This is a condemnation proceeding, taken by the commissioners of parks of the town of Rye, in Westchester county, to acquire for a public park certain land commonly known as Oakland Beach, on the shore of Long-Island sound. Commissioners of appraisal were duly appointed by the court and have made their report,- in which they awarded the owner, for the property thus taken, the sum of $295,000. Upon the application made to this court at Special Term to confirm the report of the commissioners" and the award thereby made, a motion was made by the counsel for the owner for an allowance to the owner of five per cent, upon the amount of the award in addition to taxable costs, the latter to include $3,000 as compensation paid by the owner to expert witnesses. Application was
After carefully considering the matter, I allowed to the counsel for the plaintiffs, that is, the commissioners of parks, for his services, the sum of $2,960', and fixed the compensation of the expert witnesses employed in behalf of the plaintiffs at the sum of $400 and made the same allowances to the owner, in addition to taxable costs, and filed a memorandum of my decision as to the owner’s motion in .the following words:
“ I consider that the award made by the Commissioners to the owner, Augustus M. Halstead, is ample and indeed liberal; and I think that an extra allowance of one per cent, upon the amount of the award will, under all the circumstances, be sufficient. Accordingly I allow the defendant owner, Augustus M. Halstead, an extra allowance of $2,950 and also taxable costs, which may include an allowance of $400 for expenses in procuring the expert witness, whom he paid. A compensation of $3,000 to such witness, which it is claimed such owner paid him, is far beyond any price or rate warranted by the usage of this locality and should not be charged against the town.”
The owner now moves before me, at Special Term, for a rehearing of his motion for allowances for costs and expenses, and asks that the allowance made to him, which was one per cent, of the amount of the award, may be increased to five per cent, thereof, and that the amount allowed him for disbursements for compensation to expert witnesses may be increased from the sum of $400 to $3,000.
The failure to submit any allowances made in any of the proceedings in the Greater Hew York for the acquisition
Whatever may be the custom in the counties composing the present Second Judicial District, or in any of them, it has been the practice in this county to make to the parties in condemnation proceedings only quite moderate allowances for their expenses incurred for counsel fees and expert witnesses; and I still think that the allowances here made are quite in harmony with such practice, which has been of frequent application, as within the last twenty-five years there have been many condemnation proceedings in this county. While, doubtless, the constitutional “ just compensation ” requires a fair indemnity to the owner for his necessary expenses incurred in proving the value of his land taken, as was substantially held by our Appellate Division-in the recent case of Matter of Board of Rapid Transit R. R. Commissioners, 128 App. Div. 103, 1'26, I do not think that such “ just compensation ” should be held to require indemnity for any unusual compensation which the owner may have chosen to pay to his counsel or expert witnesses. If, in the hope of securing an unusual award, he has deemed it best to incur such an excess beyond ordinary expenditure, I think he should be left himself to defray it. The court here has made the same allowance for expenses of counsel and expert witnesses upon each side. It would seem invidious to larg’ely increase the allowance on the side of the owner, when it is apparent that the labor performed upon the other side was at least as great. It was obviously as important to the town to decrease the award, or to hold it within moderate bounds, as it was to the. owner to inert ase it.
There were but eleven meetings of the commissioners of appraisal which were attended by counsel, and at two of such meetings no testimony was taken. Only two witnesses on each side were examined as to the value of the land, and the whole record of the testimony occupies but 161 pages.
Motion denied.