DocketNumber: Claim No. 39750; Claim No. 39736
Judges: Aulisi, Gibson, Herlihy, Misc, Reynolds, Taylor
Filed Date: 5/6/1966
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeals from two judgments of the Court of Claims, dated February 25, 1965 in the ease of the landlord, Garfield, and March 1, 1965 in the case of the tenant, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Inc., which awarded the landlord the sum of $37,532.32 and the tenant $3,602.68 as damages to their respective interests in certain real property caused by the State’s appropriation of a fee and temporary easement pursuant to section '30 of the Highway Law. On the date of the appropriation, October 30, 1959, the landlord owned two adjacent parcels of land, one contained a one-story brick building 50 feet by 125 feet which housed a supermarket operated by the tenant, A & P. The other parcel, behind the supermarket, was a vacant lot about 25 feet by 100 feet. The 50-foot front of the supermarket was on the north side of Jericho Turnpike while one of its sides faced Willis Avenue. The State took the entire frontage on Jericho Turnpike up to a depth of 18% feet in fee .and acquired a temporary easement to a further depth of 10 feet across the entire frontage, totaling 6,250 square feet, or, as the trial court found, approximately 25% of the supermarket premises. At the time A & P had been paying a rent of $541.60 per month or $6,500 a year under a lease which was to terminate on April 30, 1964 but which contained an option for a five-year renewal -at $581.60 monthly rental or $7,100 per year. The trial court found, and no one appears to disagree, that the A & P remained in full control and possession of the premises beyond the appropriation date of October 30, 1959 and up until June 30, 1960 and continued to pay rent to Garfield for that period. Also, there appears to be no dispute that the economic Tent of the building leased to the A & P was $750 a month or $9,000 a year. ■ Since A & P, as found by the trial court, remained in complete possession of the premises until June 30, 1960 and paid Garfield rent until that day, there were no damages sustained by either the tenant or the landlord until July 1, 1960. The award to the landlord and tenant of $30,900 for the fee taking, representing the direct and consequential damages to the entire property is not contested by the .State. Nor does it express any interest in the apportionment of this amount made by the trial court as between the landlord and tenant. The tenant’s obligation- to the landlord for the rent reserved — in the absence of a termination clause in the lease drawn by A & P — is not affected by the appropriation itself. Any portion of the recovery, therefore, which represents rent for the premises, if awarded to the tenant would have to be ultimately paid over to the landlord. The trial court, in awarding an additional $10,235 to the landlord for the direct and consequential damages to the rental value of the premises by the temporary easement, merely avoided a circuitous route and the tenant in any action by the landlord for the rent may, as far as here appears,