46 N.Y.S. 727 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The relators applied to the commissioner of public works for a permit to cross the sidewalk on the east' side of Edgeeomb avenue, 200 feet north of One Hundred and Forty-fifth street, with carts, and trucks for the purpose of depositing earth upon the property at that place. This permit was refused by the commissioner, whereupon this motion was made for a mandamus to "compel him to’ issue it, and the question presented by the appeal is whether the court at Special Term erred in refusing the mandamus. ' The motion having been made upon affidavits, can only be granted where the right depends solely upon questions of law (Code Civ. Proc. §-20l0); and,, if any disputed question of fact is presented, the court, therefore,, must deny the motion. In this case the affidavits on the part of' the relators were met by contrary affidavits produced by the-respondent. Upon the examination of this question, the facts. stated in these affidavits of the respondent must be "accepted as-stating the true facts upon which the application ■ must be decided (People ex rel. Lewis v. Brush, 146 N. Y. 60); and the question,, therefore, is, whether, assuming the facts to be as stated in the affidavits presented "by the respondent, the relators show such a clear legal right to a mandamus that it ought to have been granted by the court.
It appears that the land upon which it is ■ sought to deposit this-earth is- a portion of the property set- aside by chapter 56 of the Laws of 1894 for a park, which was to be called Colonial Park. This statute described certain lands -by metes and bounds, and declared them to be a public parkway for public use and public-purposes, and it required the municipal authorities of the city of’ New York at once, in the manner described in the act, to condemn the property and have the value of it appraised, ■ The' statute provided a complete scheme for the condemnation of the property and the payment of the price which should be awarded to the owners,, and it operated to condemn the land and appropriate it for public use. (Matter of the Application of the Mayor, 99 N. Y. 569, 580 ; Matter of Dept, of Public Parks, 53 Hun, 280.) , From the time-of the passage of the- act, and certainly from the time when the-lands therein were located by the filing of the map, they were fully appropriated and set apart for public use, and the duty of taking
It appears by the affidavits presented by the commissioner that proceedings were taken under the statute for appraising the value of this land, and, so far as this particular piece of property is concerned, the testimony has all been taken; and that testimony was given as to the value of the land at the time of the taking, and in the condition in which it was at the time the act was passed. This fact is not disputed. The land is intended for a public park, and it appears from the affidavits that when it was appraised it was in its natural condition. The land proposed to be taken for this park was rough and rocky and unimproved, and to a very considerable extent covered with trees and bushes. In this condition it is easily adapted for a, public park, and the improvements necessary for that purpose can conveniently and easily be made with reference to the natural condition of the ground. The affidavits of the respondent show that the filling in of this lot, as it is proposed to be done by the relators, will change its natural surface and destroy to some extent its adaptability for the purposes for which it was taken, and add greatly to the expense of such, grading and improvements of the surface as may be necessary to bring the land into harmony with the remainder of the park, which is necessary in laying it out for that purpose.
It further appears by the affidavits that no structures have been erected upon the land, and nothing had been done upon it until after
We have, then, this condition of affairs: This property, being adapted for rise as a public park, has been taken by the Legislature for that purpose; proceedings to appraise its value have been taken; the evidence has been given upon both sides upon the theory that the property should remain- in its natural- condition, and that it should' not be made less available for the purposes for which it was intended than it was in its natural state. It is proposed now not to use this property for the ordinary purposes for which land may be used, but to make a substantial and serious -change in its. condition, the effect of which will add- greatly to the expense of devoting it to the purposes for which it was taken. The condition of affairs-is substantially the same as it would be if one, having made an execu
The order appealed from must he affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the respondent.
Patterson, O’Brien and Parker, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., concurred in result.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.