206 A.D. 589 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The plaintiff railroad has brought this proceeding under the Condemnation Law for the condemnation of certain lands and premises which are now and for many years past have been in the possession of the said railroad and its predecessor as a portion of its railroad property. The entire property sought to be condemned is a strip of land upwards of 3,200 feet in length and in width varying from 100 to 225 feet within the limits of which are situated' the plaintiff’s passenger station at Livingston Manor, its freight depot, railroad yards, two main tracks and various side tracks and generally the usual railway equipment incidental to the running and maintenance of a railroad. These structures and equipment cover practically the entire surface of the land involved, which is graded ánd filled as a railroad. The entire property is essentially a railroad property and nothing else and is maintained as such by the plaintiff as part of its main line for the conduct of its business as a railroad company.
The property involved has been adjudicated by this court to belong to the defendant herein as the result of an action in ejectment brought by the defendant against the plaintiff. (Livingston v. New York, Ontario & W. R. Co., 193 App. Div. 523.)
Edward Livingston at the time of his death in 1864 resided upon a farm of 200 acres in Sullivan county. By his will he gave to his nephew, Charles Octavius Livingston, this farm of 200 acres for his life and upon his decease to the eldest son of said nephew who should then be living. In 1871, at which time the life tenant had not been married,, the said life tenant made a deed which purported to convey the farm to one Morss. The predecessor of the plaintiff railroad in 1872 constructed its railroad over said farm under an agreement with Morss for the conveyance of a right of way and in
After the entry of judgment in the ejectment suit which held Livingston, the defendant here, to be the absolute owner of the property, this condemnation proceeding was instituted. The plaintiff railroad company characterizes the proceeding as one to cure the title which it had attempted to acquire through the life tenant and which had been found to be invalid as to the remainder-man. The plaintiff relies upon section 17 of the Railroad Law
A review of the authorities and text writers as to the allowance for improvements by a bona fide occupant under a claim of title, where such occupant subsequently condemns the property occupied to acquire title or to cure a defective one, appears to present some difficulties when an attempt is made to apply the rules which have been formulated to the situation disclosed in the present controversy.
It, therefore, appears on principle that where an owner of land has a legal title sufficient to sustain an action of ejectment there can be no recovery for improvements by the occupier except by way of setoff to damages for mesne profits. The present legislative definition of the ancient technical term “ mesne profits ” is “ the rents and profits, or. the value of the use and occupation, of the real property recovered." The action for mesne profits under the common law was a liberal and equitable one and allowed of every kind of equitable defense. (Wallace v. Berdell, 101 N. Y. 13.) This equitable setoff was the limit of recovery where the owner of the legal title sustained his action of ejectment at common law.
In an equitable action, however, the rule was different. The Court of Chancery administering a different system of remedies and being untrammeled by the strict rules of the common law afforded a greater allowance to an occupier in some cases where he made valuable improvements in good faith, he being the holder of the legal title but being liable to be dispossessed at the suit of the equitable owner. In this respect the Court of Equity followed the rule of the civil law which permitted the possessor of property of another to have payment for improvements after deducting from the value thereof a fair compensation for the rents or use of the property during the time he occupied it, where such possessor had erected buildings or made other improvements on the lands in good faith supposing himself to be the owner. (2 Am. Jur. 294.) In determining, therefore, the right to compensation for improvements the first inquiry is whether they were made by the legal or equitable owner. If made by the legal owner of lands to which another is equitably entitled, the latter when he resorts to a court of equity to enforce his equitable rights, will ordinarily be required to do equity by reimbursing the legal owner for the enhanced value of the lands by reason of permanent improvements made thereon by the person occupying under defective legal title provided the occupier made the improvements in good faith. But where the legal owner has title sufficient to enable him to pursue his rights and recover the property at law by ejectment, the occupier cannot recover for improvements beyond the mesne profits. In Putnam v. Ritchie (6 Paige, 390, 404) the chancellor in discussing the right to an allowance for permanent improvements said: “ This principle of natural equity is constantly acted upon in this court where the legal title is in the person who has made the improvements in good faith, and where the equitable title is in another who is obliged to resort to this court for relief. The court in such cases acts upon the principle that the party who comes here as a complainant, to ask equity, must himself be willing to do what is equitable. I have not, however, been able to find any case, either in this country or in England, wherein the Court of Chancery has assumed jurisdiction to give relief to a complainant who has made improvements upon land the legal title to which was in the defendant, where there has been neither fraud nor acquiescence on the part of the latter after he had knowledge of his legal rights. I do not, therefore, feel myself authorized to introduce a new principle into the law of this court, without the sanction of the Legislature, which principle in its application to future cases might be productive of more injury
This is the rule which has been followed in this State. (Mickles v. Dillaye, 17 N. Y. 80; Bedell v. Shaw, 59 id. 46; Woodhull v. Rosenthal, 61 id. 383; Wood v. Wood, 83 id. 575; Satterlee v. Kobbe, 173 id. 91; Thomas v. Evans, 105 id. 612; Trimm v. Marsh, 54 id. 599; Dows v. Congdon, 28 id. 122; Wallace v. Berdell, 101 id. 13.)
In the case at bar defendant here prior to the condemnation proceedings pursued his remedy at common law in ejectment and was successful. It was not necessary for him to come into equity .for any purpose. Since he obtained a judgment at law upon his legal title and the railroad company in the ejectment suit failed to set off its claim for improvements, it cannot do it now. The fact that an occupier of land has the right of eminent domain gives it the right to take the property upon making compensation. What a railroad corporation takes it must pay for as the rights and interests of the parties exist at the time of the taking. The railroad is now taking lands and structures which have been held to be the absolute property of the defendant. Assuming that the railroad company at the time the ejectment action was brought, might have brought an action in equity staying the ejectment action and asking that the railroad company obtain some relief with relation to the improvements made by it upon the ground of fraud or acquiescence upon the part of the remainderman, the fact is that the railroad company did not do so. Moreover, it would seem that the railroad would not have been successful in so urging an estoppel against the remainderman since this court has already said as much in the ejectment suit. Woodward, J., in the case of Livingston v. New York, Ontario & W. R. Co. (supra, at p. 528) said: “ The public records at all times showed that the title to this property must vest eventually in one other than the life tenant, and if the defendant, possessed of the right of eminent domain, chose to deal with one who had only the rights of the life tenant it cannot now be heard to urge an estoppel, for at the bottom of an estoppel lies either fraud, or something which operates as such (Wilmore v. Flack, 96 N. Y. 512, 520), and the plaintiff cannot be said to have acted fraudulently by remaining quiet until his rights in the premises had become fixed.”
The appellant, relying upon what was said in Matter of City of New York (198 N. Y. 84, 89) in relation to the decision in Village of St. Johnsville v. Smith (184 id. 341), maintains that the structures being solely adapted to railroad purposes, the lands were not proved to have been enhanced in value thereby, that there was no evidence to show that they added anything to the value of the defendant’s land as a farm. In the St. Johnsville case the property condemned was a portion of a farm and the structures erected by the village upon a portion only of the farm did not change the character of the property as a whole. It remained a farm and the structures were not adapted to a farm, adding little or nothing to its value as such. In the present case the property acquired has no relation to a farm and for the major part has had no such relation for fifty years. Nor is it a part of any property differing from it in character. It has been railroad property and nothing else for all that time. It is unreasonable to consider the question of the adaptability of the structures to the land as of the situation existing fifty years ago when the railroad entered upon the lands as part of a farm. For many years the narrow strip of land sought to be acquired has constituted a railroad right of way through a large village. During all this time the land has not been adapted to farming purposes but peculiarly to railroad purposes. The defendant is entitled to a consideration of this peculiar adaptability for the purposes for which the land is being taken in fixing the value of the land (Matter of N. Y., Westchester & Boston R. Co., 151 App. Div. 50, 56; Matter of N. Y., L. & W. R. Co., 27 Hun, 116; Van Size v. Long Island R. R. Co., 3 id. 613; Matter of Gilroy, 85 id. 424) and is entitled to the value of the structures if they are adaptable to and enhance the value of the land for the purposes of the condemnor. (Matter of City of New York, 198 N. Y. 84.) The commissioners have viewed the land and premises and have fixed apparently moderate values well within the figures presented by the witnesses both as to the land and the structures and the measure of compensation adopted seems to be fully sustained by authority. (Matter of City of New York, 198 N. Y. 84.)
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Cochrane, P. J., H. T. Kellogg and Van Kirk, JJ., concur; Hasbrouck, J., not sitting.
Final order unanimously affirmed, with costs.
Amd. by Laws of 1913, chap. 284.— [Rep,