287 N.Y. 243 | NY | 1942
This is a proceeding for the appointment of commissioners of appraisal in accordance with section
In attempted compliance with the foregoing requirement that such "a verified claim" be presented, the petitioner served upon the respondent town board a document in this form:
"STATE OF NEW YORK | ss; COUNTY OF SULLIVAN |
"SAMUEL LEVINE being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the owner of a garage property adjacent to the highway leading from South Fallsburgh toward Hurleyville and bounding the property of the Fallsburgh Lumber *245 Company on the Westerly side; that the Town of Fallsburgh graded and macadamized the said highway at a point where the same passes through and along the premises of deponent and as a result thereof changed the grade of the same causing the premises owned by deponent to be damaged in the sum of $3,000.00. This change was effected and completed on or about the 22nd day of August, 1940.
"Deponent hereby makes claim against said Town of Fallsburgh for the damages resulting from such change.
"SAM LEVINE.
"Severally sworn to before me this 19th day of October, 1940.
"ELLSWORTH BAKER, "Notary Public."
The courts below were of opinion that the phrase "a verified claim," as used in section 197, indicates a written demand confirmed by an affidavit of verification in the form prescribed for pleadings by rules 99-100 of the Rules of Civil Practice. In that view, the foregoing document was without effect and this proceeding had no basis. We agree with the petitioner-appellant that this construction outruns the signification of a fairly simple statute.
"What is a claim? It is, in a just juridical sense, a demand of some matter as of right made by one person upon another, to do or to forbear to do some act or thing as a matter of duty. A more limited, but at the same time an equally expressive definition was given by Lord DYER, as cited in Stowell v. Zouch, Plowden, 359 * * *: that `a claim is a challenge by a man of the propriety or ownership of a thing, which he has not in possession, but which is wrongfully detained from him.'" (STORY, J., Prigg v. Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. [U.S.] 539, 615.) An affidavit is ordinarily the authorized vehicle for the making of a claim to specific property, even where the custody is that of the law. For example, a claim by a third person to a replevied chattel is to be made in that form. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 1107.)
The claim permitted by section 197 is of the broader *246
kind. Damages to be thereby demanded will be unliquidated and can be awarded only through the procedure directed by the statute. No particular data are specified as necessary to a statement of the claim, the reason being, as we suppose, that one party will know as well as the other whether the essential facts have taken place. A conventional affidavit of verification of a pleading would be out of place on an instrument of demand so called for. (Cf. Court of Claims Act, §
The orders should be reversed and the motion to dismiss the proceeding denied, with costs to the appellant in all courts.
LEHMAN, Ch. J., FINCH, RIPPEY, LEWIS, CONWAY and DESMOND, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.