40 A.D. 519 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This is an appeal from an order confirming the report of a referee directing the payment ■ to the respondent of an. award made to unknown owners for a plot of ground taken by the city of New York for Brook avenue. The award was made for lot No. 73 on the damage map. There are two questions presented upon this
■ The facts show that one Frank L. Eldridge owned the piece of land which included the premises owned respectively by the appellant and respondent, and that the lot No. 73 on the damage map in question fronted upon a public road or highway called Railroad avenue. Prior to the date of the deeds hereinafter mentioned,. Brook avenue had been laid out on the map of the city, but was not an existing road or- street; and no steps had been- taken either to condemn the property or to open the avenue for use as a public-street. This being the situation, Eldridge and his wife conveyed to the appellant a lot of land upon which- a building had been .erected, by a description which commenced at a point on the northwesterly side of the Harlem railroad, distant 192 feet, along the boundary line of said railroad southwesterly from the southwesterly boundary line of Bathgate farm as laid down on said map ; running -thence- southwesterly along the said railroad line 25 feet; thence northwesterly on a line parallel -with the said boundary line of the Bathgat-e; farm 100 feet- more or less to the southeasterly side or line of Brook avenue as laid- out by the department of public parks of the city of New York; thence northeasterly along said southeasterly side of Brook avenue 25 feet; and-thence southeasterly and- parallel with the said boundary line of said Bathgate farm -100 feet more or less-to the boundary line of the said railroad at the point and place of' beginning. The appellant by a formal stipulation upon the trial conceded, and upon this appeal concedes, that by this conveyance-no portion of the fee of Brook avenue vested in him. He claims,, however, that he is entitled to an easement in the strip of -land laid out upon the map of the city as Brook avenue.
It is a little difficult to see just what easement could be implied by this -grant under the circumstances existing at the time of the execution-and.-delivery of the conveyance; The land conveyed, to- ' the-appellant fronted upon Railroad avenue, a-public street, from which he had access to the property conveyed. Its boundary line-extended westerly to the southeasterly line or side of a piece of land
Under this proceeding the city will acquire the fee of the property taken, to be held in trust, 'however, for use as a public street; and when the fee is thus acquired, neither the city nor the State has the power to devote such property to any use inconsistent with that for which it is acquired and held, except upon payment of compensation to the abutting property owners. (Matter of One Hundred and Sixteenth St., 1 App. Div. 439, and cases there cited; City of Buffalo v. Pratt, 131 N. Y. 297.) When this proceeding was commenced, the appellant occupied no portion of the bed of Brook avenue, nor did he have any title or easement therein. In this respect the case differs from Matter of the Opening of Eleventh Avenue (81 N. Y. 436). There the award was for the full value of the land. It was intended for the benefit, not merely of the owner of the ultimate fee, but of “the owners, proprietors and parties interested in respect of the whole estate and interest, of whomsoever may be entitled unto or interested in ” the land, and the owner of the land had treated the streets and avenues as existing when the conveyances were made.
In De Peyster v. Mali (92 N. Y. 262) the award of the commissioners was for the westerly half of Bloomingdale road, the fee of which was in the plaintiff, and that award was made to the defendants as owners thereof and was confirmed and paid by the city to them. The court held that the defendants had no right whatever to these awards. They had an easement in the Bloomingdale road in front of their lot for use .as an abutting owner. But their easement was not taken. The road was not closed but remained open as the Riverside drive, with undiminished usefulness as a highway, and as the abutting land was taken for the Riverside park this casement went with that as an appurtenance thereto, and the defendants ceased to have any private interest in the road.
In The Matter of One Hundred and Sixteenth Street (supra) the question presented was much like the one now under discussion. That was an appeal from an order confirming the report of the commissioners of estimate and assessment, by which they awarded to the New York Hospital the full value of certain land which formed a part of the bed of the street. The commissioners allowed the New
In the cases cited in "which the grant of an easement has been implied, there was either an existing street or highway upon which the premises conveyed abutted which furnished a means of access to the property granted, or the parties by the conveyances had treated streets or avenues laid out upon the city map as existing streets or avenues, or from some existing condition an intention to grant a right in the street could be presumed. The facts, as here presented, establish, we think, that no such intention existed.
In The Matter of Board of Street Opening (27 App. Div. 265) the-question as to who was entitled to an award made to unknown owners was presented. This award was claimed by the owner of the fee and also by the owner of an easement to which the land taken was servient. The referee, to whom the action was referred, divided the award, paying part to the owner of the fee and the remainder to the owner of the easement. The only point made by the appellant in that case was, that the award of the commissioners having been made to the owners of the land, w^as a binding adjudication that a person who owned an easement to which the land was subject had no right to the award; and that contention was not sustained. What we decided was that “ two or more persons may have an interest in land which, taken together, would • constitute an ownership of the land, and whether they are entitled as tenants in common to the fee of the land, or one is the owner of the fee while the other is the owner of an estate, either for life or for years, or an easement to which the land is servient, they together are the owners of the land and are entitled to the fund which stands in place of the land, according to their respective interests.” We cited in support of that proposition The Matter of the Opening of Eleventh Avenue (supra), which is certainly an authority for the position taken, and that position has never, ' so far as we know, been seriously questioned. There was no claim
The right to have Brook avenue remain open as a public street accrued to the defendant as an appurtenance to his abutting property when the avenue was opened under this . proceeding; and there is nothing to show that the amount awarded to unknown owners included the value of the interest of the appellant in the avenue which was not taken, or that the assessment for benefit imposed upon the appellant’s abutting property was not fixed after considering the right that said property acquired by the grant in question. The city took in this proceeding, under the statute, the fee of the laud in trust to be used as a public street.- It certainly never undertook to appropriate, destroy or interfere with, any easement of the appellant, for he had none.
We think, therefore, that, upon the facts presented, no property of the appellant in this street was taken, and that the appellant is not entitled to any portion of the award made for the property which was taken. The order appealed from is, therefore, affirmed, with costs.
Yan Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumset and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with costs.