18 F. Cas. 858 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York | 1866
This case, in its present posture, raises questions different
Upon these .facts, it is insisted on behalf of the defendants, that the motive for the conveyance of the lots to the plaintiff was, manifestly, to transfer to the national courts a controversy commenced in the state court, and that, under such circumstances, this court, notwithstanding the discontinuance of the suit in the state court, should decline to exercise jurisdiction. This objection to the proceedings of the plaintiff is not well taken. The deeds show a legal title conveyed to the plaintiff for a valuable consideration, and it is conceded that he is a citizen of New Jersey. This gives the court jurisdiction. “The jurisdiction flows from the citizenship of the parties. The right to recover flows from the sufficiency of the title, and that is a matter purposely to be discussed upon the trial of the merits.” Story, J., in Briggs v. French [Case No. 1,871]. So long as an actual conveyance has been made, it matters not what may have been the motive which led to it; and the national courts do not decline jurisdiction, although it be conceded that the plaintiff has taken title for the purpose of enabling resort to be had to those courts. This precise point was so decided by the supreme court in Smith v. Kernochen, 7 How. [48 U. S.] 198.
But it is further insisted, that, inasmuch as the plaintiff is not shown to be the owner in fee of any land in the avenue and over which the railroad is to run, he cannot maintain the action in the absence of proof of special damage. Such is unquestionably the law. Assuming that the defendants have no legal authority whatever to lay down their track in Greene avenue, their position is that of parties about to erect a public nuisance, which affects the right of every person entitled to use Greene avenue as a street, that is to say of the whole community. They do not propose to enter upon any land of the plaintiff’s and the damage occasioned by the road to the plaintiff will not be different, • in kind or degree, from that sustained by every other lot-owner upon the avenue. It is damage resulting from the depreciation of the value of lots abutting on the street by reason of a railroad running through it, in front of, but not over, the plaintiff’s land. Now, it is well settled, that damage sustained alike by all the individuals of a large class furnishes no foundation for an action on the part of a single individual of the class. Lansing v. Smith, 8 Cow. 146; Davis v. Mayor, etc., 14 N. Y. 506. It was incumbent, therefore, on the plaintiff to show 'some special damage sustained, or likely to be sustained, by him. differing in kind from that sustained by the neighborhood, to entitle him to ask the interference of the court in his behalf. No such damage is pretended to exist, and its absence is fatal to the plaintiff on this motion.
The question so much discussed, upon the motion for the injunction, whether the grant of the right to lay down and use a railroad track in a public street, for the purpose of transporting passengers about a city in horse cars, is a new burden upon the land on which the rails are laid, for which compensation must be made, appears now to be out of the case, and its discussion is unnecessary here.
For the reasons stated, we are clearly of the opinion that the motion should be granted, and the. injunction be dissolved.