101 N.Y.S. 433 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The respondent is a domestic street surface railroad corporation duly organized for the purpose óf constructing arid operating a street surface railroad between tire city of Boclrester and the city uf Syracuse. The defendants own a tract of land containing about-twenty-one acres, situated on East avenue and -in. the town of Brighton .and within 400 feet of tire city line of Boclrester.
The respondent’s proposed route passes, through the lands of the appellants, and it commenced the usual proceeding, under the Con-, demnation Law by petition to acquire the real property sought to bp taken of these appellants..
Their frontage on East avenue is nearly; 1,100 -feet, and,■ if the respondent’s road is constructed as contemplated, it will pass through.
The commissioners awarded to the landowners the sum of $1,200. Two of the commissioners united in the report and one of the commissioners in a minority report favored the payment of the sum of' $3,875. Upon the hearing witnesses on behalf of the appellants testified that the value of the land actually taken was from $600 to $1,000 per acre, and the entire damage to the premises by reason of the taking of the "land and the construction and maintenance of the petitioner’s road was from about $4,500 to nearly $9,000, while the variation of the witnesses on behalf of the petitioner was from $300 to $600 as to the loss to be sustained by the appellants.
We refer to this difference in the estimates for the purpose of emphasizing tlie significance of the circumstance upon which we base our reversal of the final order, for the commissioners might have awarded to the appellants a sum considerably in excess of much less than that awarded and still have been within the range of the damages as fixed by the witnesses.
One of the commissioners joining in the majority report was Mr. Defendorf, who was a prominent man in the town of Brighton. Opposition was made to the confirmatio'n of the report of the commissioners upon the ground that Mr. Defendorf was not an impartial commissioner. Affidavits were presented showing that while the petitioning respondent has been procuring rights of way through the town of Brighton, it has been represented by Mr. Defendorf. The evidence shows that in two instances he applied to landowners on behalf of the railroad company, to procure rights of way for it. In one instance an option was obtained and renewed by Mr. Defendorf and he paid for the continuance of such option and, eventually, the purchase price agreed upon between him, on behalf of the railroad company, and the owner, was paid. In the affidavit of Mr. Hone, the attorney for the appellants, it is stated that he had ascertained that Mr. Defendorf, on behalf of the rail
While an affidavit is presented by the secretary of the respondent that Mr. Defendorf has not represented the company, except in the two instances With Deal and Schummers, which was in the year 1902, yet there is no affidavit by Mr.’ Defendorf himself, who, above all others, possesses certain knowledge orn this subject, gainsaying the affidavits used on the motion.
We<think, therefore, it is a fair deduction from the affidavits in the record that Mr. Defendorf, prior to his appointment as commissioner, had been acting as the representative and agent of the petitioner in procuring rights of way in the town of Brighton and along its proposed route: He was noyt, therefore, an unbiased commissioner. It does not necessarily follow from this statement that Mr. Defendorf’s' connection with the respondent in any respect influenced his decision, but a man acting -in a judicial capacity should be free from the suspicion of partiality or bias. As was said by Judge Bronson seventy years ago in People ex rel. Roe v. Suffolk Common Pleas (18 Wend. 550, 552): “Hext in importance to the duty of rendering a righteous judgment, is that of doing it in such a manner as will beget no suspicion of the fairness and-integrity of the judge.” (See, also, Darling v. Pierce, 15 Hun, 542; Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N. Y. 549.)
Taking into consideration-the wide variance in the value put
The order should be reversed and a rehearing had before new commissioners to be appointed at Special Term, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.,
All concurred.
Order reversed and report of commissioners set aside, with costs to the appellant to abide event, and new appraisal ordered before other commissioners to be appointed at Special Term.