacht Club v. Bridgeport (85 Conn. 366; 82 Atl. Rep. 1035; 39 L. R. A. [N. S.] 478); Matter of Melon Street (182 Penn. St. 397).
The rule almost universally applied is that those damages can be recovered which could have been recovered at common law had the acts which caused them been done without statutory authority. (Lewis Em. Dom. [3d ed.] § 199.) Under facts very similar to those here, injury to business was the basis of damages allowed in an action against a railroad. (Buchholz v. New York, Lake Erie & Western R. R. Co., 148 N. Y. 640.)
On principle there seems to be little distinction between injury to business arising from diversion of traffic and injury to the land value arising from the same cause.
It is doubtful whether it is humanly possible to put into terms of dollars and cents separate damages arising from different causes. The commissioners say they made no award for damages arising from diversion of traffic. If, for the other element alone, some of the awards seem large, we are yet unable to say that the error is of a character to warrant an attempt at correction by this court. In Matter of Corporation Counsel of City of New York (188 App. Div. 668; appeal dismissed, 228 N. Y. 523), in dealing with a like case, the court says: “ The commissioners having ascertained and awarded the damages our power of review is very limited. It is well settled that the findings of commissioners will not be disturbed, unless it is apparent that injustice has been done, or they have overlooked some material feature of the case, or have proceeded upon an erroneous principle or been influenced by prejudice or passion. (Harlem River & Portchester R. R. Co. v. Reynolds, 50 App. Div. 575; Matter of Manhattan R. Co. v. Comstock, 74 id. 341.)”
In proceeding No. 125, but one parcel, known as the Tiffany property, is involved. It is located on the southwest corner of Bailey avenue and Seneca street. As part of the improvement, the grade of Seneca street west from original Bailey avenue under the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad viaduct was raised several feet, and as an incident there Was a certain change
The report of the commissioners and the order of the Special Term confirming the same should be affirmed, with costs.
Hubbs, P. J., Clark and Davis, JX, concur; Sears, J., not sitting.
Report of commissioners and order confirming same affirmed, with costs.