Citation Numbers: 28 N.E. 518, 128 N.Y. 436, 40 N.Y. St. Rep. 445, 83 Sickels 436, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 997
Judges: Peckham
Filed Date: 10/13/1891
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
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The structure erected by defendants in Second avenue, in front of the plaintiff's premises, was as to her an illegal structure and inconsistent with the use of the avenue as a public street. At the time of building the railway a trespass was committed by the defendants upon the property now owned by the plaintiff, although she did not own it at that time. Such trespass has been continued from the time when the road was *Page 444
built up to the time when the judgment in this action was entered. By continuing the trespass the defendants laid themselves open to continuous actions, in which the recovery would be for the damage sustained up to the time of the commencement of each action. These propositions are clear, and are now undisputed. They have been settled by the Story and theUline cases, so familiar to the court and the bar (
In an action at law the owner of the property interfered with or trespassed upon cannot recover damages to his premises, based upon the assumption that such trespass is to be permanent. He can recover only the damages which he has sustained up to the commencement of the action. The judgment entered for the damages sustained does not operate as a purchase of the right to continue the trespass. But the owner may resort to equity for the purpose of enjoining the continuance of the trespass, and to thus prevent a multiplicity of actions at law to recover damages; and in such an action the court may determine the amount of damage which the owner would sustain if the trespass were permanently continued, and it may provide that, upon payment of that sum, the plaintiff shall give a deed or convey the right to the defendant, and it will refuse an injunction when the defendant is willing to pay upon the receipt of a conveyance. The court does not adjudge that the defendant shall pay such sum and that the plaintiff shall so convey. It provides that, if the conveyance is made and the money paid, no injunction shall issue. If defendant refuse to pay, the injunction issues. It may be that, in the case of a railroad actually running its cars upon or through property of another, it would not be justified in refusing to pay upon the delivery of the conveyance, and, instead thereof, submitting to an injunction. Public interests might have a right to be heard in that respect. But it is enough to say that, in the cases where permanent damage is to be paid, there is a condition *Page 445
that a conveyance shall be made, and the defendant thus secures title to the property used. In cases where the owner wishes to actually stop the further trespass and where the defendant has no legal right to acquire the property, such condition would not be inserted, and an injunction would issue upon the right of the owner being determined. (Henderson v. Central Railroad Co.,
The plaintiff, if he receive the amount of the permanent damage, is by the court compelled to convey the interest to the defendant which the defendant pays for in that way. Condemnation proceedings are thus avoided. It is conclusively determined that the trespass is to be continuous, and defendant concedes it when it avails itself of the condition and pays the permanent damage in order to receive the conveyance. It is only in this way that the owner recovers as for a permanent damage to his property.
In a case where the defendant has no power to condemn the property, if the owner in that event proceed in equity, he recovers only his damage up to the entry of the judgment, and at the same time secures an injunction which prevents the future trespass. If the owner sue at law he recovers his damages as stated. If the owner, without having brought any suit in equity, sell his property at a loss caused by the erection of the railroad, the question at once arises as to what rights are acquired by the purchaser, and what claim, if any, has the vendor against defendant. The vendee has in such case purchased and the vendor has sold to him in fee simple absolute the premises fronting the street, to which premises are attached, as property passing to him by the conveyance, the easements of light, air and access which the defendants have already interfered with and trespassed upon by the erection and operation of the road. (Story v. El. R.R. Co.,
The argument, of course, assumes that if such a cause of action be made out, it must follow that none arises in favor of a subsequent purchaser who obtains the land at a price reduced on account of the existence of the road. Unless the one cause of action exclude the other the defendants would accomplish nothing by proving the existence of one in favor of the original owner.
The defendants' counsel assert that the permanent damage to the property was sustained by the vendor at the time he sold to the plaintiff, and that the company is liable to pay the same to him. Hence they say that in taking from the present owner the easements spoken of, which, when separated from the land to which they are appurtenant, are of themselves but of nominal value, the defendants would only be condemned to pay therefor a nominal sum, such as six cents; and as to the resulting loss in value to the adjoining land of the vendee, caused by the erection and operation of the railroad, the vendee has not sustained that loss, because she has only paid for the property the sum to which it had depreciated by reason of the existence of the road in front of it. Continuing the argument the counsel for the defendants state that if the present owner *Page 448 (the vendee) should commence an action to restrain the further trespass, the defendants could at once commence proceedings to condemn the easements, and that the rule of damages would be the difference between the present market value of the whole property and that portion which would be left after the taking, and that difference would be nominal only. So that when the present owner commences her action to restrain the further commission of the trespass, the whole matter may be adjusted in such suit, and the same rule of damages would obtain. The result would be either that the defendants would be enjoined from further operating their road until they paid six cents, the nominal damage sustained by the present owner of the easements, or else the bill would be dismissed entirely on the ground that the aid of equity could not be invoked for the purpose of compelling the payment of merely nominal damages. This course of argument does not, as it seems to me, answer the claim of the present owner to enjoin the further trespass upon her property unless she is paid the damage which such trespass will permanently cause her. That damage is not merely nominal.
In 1880, the defendants erected their road, and by its erection and operation depreciated the value of the property now owned by the plaintiff. In erecting their road they trespassed upon the easements appurtenant to that property, and such trespass has been continuous ever since. By these wrongful acts the market value of the plaintiff's property has been greatly depreciated. If they were compelled to resort to condemnation proceedings, the defendants say it is the present market value which they must pay. The vice in this argument lies in the erroneous statement of the measure of damages. In such case and under these circumstances, where the value has been depreciated by the wrongful entry of defendants upon the property, it is not the present market value of such property thus damaged that the defendants must pay. Actual market value at the time of the institution of the condemnation proceedings is usually the inquiry. But when the defendant has already entered upon the property and has depreciated its *Page 449 value thereby, it is plain that the simple question of value at the time of condemnation is not the proper rule. In such case the inquiry must be what would be the fair market value of the whole property at the time of condemnation, without the railroad, and the difference between that sum and the present market value of the property left, with the railroad in existence, would constitute the measure of damages to which the owner would be entitled. This inaugurates no new rule of damages in condemnation proceedings in this state. As the entry was unlawful, it is for the purpose of arriving at the value of the property regarded as not made, and the inquiry is what is the present value of such property without the presence of a structure which is there without right and which cannot be continued without payment in full for all damage done. Its existence cannot be considered for the purpose of diminishing what would otherwise be the present market value of the property. I think the same rule would hold in the case put by the defendants, where the city or any other body having the power should seek to take the owner's property, even though such owner had himself purchased subsequent to the erection of the road. The city would have no right to take the property from its owner on a valuation based upon the permanent character of a trespass which the law regards as temporary. The inquiry in the case supposed would still be, what would be the fair market value of the property with the railroad away? That sum the city would have to pay, and when it acquired the title it would have the same right as any other owner to compel the defendants to desist from their trespass or pay the amount of permanent damage they caused by its continuance. Under this rule the amount which the present owner may have paid for the property will be wholly immaterial. As the act of the defendant in trespassing upon or appropriating any portion of the property was unlawful, any depreciation in the value of the property caused by such illegal action cannot be regarded in fixing the value of the property to be taken or the damage to that which will remain. The claim of the defendants that the loss from the depreciation in value was suffered by the original *Page 450 owner when he sold, and that it is a personal claim in his case against them for which they are responsible, cannot, as it seems to me, be maintained. Such a doctrine would do away with the right of an owner of property to prevent a continuous trespass upon it by another. The defendants would say that, because the original owner transferred the property to his vendee, the defendants, by reason thereof, were thereby invested with the right to continue forever the original trespass, and the consideration for such license rested in their liability to pay (not necessarily in the payment to) the vendor the difference between the sum which he actually received for the conveyance of his land and that which he would have been able to secure had it not been for the acts of the defendants. Whether such sum had been paid or not would be immaterial so far as concerned the present owner. That would be a matter between the original owner and the defendants. But the present owner, on account of the transfer of the land to him, would really have no right to prevent the trespass, no matter how much in truth his property was damaged, and although the defendants had no more title to the property trespassed upon than they ever had. They could have no title because the original owner transferred it to his vendee, and after such transfer, of course, that owner could not again transfer any portion of the property to anyone else. The vendee took the title, and he certainly has not conveyed it to the defendants, but, on the contrary, still retains it absolutely. Thus with no title the defendants have by this course of reasoning been, in substance, invested with a right to perpetually appropriate property belonging to the plaintiff, because of a liability on their part, as they allege, to pay a former owner certain damages which he alleges he sustained by selling his property to the plaintiff at a reduced value caused by defendants' illegal act. This mere liability of the defendants to reimburse the vendor operates, by defendants' argument, as a bar to the rights of the vendee. If not paid by the defendants the liability still remains, and, of course, the bar still continues; and thus the general right which follows the possession of property to protect it *Page 451 from a trespass is denied an owner, because the defendants are, they say, liable to a former owner on a personal claim by him for a loss occasioned by a sale. Heretofore absolute ownership or legal possession of property has been regarded as sufficient to enable the owner to protect it from a trespass. It has been sufficient to permit him to maintain an action to restrain its continuance, even though he was fortunate enough to secure the property at one-half its value. The inquiry in such cases, where the owner sought to restrain the future trespass, has never been in regard to the price which the owner paid, or whether the former owner sold at a loss on account of the trespass. The inquiry has been whether the plaintiff was the owner or entitled to the possession, and whether the acts of the defendants were illegal. That is all that should now be required.
I have thus far referred to the case of the vendee for the purpose of inquiring what rights appertained to him as the present owner of the property. But the argument in favor of the vendor, who owned the property when the road was built, and who sold his land in a depreciated market caused by the wrongful acts of the defendants, is not to my mind very strong.
In the first place, he had his right of action to recover for all damage caused by the trespass up to the time of the commencement of his action, and the subsequent conveyance of the land would not in any way affect that right. If he desired to restrain the further continuance of the trespass or to recover for the permanent damage caused, he could, while owner, commence and maintain his action in equity. In that action he would obtain full relief. If he chose to sell instead of using the remedies which the law gives him, that was a matter, legally speaking, of his own choice. The defendants did not compel, or limit, or restrain such sale. Nothing that they did could be said to amount to any compulsion by them. The law says their action cannot be regarded as a permanent trespass for the very reason that it is unlawful, and the law will not presume that an unlawful act is to be forever continued. His choice to sell, *Page 452 rather than avail himself of the remedies given him by the law, does not furnish a cause of action against the defendants to reimburse him for a loss arising because of the presumption he has indulged in that the trespass would be continuous and unpaid for. He has chosen to regard the trespass in a light opposite to that in which the law regards it, and the loss he has suffered thereby is not one which the law can regard as caused by the defendants. If the original owner thus choose to sell his property without enforcing those rights which he has only by virtue of such ownership, the purchaser at any rate takes his fee and with it the rights of such an owner. The right to enjoin the continuance of the trespass has not escaped by the conveyance. It cannot rest with the vendor, for he has no longer any interest in the land. Unless it passed to the vendee it has vanished, and yet no conveyance by any one having the right to convey has been made to the trespasser, and so far as the legal title to the property is concerned, the trespasser has no lot or parcel in it. It seems to me the right passed to the vendee.
I can see no similarity in the case of the owner of property who has thus sold at a loss, to that of one who has suffered from a slander of his title. To start with, there is in the case at bar no slander. And, again, there is no malice. The erection of a structure on plaintiff's property by defendants cannot be twisted into a slander of plaintiff's title by them. No one asserts that the defendants built their road knowing they were wrong-doers or trespassers. The findings in this case substantially negative any such idea. The court finds that the road was built in conformity with plans prescribed by boards of commissioners appointed under legislative authority. It has been held that punitive damages ought not to be awarded against defendants for the taking of the property of abutting owners by the building of their road. (Powers v. Manhattan R. Co.,
If, instead of resorting to his legal or his equitable remedy, he choose to sell, it cannot be said that, in a legal sense, he has been limited or restrained in respect to his lawful right to sell his property by defendant's wrongful act. The connection between the sale and the alleged cause is too remote and indefinite; it is not proximate or direct. Further than this, however, the right of action with respect to the damage inheres in the owner and possessor of the land, and it is by reason of such ownership and possession that the right of action accrues. (Broiestedt Case,
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 455