67 N.Y. 227 | NY | 1876
This action was brought to restrain the defendant from further prosecuting special proceedings instituted to condemn certain real estate in New York city. The plaintiffs had contested the proceedings upon the ground that *229
there was no necessity for the appropriation of the land, but the litigation resulted in an order appointing commissioners, which was affirmed by this court. (
In the supplemental complaint the plaintiffs allege the *230 leasing of the defendant's road and property to the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company for 401 years, and claim that such lease operated to abrogate the pending proceedings to condemn the land in question, and terminated and removed all necessity for the acquisition thereof for the corporate use of the defendant.
In this I think the learned counsel for the plaintiff is mistaken. The lease did not affect the defendant as a corporation in its relations to the State. The same necessity existed for the land proposed to be condemned after as before the lease for the purposes of the defendant as a corporation.
The allegations of the complaint are not that in fact the necessity has ceased, but that such is the legal effect of the lease of the road. Facts are admitted by a demurrer, but not conclusions of law, and the fact of a want of necessity is not admitted. It is said that the lessee may need the land, but the lessor does not, and that as the matter now stands it appears that a necessity did, but does not now exist in favor of the defendant.
For aught that appears, the same necessity exists now as did before the lease of the road, for this land, and it is legally appropriate to affirm that it exists in favor of the defendant, notwithstanding the lease. But if the necessity is only in favor of the lessee, it is a necessity for taking this land to operate the defendant's road for public use, and it is competent for the lessee to continue the proceedings in the name of the defendant. This results from the legal relation of the parties to the subject-matter of the controversy. The act of 1869, before referred to, confirms this view, and expressly authorizes proceedings to condemn land by either the original company or the lessee. It follows that the proceedings to condemn the land in question are not affected by the lease of the road. We concur substantially with the opinion in the court below, and it is unnecessary to elaborate the questions involved.
The judgment of the General Term must be affirmed.
All concur; ALLEN and RAPALLO, JJ., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed. *231