142 N.Y.S. 839 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The relator, Jordan L. Mott, owns a plot of land measuring 612 feet on Third avenue, 352 feet on the Harlem river and 710 feet on the Mott Haven canal in the borough of the Bronx in the city of New York. Upon this plot are buildings used for many years for foundry and iron working business. In the year 1890 an act of Congress
Cases strictly analogous to the present are Willis v. Winona City (59 Minn. 27); Dore v. City of Milwaukee (42 Wis. 108), and People ex rel. Hallock v. Hennessy (205 N. Y. 301). Furthermore, the statute under which the bridge and approaches were constructed plainly intends that the approaches built upon and over existing streets shall be considered as a change of grade and shall entitle the abutting owners damaged thereby to receive compensation, and such was the construction given to the act by this court in People ex rel. City of New York v. Lyon (114 App. Div. 583, 585; affd., 186 N. Y. 545). The city of New York places much' reliance upon People ex rel. City of New York v. Sandrock Realty Co. (149 App. Div. 656; affd., 207 N. Y. 771). That case, however, arose under a different statute (Laws of 1894, chap. 147, as amd.).
By that statute the Legislature had provided that damages should be paid to abutters upon Willis avenue (upon which the bridge approach was erected) for injury to or interference with then easements of light, air and access, but had limited such damages to property lying south of One Hundred and Thirty-third street on the theory apparently that, in consequence of the widening of the avenue above that street, no injury would be done to the street easements of abutting property. By another section of the act, as construed by this court and the Court of Appeals, damages for change of grade were to be awarded only to owners of land abutting on streets which intersect Willis avenue. The Sandrock Realty Company’s property abutted on Willis avenue, but was north of One Hundred and Thirty-third street, so that it was entitled to damages under neither section of the act. The scheme of the present act is quite different and plainly contemplates an award of damages, as for a change of grade, to the owners of lands abutting upon Third avenue. The writ of certiorari sued out by the property owners brings up for review the amount
The majority of the board who made the award have not stated the rule which they adopted, but an examination of the record, and a comparison of the results with the evidence of the city’s witnesses seem to make it very clear that the assessors considered only the damage done to a strip of land 100 feet deep fronting upon Thud avenue, and allowed nothing for the damage to the property considered as a plot. That this was the rule adopted by the majority of assessors is plainly intimated by the opinion filed by the president of the board who favored a somewhat larger, and, as it would seem, a more reasonable allowance. He may be presumed to have had knowledge of the theory upon which his colleagues acted. If this was the rule applied by the majority it was plainly inapplicable to the situation presented by the Mott property, the owner of which was entitled to an award of damages based not solely upon the injury to the frontage, but upon the injury to the plot treated as a whole. (Matter of Grade Crossing Commissioners, 116 App. Div. 549.) The award appears to be so clearly inadequate that justice requires that it be referred back to the assessors for reconsideration.
As a result, the writ of certiorari sued out by the city must be dismissed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements to the claimant Jordan L. Mott, and writ of certiorari sued out by said claimant must be sustained, the award of damages annulled, and the matter remitted to the board of assessors for further consideration.
Ingraham, P. J., Laitghlin, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
As to the city, writ dismissed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements to claimant; as to claimant, writ sustained, and matter remitted to assessors. Order to be settled on notice.
See 26 U.' S. Stat. at Large, 426, 437, chap. 907.—[Rep.