97 N.Y. 245 | NY | 1884
This case arises upon a demurrer to the plaintiff's complaint on the ground that it contains two causes of action which are improperly united. The first cause of action alleges, in substance, that the defendant erected and wrongfully and unlawfully maintains a heavy wall on the easterly side of a stream flowing southwardly through the village of Remsen for the protection of its road-bed, by means whereof the stream, in time of high water, is turned into and through the dwelling-house and grounds of the plaintiff on the west bank of the stream, whereby the property was damaged. The second cause of action sets forth that the plaintiff is the owner and possessor of a wood and timber lot in the town of Remsen, containing some forty-four acres; that the defendant's road crosses this diagonally, dividing it into two parcels; and that plaintiff can only reach one of them, or pass from one parcel to the other by crossing the railroad track or by going a long distance around and crossing lands owned and occupied by other persons. It then avers the statutory duty of the defendant to erect and maintain fences with openings, or gate or bars, and farm crossings for the use of the owners of lands adjoining the railroad, and its neglect and refusal, upon request, to do so, for plaintiff's use, and leaving no passage or farm crossing, etc., to the damage and injury of the plaintiff. The only question to be determined is, whether the two causes of action, set forth in the complaint, can be properly united in the same action under the provisions contained in section 484 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This section provides that the plaintiff may unite in the same complaint two or more causes of action, in the several cases which are enumerated, and among others "for injuries to real property." (Code of Civ. Pro., § 484, subd. 4.) It is very manifest that the first cause of action, in the complaint herein, is to recover damages, *248 within the meaning of subdivision 4 above cited, "for injuries to real property."
A more difficult question arises as to the second cause of action. The complaint, as amended, after a portion of the same had been stricken out by an order of the court, claims to recover damages sustained by reason of a failure of defendant to perform its statutory duty. The gist of the action is this failure of the defendant to perform a duty enjoined upon it by law, in consequence of which the plaintiff has sustained injuries for which he is entitled to recover damages. This second cause of action arises upon an implied contract or obligation of the defendant to perform a duty required. The duty is imposed by statute and an implied promise of performance arises by reason thereof. In N.Y. N.H.R.R. Co. v. Schuyler (
The plaintiff, in the second cause of action, did not claim damages for any injury to the land, but merely for the inconvenience arising from his being compelled to cross the lands of other parties or to go a long ways around the land or to cross the railroad track. These inconveniences constitute the basis of the claim for injuries sustained by the plaintiff, and as set forth had no relation to any injury sustained to the land itself. An injury to the real property does not consist in a failure to perform a duty which relates to the use of the same in a convenient and proper manner, but it must be a trespass, tort, or some act which takes away from or reduces the value of such *249 property. A failure to perform a duty can scarcely be regarded as taking away any value from the property as it existed. It merely leaves such property in the same condition as it was previously. Its condition was not changed by any such neglect on the part of the defendant, from what it was before such neglect occurred. Its value was the same after the failure to perform as it was before, and hence no injury was inflicted thereby. The performance of this duty might add to the value of the real property, but a failure to perform would not lessen or impair its value.
The position of the respondent's counsel, that any obstruction to the use of real property diminishes its value, and hence the failure to perform the duty imposed was an injury to the real estate, is without force. If the failure to perform the duty was an obstruction, such obstruction existed before the failure occurred, and hence it cannot be claimed that such failure affected the land itself. Nor can it be said that the failure of the defendant to provide farm crossings constituted a breach of duty coupled with injury which made up a tort. The neglect of the defendant, of itself, was not tortious and did not directly affect the land. It was merely a failure to perform its contract and not an act of a tortious character.
The second cause of action in the plaintiff's complaint, we think, comes within the provisions of the first subdivision of section 484 of the Code as to contracts, express or implied.
No claim is made by the respondent's counsel that the second cause of action is within the meaning of the ninth subdivision of section 484, in reference to claims arising out of the same transaction, etc. There would seem to be no ground for claiming that both the plaintiff's causes of action arose out of the same transaction or were connected with the same subject of action.
The court erred in overruling the demurrer, and the judgment should be reversed, with leave to the plaintiff to amend his complaint upon payment of costs.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *250