27 N.Y.S. 304 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1894
This action was brought by the plaintiff, as the owner in fee of the premises Nos. 21, 23, and 25 Ninth avenue, between Little West Twelfth street and Thirteenth street, for an in
It is evident both from his findings of fact and conclusions of law that the learned judge who tried this case was conscientiously endeavoring to apply the rule laid down in the Newman Case, 118 N. Y. 618, 23 N. E. 901, and the Bohm Case, 129 N. Y. 576, 29 N. E. 802, and reaffirmed in the cases supra, to the facts before him, for he found as a fact that the presence of the defendants’ station at Fourteenth street brings a large number of persons daily into Ninth avenue in the immediate neighborhood of the premises in question, while he refused to find as a fact that this number increased the traffic upon the avenue in front of plaintiff’s premises. It is true he did not give his reasons for this refusal, although the presumption was it would in most cases increase the traffic; but he was bound to do so, if the facts and inferences (some of which we have
On the submission of the case the defendants presented a series of requests to find, to the effect that there had been no depreciation in the rental value of plaintiff’s premises since the defendants’ railway had been maintained and operated in front of them; that there had been no depreciation in the rental value of plaintiff’s premises since he purchased the same; and that the fee value- of plaintiff’s premises had not decreased since he acquired title thereto; to which the court answered by finding that the rental value of plaintiff’s premises had not been less than it was before the roads were operated, and not less than it had been since the plaintiff purchased the same, and that the fee value had not been less than it was prior to the time of his purchase. He also found that the fee value of the premises in question had increased since the plaintiff acquired title thereto, and also had increased after the date of the erection and operation of the railroad. And appellants now contend that the judgment rendered in this case is inconsistent with these findings, arguing that, since the rentals had not decreased, and the value of the fee had actually increased, the maintenance and operation of the railroad could have been of no damage to the premises; which we think is not well-founded, and assumes that the fee and rental values of property in this city will remain stationary no matter what had affected such values before the building of the road, and leaves out entirely the facts proved on the trial, which we have before referred to, and also the further fact of the recent establishment of the Farmers’ and Gansevoort. markets in its near vicinity. One of plaintiff’s witnesses testifies that since the establishment of these markets property in Thirteenth street, between "Ninth and Tenth avenues, has risen more than 200 per cent.; in Little West Twelfth street, between the same
“If it [the property] had not increased in value to the same extent that it would have done but for the erection and operation of the road, that is a fact which shows damage. What we now say is that evidence that the value of land on the avenue has not increased in the same proportion as land In the side streets is admissible, and may be considered, in connection with the other evidence in the case, upon the question of fact whether the land of the owner has increased in value to the same extent that it would have done but for the presence of the road. * * * In the nature of the subject, proof of a possibly greater value attaching to the property but for the building of the road is difficult, and somewhat shadowy and vague.”
The appellants further contend that the court erred in refusing to find defendants’ thirteenth conclusion of law, as requested by them, which was to the effect that in estimating and fixing the sum which the defendants might pay to obviate the injunction herein the special benefit resulting from the benefit of defendants’ railroad to the premises in suit should be offset against any consequential damages resulting to said lot and building from the appropriation or interference with the easements in Ninth avenue, appurtenant thereto, by the maintenance and operation of defendants’ railroad in front thereof. This the court very properly refused, because it had before found as a fact on sufficient evidence that no special benefits to plaintiff’s property resulted from the railway; and for the reasons before given there was no error in the court’s refusing to dismiss the complaint, either upon the plaintiff’s case or upon all the evidence offered.
“This is a practice not to be tolerated. The large number of requests are generally quite embarrassing to the courts. But when the same matter is requested to be found both as facts and law, it duplicates all the specific findings requested, and the number is still largely increased when every sentence is also requested to be found both as facts and law. Such a practice is not needful for the protection of the rights of any party, and the tendency must be to ensnare the trial judge, and frequently to defeat the ends of justice by inducing mistakes, confusion, and uncertainty into ■ the records of cases brought up for review. Proper practice requires that a request to find either facts or law should be plainly stated in a single proposition. The whole of it can be granted or refused, and any modification of the requested finding should be left to the discretion of the trial judge.”
And the court has therefore held that where a request to find embraces several propositions, some of which the party making the request is entitled to have found, and some not, the refusal of the request is not error, and therefore says:
“There is considerable difficulty attending the trial of this class of cases, and a judgment should not be reversed if, upon the whole record, we can see that no harmful error was committed, and that the proper principles of law were not misapprehended or misapplied.”
See, also, Struthers v. Railroad Co., (Com. Pl. N. Y.) 25 N. Y. Supp. 81, and we think this is specially applicable to this case. We do not see how this finding, even if unsupported by evidence, could or did in any way injure the defendants. The testimony is clear that the nearest rail of the structure is not nearer to the plaintiff’s house line than 36 feet. The finding itself is obscure. The whole sentence reads: “The structure is boarded over between the tracks, and between the rails of the tracks there are ties running at right angles with the lines of the house.” But a reference to the testimony of Mr. Osborn, and the diagram, plaintiff’s Exhibit A, which is referred to in the index of this case as printed, but which is not, and which we have consulted, as we have a right to do, it being on file in this court, shows that the elevated railroad in front of the premises in suit is composed of two independent structures, one
Besides these, two exceptions to the exclusion of evidence were argued by them. The first respects the exclusion of the opinion of one of plaintiff’s witnesses as to the cause of the increase in the valué of lots west of Ninth avenue and adjacent to Gansevoort market. When the propriety of this question was urged before the trial judge, counsel was asked by the court, “Is not that one of the questions to be determined in this action?” to which defendants’ counsel replied: “I think not. As I understand, the rulings of the court of appeals is this: that we cannot ask what would have been the value if the road had not been built, which is the conclusion for the court to draw. But it seems to me to be entirely proper for me to show all of the facts, circumstances, and conditions,”—to which the court replied, and, as we think, very properly: “That you may show, but that is not what you are asking for. You are asking for the "opinion of the witness as to the cause of the appreciation of the property, when, if the witness had been asked to state his opinion as to the cause of the depreciation, it would have been directly within the rulings of the court of appeals.”
The defendants offered proof of the application of plaintiff to the Union Dime Savings Bank for 'a loan upon the premises in suit, and the bank’s appraisement of the value of the premises, which was excluded. Mr. Leake, the secretary of the Union Dime Savings Institution," was then on the stand, and most of the questions asked were ruled out, because he had no personal knowledge of the matters inquired of. But the papers themselves were in no sense evidence. As we understand them, they were not under oath, were prepared merely for the purpose of procuring a loan. It was a matter entirely foreign to anything connected with the issues in this case, and for this reason the plaintiff’s statement contained in them could not be taken as an admission as against his interests in this action. The judgment should therefore be affirmed, with costs. All concur.