Henderson v. New York Central Railroad

Smith, J.:

The Court of Appeals held in this case, that the defendants were trespassers in laying their tracks over the plaintiffs’ land in the street in question, without his consent, or the appraisal and payment of his damages. They held, also, in accordance with well established rules, that the plaintiffs arc consequently entitled to an injunction restraining the defendants from continuing the trespass, upon the ground of preventing irreparable mischiefs and a multiplicity of suits ; and that the court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter, for the purpose of giving equitable relief, may also, in this action, award'damages to the plaintiffs for the ¡last injury.

The proper measure of damages in the case was not considered by the Court of Appeals. It presents a novel question, and one of considerable difficulty. The referee having found that by the construction and use of the railroad, Williams sustained damage, not only by the use of that part of his land upon which the railroad was laid, but also in the impaired value of his lands fronting on the street, allowed damages of the latter description, and the defendants’ counsel claims that the allowance was erroneous. He insists that the case is to be governed by the rule prevailing in actions at law for trespass quare clausum fregit; to wit, that the plaintiffs, if disseized, can recover only for the entry and ouster, and not for the continuance of the trespass, unless he has regained possession by re-entry. Ho also insists that the damages should be confined to the strip of land actually taken by the defendants, and should not include consequential damages to the adjoining lands.

It may be assumed that the acts of the defendants amounted to a disseisin. The Court of Appeals held, in the case of Carpenter v. Oswego and Syracuse R. R. Co. (24 N. Y., 655), that the owner of land covered by a highway upon which a railroad company had laid its track, without his consent, and without making *349compensation, may maintain ejectment to recover possession. And in the later case of Wohler v. The Buffalo and State Line R. R. Co., not reported, which was an action of trespass, the same court held, as appears by the manuscript opinion of Grover, J., handed up by the appellants’ counsel, that the wrongful laying down and use of a railroad track by running trains upon it was a disseisin, and that the owner of the land could only recover for the entry and ouster until he had regained possession.

But we are of the opinion that the rules invoked by the appellants’ counsel are not applicable to the present case. The judgment now appealed from having determined that the plaintiffs are entitled to a perpetual injunction restraining the defendants from making further use of the locus in quo, the position of the respondents is analogous to that of a plaintiff who has recovered judgment in an action of ejectment entitling him to the possession. The circumstance that the allowance of the injunction is dependent upon a condition to be performed by the plaintiffs does not affect the question, as their ability to perform the condition is obvious, and their willingness to do so is evinced by the fact found by the referee, that on the tidal they tendered a stipulation to do the acts which the condition requires. The case is to be regarded as if the condition had been performed, and the injunction had issued.

We are therefore brought to inquire what damages the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, upon the assumption that they have regained possession. As the defendant’s tracks, and the use made of them, were a continuous trespass upon the plaintiffs’ lands, amounting to a nuisance, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover for the injuries directly resulting therefrom. Is the counsel for the appellants correct in his position that the damages are limited to the strip of land actually occupied by the tracks of the railroad, and do not include damages to the adjoining lands ? When the railroad was constructed, the plaintiffs’ lots extended to the centre of the street. The road was built upon a portion of each lot. Had the defendants instituted a statutory proceeding to acquire the title to the land needed for their tracks, on making-compensation, while the plaintiffs, or their testator owned the entire lots, the land in the street would have been regarded as still forming a parcel of the original lots, subject to the easement, *350and the depreciation in the value of the portions of the lots adjoining the street, as well as the value of the portion proposed to be taken for the actual use of the railroad, would have been a proper element of damage in such proceeding. (The Troy and Boston R. R. Co. v. Lee, 13 Barb., 169; Rood v. The N. Y. and Erie R. R. Co., 18 id., 80; Furniss v. Hudson River R. R. Co., 5 Sandf., 551; Matter of Prospect Park and C. I. R. R. Co., 13 Hun, 345; 16 id., 261.) Such depreciation was the direct result of the construction and use of the railroad. The case of Proprietors of Lodes and Canals and ano. v. The Nashua and Lowell R. R. Corporation (10 Cush., 385), cited by the appellants counsel is not in point. There, the owner of land not abutting on the defendants’ railroad, and situated at some distance from it, claimed damages for depreciation in its value caused by laying the railroad across a street leading thereto, and also by reason of waste water being set back upon the land, in consequence of the railroad being constructed across a street gutter without a culvert. It was held that the damages claimed were consequential and remote, and could not be recovered. Ch. J. Shaw, who delivered the opinion of the court, distinguished the case from those where the damage to real estate is direct, by passing over it, or part of it, or, to quote his language, “ which affects the estate directly, though it does not pass over it, as by a deep cut or high embankment, so near lands or buildings as to prevent or diminish the use of them ; ” and he expressed the opinion that the particular circumstances stated by him would present proper subjects for the assessment of damages. The statute of Massachusetts, under which the proceeding was had, gave a remedy only for damages necessarily caused to the land by the railroad (p. 388). The referee in this case has found upon testimony which fully warrants the finding, that by reason of the construction and use of the defendants railroad, the plaintiffs’ testator sustained damages in the impaired value of his lands and of the rents and profits thereof. In ascertaining the amount of such damage, he fixed the amount of the depreciation in value of each lot, and to that he added interest, computed from a date not exceeding six years prior to the commencement of the suit. There appears to have been no allowance for the depreciated value of the use or of the rents and profits, other than *351the allowance of interest. In theory of law and in fact, the damage, consisting of the depreciation in value of the land, was sustained when the defendants built and commenced using their railroad.

The subsequent sale of the land by the plaintiffs did not divest them of their right to recover damages, that right having been reserved to them by express agreement with their grantees or operation of law; but it had the effect to deprive them of all remedy for the recovery of such damages, unless they are recoverable in this action. It has been said already that the damages in question would have been a proper subject of award in a proceeding instituted by the defendants to acquire the right of way, while the plaintiffs were the owners of their original lots. But if the defendants should hereafter institute a proceeding for that purpose, they could not be required to make compensation for the depreciated value of the lots fronting on the street, for the reason that the plaintiffs no longer own them and the present owners have no interest in the lands which the defendants would seek to condemn, so that if the item of damage under consideration cannot be recovered by the plaintiffs in this action, not only are they without remedy, but the wrong-doer is exempted from its payment. The plaintiffs and their testator in selling violated no duty. They were under no obligation to the defendants not to sell. They had a right to sell whenever they chose.

On the whole, we think the item of damages in question was properly allowed. That the plaintiffs are also entitled to interest upon it, as allowed by the referee, seems clear. It is but a fair compensation for the depreciated rents and profits before the sale and for the use of the principal sum represented by the depreciated value of the land to which the plaintiffs have been entitled since the sales. The plaintiffs are not chargeable with unreasonable delay. The defendants are in fault, having wrongfully taken and withheld possession of the land of the plaintiffs’ testator nearly forty years, without instituting proceedings to acquire the right to do so on making compensation.

These conclusions do not conflict with the decision of the Supreme Court in the fifth district, on the appeal from the judgment rendered upon the second trial. In two particulars, the *352case as then found by the referee differed from the case now presented. The prayer for an injunction was denied, and a portion of the plaintiffs’ lands fronting the street had not then been sold. Mr. Justice Mullin, who wrote the prevailing opinion, thought the case was a proper one for an injunction ; but as no appeal was taken from the part of the decision which denied the injunction, he did not discuss it, and the case was necessarily treated as one in which the plaintiff was not entitled to an injunction.

The judgment requires certain other damages to be paid by the defendants on their being tendered a deed and release. That portion of the damages consists exclusively of the value of the strip of land appropriated by the defendants for their tracks, as found by the referee. The defendants’ counsel objects to that part of the judgment that it makes a bargain for the parties, and that it compels the defendants to buy at a price fixed by the referee under a throat of an injunction if they refuse. That view of the matter is hardly warranted. The plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction, unconditionally, and they alone can complain of that feature of the judgment. The terms prescribed are for the benefit of the defendants, and afford them an opportunity to purchase the fee of the land without the expense and delay of a special proceeding for that purpose, and the stoppage of their trains by injunction in the meantime. If they do not choose to avail themselves of it, the case will be the same as if the injunction had been ordered without any condition.

The counsel for the defendants argue that this provision of the judgment was held erroneous by the Supreme Court on the second appeal. The decision, then under -review, was very different from the present judgment in that respect. It ordered payment, unconditionally, of the whole amount of damages awarded, and provided that upon such payment the fee of the soil covered by the track should vest in the defendants for the purposes of their railroad, subject to the public easement. It was not optional with the defendants to pay, or with the plaintiffs to convoy. Judge Mullin held that the decision was erroneous, in that it compelled the plaintiffs to convey, without their consent, on receiving the damages which the law awards for the trespasses of which they complained ; and also, that as the decision necessarily implied *353that the damages included the value of the property taken, a measure of damages was adopted not applicable to an action for trespass on lands. The present judgment is not liable to either of those objections.

It follows from the views above expressed that the judgment should be affirmed. The plaintiffs are entitled to costs.

Taloott, P. J., and Hardin, J., concurred.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.