149 N.Y.S. 276 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
In 1910 the State appropriated for barge canal purposes lands of which the relator claimed to have title. The relator thereupon filed with the Court of Claims a claim for such appropriation, which upon trial in said court resulted in November, 1911, in a judgment for $2,545.86. Thereafter there was filed with the State Comptroller a certified copy of the judgment, a certificate of no appeal by the Attorney-General, a 'release and waiver of lien by claimant’s attorneys, and an abstract of title of the premises. The Attorney-General disapproved of the abstract of title, and the Comptroller for that reason refused payment of the judgment. The relator claiming that the Court of Claims possessed jurisdiction to determine whether he had a good title, and also jurisdiction to determine the value of such title, and that the question of his title had been submitted to and passed upon favorably by the Court of Claims, applied for a peremptory writ of mandamus directing the Comptroller to pay the judgment. The respondent filed answering affidavits, and an alternative writ was thereupon issued to which the respondent made return. The issues thus raised were brought to trial before the Special Term under a stipulation that the court should decide the facts and the law. The court decided that the title held by relator was not a
The Court of Claims, being a statutory court, did not have jurisdiction to pass upon conflicting titles and it had only such powers as were conferred upon it by statute (Taylor v. State, 124 N. Y. Supp. 818; People ex rel. Swift v. Luce, 204 N. Y. 478); and the evidence fails to establish the relator’s contention that that court assumed to pass upon the validity of relator’s title, and sustains the finding of the trial court that the Court of Claims did not assume to do so.
Evidently the determination of the Court of Claims was not intended to fix the value of relator’s interest in the lands appropriated, but to determine the value of a marketable title
The order appealed from should, therefore, be reversed and a writ of mandamus ordered issued directing the State Comptroller to make such deposit of the award.
All concurred.
Order reversed, without costs, and mandamus directed to issue as per opinion.