116 N.Y.S. 924 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1909
This is á proceeding taken by the above named plaintiff to condemn 'and acquire the easements in and to the Bronx river, appurtenant to certain parcels of land abutting upon said river in the city of Mount Vernon, which easements are to be taken away from said parcels by the diversion of said river therefrom.
Upon trial duly had at Special Term of this court judgment, permitting such diversion and condemnation, was
The motion was submitted upon oral argument and briefs and the record of the proceedings had by and before the commissioners. After carefully reading such record -and considering the arguments of counsel, I am convinced that the report should be set aside upon both grounds above stated. '
It is well established that such a report can be set aside only upon such grounds.
At the locality involved in this proceeding the tracks and right of way of the Harlem division of the plaintiff railroad company pass through the city of Mount Vernon in a general northerly direction from Oak street, in said city, toward Bronxville and White Plains beyond to the north. Such tracks and right of way there are substantially in the center of Eailroad avenue, and the portion of said avenue lying south of the right of way is known as South Eailroad avenue, and the portion lying north of the same as Worth Eailroad avenue, each being a highway. The nine parcels of land involved in this proceeding lie on the west side of Worth Eailroad avenue, beginning some fifty feet north of Oak street. Each parcel or lot fronts upon the west side of Worth Eailroad avenue and extends at the rear to the present channel of the Bronx river, by a description which carries to the center of the channel of the river. The lots vary in width along the avenue and river from thirty to seventy feet, and in depth from sixty-three to one hundred feet, approximately. o The front of the lots at the avenue line is about twenty-five to thirty feet higher than their rear at the easterly side of the channel of the river. Some ten feet from
The plaintiff, having obtained due authority from the Public Service Commission and otherwise, is engaged in the improvement of straightening its tracks through the city of Mount Vernon and, as a part of such improvement, is about to change its tracks to a line some three hundred feet westerly of its present location and the locality herein involved; and, as a part of such improvement and by the requirement of such commission, it is to make a new channel for the Bronx river, along a line west of the new line of its railroad, which will straighten the river by taking out the 'loop above mentioned, and will necessarily divert the waters of the river from the rear of these parcels.
The commissioners have awarded to the owner of each parcel, .as damages for such diversion, a sum amounting to twenty-two dollars and fifty cents for each running foot of the width of such lot, the awards being as follows:
Parcel No. 1, width 49 feet, award.......... $1,102 50
Parcel No. 2, width 63 feet, award.......... 1,417 50
Parcel No. 3, width 50 feet, award.......... 1,125 00
Parcel No. 4, width 45 feet, award.......... 1,012 50
Parcel No. 5, width 45 feet, award.......... 1,012 50
Parcel No. 6, width 45 feet, award.......... 1,012 50
Parcel No. 7, width 30 feet, award.......... 675 00
Parcel No. 8, width 35 feet, award.......... 787 50
Parcel No. 9, width 70 feet, award.......... 1,575 00
Each lot is now used for residential purposes, having a dwelling-house upon it. It is claimed, in behalf of the de
The highest value of the naked land given in the evidence, that is, by the defendants’ experts, is upon the basis of $1,500 for a frontage of twenty-five feet along the avenue, with an average depth of one hundred feet. Assuming that the commissioners viewed the property as approximately being of that average depth they allowed as damages more than one-third of the full value of the land,.aside from the buildings. There is nothing in the evidence, except the naked opinion of the experts, which indicates that the easement taken could have constituted any such proportion of the land value. The opinion of an expert in such a case is to be valued according to the reasons which he may give in sup
It is manifest that, for manufacturing purposes, the use of those waters as appurtenant to these lots or any of them could never be applied to constitute a water power, i. e., by the erection of a dam and the accumulation of a head of water. The only use of the waters for manufacturing purposes suggested by the proofs, or which can be supposed, is by pumping the water into a factory and using it for the production of steam or other purposes, not directly as a means of producing power.
It does not seem to me at all possible that any such use of the water could be anything like so large an element in the value of the land. The claim of the defendants’ experts that the deprivation of such use could affect the value of the buildings, aside from the value of the land, is utterly unreasonable. Evidently such latter claim was not at all accepted by the commissioners, as, if it had been, their awards could not have been upon the uniform ratio of twenty-two dollars and fifty cents per each foot of frontage.
It does not. seem possible that the value of the use of the water, whether for domestic or manufacturing purposes, whatever its condition, as an. appurtenant easement to the several lots, could vary with or be dependent solely upon the number of feet frontage of the lots upon the river. It is plain that for manufacturing purposes each parcel, even
The only theory, suggested by the proofs or by my own reflections, upon which the awards could properly have been made upon the basis of a uniform allowance for each running foot of river frontage is that the damage to the different lots from the loss of the easements is measured by the cost of filling in 'the rear of such lots. The record shows that, before the commissioners the defendants claimed that the damage to any one of the lots as a residential lot, from taking away the easements, would be represented by the cost of building retaining walls around the rear of the lot, i. e., at the center line of the channel, the very rear of each lot, and along the sides of the lower portion of the rear, and filling up the lot inside of such walls so high that the surface water from the rear of the filled up lot would drain easterly into the avenue. The cost of such walls and such filling in for parcel ITo. 1 was by such proofs shown to be the sum of $8,696.55, which was several times as much as the highest value of the land given by any witness. Such a suggestion as a measure of damages is evidently absurd, and the evidence in support of it was clearly incompetent and should not have been received. It, however, was not objected to in behalf of plaintiff. It is to be said, in support of the report of the commissioners, that they awarded only about one-eighth of this preposterous sum. Under no possible view could it ever be necessary to do any such filling in, or in any way to change the natural grade of the land, which is, of course, strongly to the west or rear. The conformation of the land, as shown by the testimony and as is well known, is such that the natural drainage of these parcels of land is and must be to the west into the present river channel, or, if that be removed, to the lowlands there lying.
The consideration of such feature of those plans does not fall within the prohibition, contained in section 3370 of the Code of Civil Procedure, against making “ any allowance or deduction on account of any real or supposed benefits which the owners may derive from the public use for which the property is to be taken, or the construction of any proposed improvement connected with such public use,” because the existence of such culvert is a part of the manner of diversion.
If filling in be required, it can only be, at the most, to maintain the grade of the land to the rear, through the old channel, by filling up the portion of such channel between the present margin and the center to the grade of the rear of the lot at such margin, which portion may be left by the diversion of the waters. The evidence does not show that the expense of such filling in could amount to. anything like the awards, and plainly it could not.
It is clear that the experts of the defendants based their valuations upon an entirely erroneous theory, and it seems equally clear to me that the commissioners must either have adopted an erroneous theory or else have made palpably excessive awards.
The report, therefore, must be set aside and the matter referred back to the same commissioners for rehearing.
Beport set aside and matter referred to commissioners for a rehearing.