13 N.Y.S. 378 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
This action was brought to enjoin the continuation and operation of the defendants’ elevated railroad in front of certain premises in the city of New York, the allegations of the complaint being that said structure as it now exists, and as above described, has been erected and maintained without legal right, and is a special nuisance and injury to the plaintiffs and their premises, and the complaint demanded that the amount of the damages sustained by reason of the existence of said road and structure should be ascertained, and that they have judgment against the defendants-therefor, and also for an injunction perpetually enjoining and restraining the continuation of the nuisance. At the commencement of the trial the counsel for the defendants moved to strike the case from the equity calendar, upon the ground that it was substantially an action for damages, and that it be sent to-the circuit for trial by jury. This motion was denied, and the defendants excepted. The defendants’ counsel also made the same motion, upon the ground that it was an action for a nuisance, which was denied, and an exception taken. Thereupon the defendants’ counsel moved the court to compel the-plaintiffs to elect whether they would proceed upon the basis that the construction and operation of the elevated road was a nuisance, or on the basis that the legislative authority was irrelevant, and no defense, and therefore the defendants’ acts were in the nature of a trespass. The court denied the motion, and defendants’ counsel duly excepted. The latter ruling, we think, was error. If this was an action for a nuisance, the defendants were entitled, as matter of right, to a jury trial. Hudson v. Caryl, 44 N. Y. 553. It was also held in that case that if the complaint is in form as for equitable relief against the continuance of a nuisance, and the prayer for damage may be regarded as incidental thereto, yet, as the existence of an alleged nuisance and the amount of damages were both inquired of by a j ury before the adoption of the present constitution, the constitutional guaranty of trial by jury applies to such an action as one of the cases in which it has been heretofore used. Under these circumstances, there being allegations in this complaint which entitled the plaintiff to proceed as for a nuisance as well as for a trespass, and the defendants being entitled to a jury trial if the action proceeded as one upon a nuisance, it was matter of right, before proceeding with the trial, that it should be determined upon which ground the plaintiffs proceeded. Thereupon, when the defendants asked that the plaintiffs should elect whether they proceeded as for a nuisance or as upon a trespass, such election should then have been made by the-plaintiffs in order that it might be determined as to whether the defendants were or were not entitled to a jury trial. The de