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Siegel v. New York Harlem R.R. Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jun 1, 1901
62 App. Div. 290 (N.Y. App. Div. 1901)

Opinion

June Term, 1901.

Ira A. Place, for the appellants.

Joseph A. Flannery, for the respondent.



Upon the question of the title to the land of the parties respectively, the only feature which distinguishes this case from many of the former cases (see Birrell v. N.Y. H.R.R. Co., 41 App. Div. 506; Conabeer v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 156 N.Y. 474) is that here the deed to the defendants with respect to the twenty-four feet in the center of the avenue antedates the deed to the plaintiff, the common source of title of both parties being one Charles Henry Hall. It is unnecessary to discuss the legal effect of this difference, no serious complaint arising but that it was duly considered by the learned trial judge. And equally upon the question of the amount awarded for damages, which was moderate and amply supported by evidence, nothing is required but a consideration of the appellants' contention that the rule which was applied deprived them of the benefit of certain deductions to which, upon the decision as made, they claim they were entitled.

The learned trial judge found that the defendants could rightfully maintain their railroad structure as it was maintained and used prior to February 16, 1897, and at any height within the lines of the central twenty-four feet of the avenue. Assuming as we must, without deciding, that this finding is right, we have to consider the contention that the judge "erred in that instead of finding and awarding as rental and fee damages the depreciation of rental and fee values, respectively, below what they would have been if defendants had maintained and operated trains upon such structure or structures, as they had acquired the right to thus maintain and use, he found and awarded as rental and fee damages the depreciation of rental and fee values, respectively, below what they would have been `if there had been no change in defendants' said railroad in Park avenue in front of said premises, pursuant to chapter 339 of the Laws of 1892.'" The contention, differently stated, is, that as the court found, first, that the defendants having acquired the right, could build their structure at any height on the twenty-four feet in the center of the avenue; and, secondly, that the defendants acquired the right prior to 1897 to maintain the railroad as it then existed in the depressed cut in the avenue (which was greater in width than the twenty-four feet), it follows that they had the right to construct and maintain the present viaduct structure without responding to plaintiff in damages at least for that part of the avenue used by them which was within the twenty-four feet.

The error which we think lies at the basis of this argument is, that the damages sought by the plaintiff were not for structure so placed, but were for the new viaduct of iron and steel about twenty feet above the surface of Park avenue and about fifty-nine feet wide, which structure the learned trial judge found was illegal and caused fee and rental damage to the plaintiff in the sums awarded, for which judgment was directed with the provision that unless the amounts were paid the illegal structure should be removed. The defendants, as stated, insist that this judgment is illogical and erroneous, because, as they claim, the extent to which the judgment could go affects only so much of the structure as projects on both sides beyond the twenty-four feet, or all the damages that could be awarded result therefrom. In other words, in every computation of the amounts to be awarded, the twenty-four feet should be excluded.

This contention, we think, is unsound. The structure is an entire one, and it would be difficult, if not impossible, to separate the legal from the illegal part. Instances may be imagined where this could be done, as where a third track is added to an elevated railroad structure, which could be removed if unauthorized, just as it was added, without destroying the rest of the structure which the owners had the right legally to maintain; or, if allowed to remain, the difference in damage between the structure as it existed with the two tracks and with the third track added, could be determined. In the present case, however, we have an entirely different structure, at a different elevation, affecting the abutting property differently, and one in which the legal and illegal portions are integral parts, and that which is illegal could not be removed without destroying the viaduct as an entirety. Moreover, considering the injury inflicted upon abutting owners, it might well be in regard to such a structure, that had it been limited to twenty-four feet in width, no appreciable damage might have resulted. Here the evidence shows that damage was caused by the placing of this particular structure in the avenue, and the fact that part of it was erected without warrant makes the structure, as a whole, illegal.

It may not be difficult, in the abstract, to theorize as to how much less the plaintiff is damaged by the entire structure because of the defendants' right to use twenty-four feet thereof in the center of the avenue. Thus, if the injury to her property were in exact ratio to the number of feet in the width of the viaduct, the arithmetical computation of damages would be simply one of proportion, and for twenty-four fifty-ninths of the whole damage she could not recover. The injustice of any such method, however, we have already alluded to in suggesting that a viaduct twenty-four feet wide might not have done any damage whatever to the abutting property, but that all the injury to the plaintiff's easements resulted from the structure as an entirety occupying, with the portions added without authority, a large part of the avenue. If, instead of taking up fifty-nine feet, the defendants had appropriated the entire avenue so as to practically destroy all of plaintiff's easements and property, then more apparently would it be difficult, if not impossible, to compute to what extent the damage inflicted would be lessened if, instead of such a structure, there were one occupying but twenty-four feet in the center of the avenue.

In our opinion there is little practical advantage in discussing what would or might be the effect on plaintiff's property of a viaduct twenty-four feet wide — for none such has been built — nor in endeavoring to imagine how much of the damage resulting from the present structure is caused by the part placed within the twenty-four feet. We say there is little practical advantage in view of the permanent structure which has been built, which is being used and which as a whole affects abutting property; for in considering the subject, even from the standpoint that the defendants, without liability to any one, might or could have built a viaduct of any kind twenty-four feet wide in the center of the avenue, we must recognize that here it is an actual situation, a present permanent structure and not a theory as to what might or could be done that claims our attention. Dealing, therefore, with this subject in the concrete and bearing in mind the character of actual structure which now exists, we can find no legal support for the contention that the defendants are entitled to a deduction either from the fee or the rental damage because of their alleged right to maintain some structure within the line of the twenty-four-foot strip. What has been held to be illegal is the structure as it now exists in its entirety, and it is that which has injured the plaintiff's easements and property, and there is no rule of law to which our attention has been called that requires a court to apportion damages for the benefit of a trespasser. On the contrary, the tendency has been in the opposite direction. ( Lahr v. Met. El. R. Co., 104 N.Y. 268; American Bank Note Co. v. N.Y. El. R.R. Co., 129 id. 267.)

In the Lahr Case ( supra) the court said: "No partial justification of the damages inflicted by an unlawful structure and its unlawful use can be predicated upon the circumstance that, under other conditions and through a lawful exercise of authority, some of the consequences complained of might have been produced without rendering their perpetrator liable for damages. The structure here and its intended use cannot be separated and dissected, and it must be regarded in its entirety in considering the effect which it produces upon the property of the abutter. However the damage may be inflicted, provided it be effected by an unlawful use of the street, it constitutes a trespass, rendering the wrongdoer liable for the consequences of his acts."

We think, therefore, as in effect did the learned trial judge, that where there is but one entire structure, part of which is illegal and not separable, this latter to those whose property is injured, makes the whole illegal. The plaintiff's evidence was directed (as defendants contend improperly, but, as we think, properly) to showing the difference in effect between the former cut as it existed with its tracks and the trains operated thereon, which the defendants had the right to maintain and use, and the present permanent structure, which, in its entirety and as used, constitutes a continuous trespass upon the plaintiff's easements of light, air and access, and which structure it was in the power of the court to enjoin, unless the reasonable award made should, in compensation for the damages suffered, be paid.

We think the judgment was right and should be affirmed, with costs.

INGRAHAM, HATCH and LAUGHLIN, JJ., concurred; McLAUGHLIN, J., dissented.


The defendants had a right to erect a steel viaduct twenty-four feet wide in the center of Park avenue at any height they saw fit. That they had such right was settled and determined by this court in Birrell v. N.Y. H.R.R. Co. ( 41 App. Div. 506). They also had acquired by prescription the right to occupy so much of the avenue outside of the twenty-four-foot strip, for railroad purposes, as they had used for that purpose, from 1873 to February 16, 1897. This was settled and determined by the Court of Appeals in Conabeer v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co. ( 156 N.Y. 474) and in Lewis v. N.Y. H.R.R. Co. (162 id. 202). The learned trial court also found as a fact that the defendants had such right as appears from the following findings:

" Third. * * * Said railroad, prior to February 16th, 1897, was operated along the center of said Park Avenue in front of the plaintiff's premises in a depressed cut about 14 feet below the surface of said Park Avenue and 61 feet and 8 inches wide, which said railroad cut was bounded on each side by parapet walls of about two feet six inches above the surface of said avenue, which said embankment or viaduct cut off access from one side of the said avenue to the other * * *.

" Fourth. That said defendant railroad companies * * * acquired the right without liability to the plaintiff to have, maintain and use their railroad and railroad structures as the same were maintained and used prior to February 16th, 1897, as hereinbefore described; and at any height within the central 24 feet of said Park Avenue."

But notwithstanding these findings and the authorities referred to, the learned trial court held that the structure and the operation of trains thereon since February 16, 1897, have been "continuous trespass upon plaintiff's easements of light and air appurtenant to her said premises," and for which fee and rental damages were awarded. This court is about to affirm the judgment, upon the theory that "the structure is an entire one, and it would be difficult, if not impossible, to separate the legal from the illegal part," and that inasmuch as a portion of it is illegal, the entire structure becomes illegal and must be removed.

I am unable to agree to this conclusion. It is a novel proposition to me that a party who has a legal right to build or maintain a structure upon his own land or in a given locality must tear down the entire building or remove the entire structure if a portion of the building or a part of the structure happens to be constructed upon his neighbor's land, or in such a way as to impair his neighbor's easements of light, air and access. I do not see how such a principle can be applied, if justice is to be meted out to parties according to their respective legal rights. It is no answer to the suggestion to say that "it would be difficult, if not impossible, to separate the legal from the illegal part." Difficulties and impossibilities are unknown to the law. Those terms are only applicable when legal principles are sought to be applied, but the principle is not destroyed even if the application and the enforcement of it be difficult or impossible. Here it does not appear but that that portion of the steel viaduct outside of the twenty-four feet can be removed and leave the balance standing, and if it did it would not make the slightest difference in determining or enforcing the rights of the parties. If A constructed a building partly on his land and partly on the land of B, no one would seriously contend that in ordering A to remove that portion of it which encroached upon B's land, the court should order A to tear down the entire building, on the theory that "the structure is an entire one." I can see no difference in principle between a building thus constructed and the structure of the defendants. The defendants had the legal right to build a part of the structure in precisely the way they built it. This we have decided, and having that right I do not see how they can be directed to take that part of it down, or to pay damages in lieu thereof.

I think the damages to which the plaintiff is entitled by reason of the erection of the structure of which she now complains, is the value of her easements of light, air and access, which have been impaired, or of which she has been deprived by that part of the structure placed or erected upon the portion of the avenue lying outside of the twenty-four-foot strip, and this only, to the extent that the use to which the avenue has been put by the erection of the steel viaduct thereon is in excess of, or different from that to which it was subjected and used by defendants for railroad purposes from 1873 to 1897. This is not the rule adopted by the trial court. The trial court directed that the entire structure be taken down, or in lieu thereof a specified sum in damages be paid.

For the foregoing reasons I am unable to concur with the other members of the court. I think the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.


Summaries of

Siegel v. New York Harlem R.R. Co.

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Jun 1, 1901
62 App. Div. 290 (N.Y. App. Div. 1901)
Case details for

Siegel v. New York Harlem R.R. Co.

Case Details

Full title:ANNA SIEGEL, Respondent, v . THE NEW YORK AND HARLEM RAILROAD COMPANY and…

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department

Date published: Jun 1, 1901

Citations

62 App. Div. 290 (N.Y. App. Div. 1901)
70 N.Y.S. 1088

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