135 N.Y.S. 234 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
This is an appeal by the defendants from an order of the Special Term of this court confirming the report and award of commissioners of appraisal appointed in proceedings instituted to condemn certain land owned by" the defendant John O. Ball for the purpose of the plaintiff’s railroad. The defendant Elizabeth B. Ball has no interest jn the premises except her inchoate right of dower, although she owns adjoining premises on which is located a dwelling house. The defendants also seek to review by this appeal the judgment appointing- the commissioners and condemning* the property.
Preliminary to the appointment of the commissioners the learned Special Term tried certain issues of fact raised by the pleadings, and determined among other things that the plain
For the'first time the defendants now raise the objection
The evidence bearing upon the value of the property taken is voluminous and contradictory. In proceedings such as this, the commissioners are to act upon then* own judgment and from information obtained from a view of the property, as well as from the testimony adduced before them. Their award, therefore, is not subject to such a review as obtains upon an appeal in an ordinary action and will not be set aside for inadequacy or excessiveness, unless palpably wrong in either respect. (Matter of Daly v. Smith, 18 App. Div. 194; Matter of Brooklyn El. R. R. Co., 87 Hun, 88.) The testimony in the record is sufficient to sustain the commissioners’ award, and the order affirming the same must be affirmed unless some material error of law has been committed during the trial.
The defendants urge that the plaintiff was bound on the question of value by the prices paid by it through its purchasing company for other land in the neighborhood of the condemned property. Evidence of the prices paid by the plaintiff for such other property is not admissible as proof of the market value of the defendants’ property. (See Matter of Thompson, 127 N. Y. 463; Matter of Manhattan R. Co. v. Stuyvesant, 126 App. Div. 848; Lewis Em. Dom. § 667.) Langdon v. Mayor, etc. (59 Hun, 434; 133 N. Y. 628), cited by the defendants, presents a situation unusual and not analogous to the case at bar. That was an action to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the erection of a new wharf or bulkhead in front of the plaintiff’s wharf on the Hudson river, in pursu
The evidence does not sustain the defendants’ contention that their property possessed any special or inherent availability for railroad purposes. In these proceedings the rule is to award full compensation for the property taken, and such compensation is measured by the present market value of the property and does not include anything for the benefit to the party taking the property as distinguished from the injury to the property owner. (Matter of N. Y., L. & W. R. Co., 33 Hun, 639; Matter of Daly, 72 App. Div. 394; Matter of East River Gas Co., 119 id. 350; Matter of Simmons, Ashokan Reservoir, Sec. No. 7,130 id. 356; Matter of Boston, H. T. & W. R. Co., 22 Hun, 176.) Themarket value has been said to be the price that the property will bring when offered for sale by one desiring, but not obliged, to sell; and bought by one under no necessity of buying. (Matter of Sim
I have examined the various-exceptions to the admission of evidence and do not find any necessitating a reversal.. The order confirming the report and the judgment of condemnation should be affirmed.
Jenks, P. J., Carr, Woodward and Bich, JJ., concurred.
Order confirming report of commissioners and judgment of condemnation affirmed, with costs.