110 N.E. 162 | NY | 1915
On an appeal by the appellant in this proceeding from the order appointing commissioners to ascertain the damages sustained by respondent by reason of the change of grade of River street, the question was whether petitioner as one of the owners of an estate by the entirety could institute and maintain a proceeding for an assessment of damages to property so owned without joining his wife, the co-tenant, as a party to the proceeding. (Matter ofGoodrich v. Village of Otego, *115
The court below reserved the question of damage to the fee until the coming in of the report of the commissioners and directed the commissioners to decide and report (a) the compensation to which the claimant Austin L. Goodrich, as a tenant in common of the use and occupation of the premises, is entitled, and (b) the compensation to which the owner of the fee is entitled.
The commissioners of appraisal thereafter reported that the damage sustained by the petitioner was $200 and that the compensation to which the claimant Austin L. Goodrich, as a tenant in common of the use and occupation of the premises, was entitled was $12 annually, and that the compensation to which the owner in fee of the premises was entitled is $200. The order confirming the report of commissioners which is now before us for review provides "that the amount of the award made as aforesaid to the owner of the fee of said premises with interest thereon from this date, shall be a liability against the said Village of Otego, N.Y., and that said village shall pay to the owner of the fee of said premises the sum of $200 damages to said fee, with interest as aforesaid, when said owner is determined, and that said village pay to said petitioner the sum of $12 annually, until the determination of the ownership of said fee as damages to the use and occupation of said premises, or in case the said petitioner, Austin L. Goodrich, and his wife, Flora Goodrich, owners as tenants by the entirety of said premises, execute to The Village of Otego, N.Y., a release of all claim or demand for said award and for the damages alleged in the petition herein, then in such even, the said *116 village pay to the said Austin L. Goodrich the sum of $200 damages, with interest from this date, in full of the award of said commissioners."
The amount involved is insignificant as compared with the importance of the questions of law which the parties seek to have settled on this appeal. Appellant maintains that the incidents of tenancy by the entirety are such that the failure of respondent's wife to unite with him in the claim for damages filed with the board of trustees is a bar to this proceeding. The husband may sell or mortgage his interest in realty so held, which is the right to the use of an undivided half of the estate during the joint lives and the fee in case he survives his wife. (Hiles v.Fisher,
The commissioners herein should have determined the compensation to which petitioner was entitled by reason of the change of grade, not for damages to his use and occupation, but for the diminution in value of his estate as a tenant by the entirety as above defined. They were without authority to award damages to owners generally, or unknown or contingent owners who made no claim for damages.
In making their report the commissioners should state that in fixing their award they have considered the question of benefits, although the presumption is that they have followed the direction of the statute in that regard. Nor should they itemize the award as they have done in this case by allowing $100 for damage to and loss of shade trees. At common law, where no compensation was allowed to the abutting owner, the municipal authorities had the right to destroy shade trees in the street without compensation when making authorized highway improvements, such as a change of grade, but the purpose of the statute is to impose liability when the land adjacent to the street is injuriously affected, as it may be by damage to shade trees. (Donahue v. Keystone GasCo., *118
The order appealed from must be reversed, with costs to abide the final award of costs, and the proceeding remitted to the Special Term for a new appraisal before new commissioners.
CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN and SEABURY, JJ., concur; WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., absent.
Order reversed, etc.