Judges: Hammer
Filed Date: 10/24/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This is an action under section 473 of the Civil Practice Act and rules 210 to 212 of the Rules of Civil Practice, in which plaintiff asks that it be declared and adjudged that the
Decision was reserved upon motions to dismiss. Having considered the evidence previously taken before another justice, which upon request and consent was accepted as part of the record herein, as well as the proof given before me, I am of the opinion that the court has jurisdiction, the plaintiff by his proof made out a prima facie case, and at the end of the entire case a question of fact was presented for determination. Accordingly, each of such motions is denied with except'ons to such rulings to each moving defendant.
In the year 1886 the late Isaac V. Brokaw bought for $199,000 a plot of ground in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York, opposite Central Park, having a frontage of 102 feet 2 nches on the easterly side of Fifth avenue and a depth of 150 feet on the northerly side of Seventy-ninth street. Opposite there is an entrance to the park and Seventy-ninth street is a wide crosstown street running through the park. Upon the corner portion, a plot of ground 51 feet 2 inches on Fifth avenue and a depth of 110 feet on Seventy-ninth street, Mr. Brokaw erected in the year 1887, for his own occupancy, a residence known as No. 1 East Seventy-ninth street, at a cost of over $300,000. That residence and corner plot is the subject-matter of this action. The residence, a three-story, mansard and basement granite front building, occupies the entire width of the lot. The mansard roof is of tile. On the first floor are two large drawing rooms on the Fifth avenue side and there are also a large hallway running through from south to north, a reception room, dining room and pantry. The dining room is paneled with carved wood. The hallway is in Italian marble and mosaic. There are murals and ceiling panels. There is a small elevator to the upper portion of the house. On the second floor are a large library, a large bedroom with bath on the Fifth avenue side and there are also four other bedrooms and baths. The third floor has bedrooms and baths. The fourth floor has servants’ quarters, bath and storage rooms. The building has steam heat installed by the plaintiff, electric light and current, hardwood floors and all usual conveniences. It is an exceedingly fine house, in construction and general condition as fine as anything in New York. It is contended by plaintiff that the decorations are heavy, not of a type now required by similar residences,
Since 1913, the year of the death of Isaac Y. Brokaw and the commencement of the life estate of plaintiff, there has been a change of circumstances and conditions in connection with Fifth avenue properties. Apartments were erected with great rapidity and the building of private residences has practically ceased. Forty-four apartments and only two private residences have been erected on Fifth avenue from Fifty-ninth street to One Hundred and Tenth street. There are to-day but eight of these fifty-one blocks devoted exclusively to private residences. (Exhibits 11 and 12.) Plaintiff’s expert testified: “It is not possible to get an adequate return on the value of that land by any type of improvement other than an apartment house. The structure proposed in the plans of plaintiff is proper and suitable for the site and show 172 rooms which would rent for $1,000 per room. There is an excellent demand for such apartments. * * * There is no corner in the City of New York as fine for an apartment house as that particular corner.”
The plaintiff testified also that his expenses in operating the residence which is unproductive would be at least $70,542 greater than if he resided in an apartment. He claims such difference constitutes a loss and contends that the erected apartment house would change this loss into an income or profit of $30,000. Plaintiff claims that under the facts and changed conditions shown the demolition of the building and erection of the proposed apartment is for the best interests of himself as life tenant, the inheritance,
Defendants claim that (3) severance of the premises in question from the rest of the original plot would impair the plottage value of the other parcels and reduce the value of the buildings; (4) the proposed plan of erecting such apartment on the premises is unsound because of the diminutive size of the lot in question in comparison with what is needed for a successful apartment and the increasing tendency to over-build. In addition (5) they assert a defense of res adjudicata, claiming that the questions raised here have already been passed upon and decided in the proceeding heretofore brought by the plaintiff for leave to mortgage the premises in question. (Matter of Brokaw, 219 App. Div. 337; affd., 245 N. Y. 614.)
Plaintiff’s life estate, in my opinion, is not limited by the asserted testamentary scheme. The codicil reads:
*74 “ First. By the Fourth clause of my Last Will and Testament, dated and executed on the 20th day of April, 1907, upon the death or remarriage of my wife I gave and devised my residence, situated at the northeasterly corner of 79th Street and Fifth Avenue, in the City of New York, to my son, George Tuttle Brokaw, but directed that in the event he should not survive her then my executors should sell the said property and divide the proceeds of the sale among the surviving children and the issue of any deceased child of my said son, the issue of a deceased child to take by representation the parent’s share. I now hereby modify that provision of my Will and after the death or remarriage of my wife I give and devise my said residence to my son George Tuttle Brokaw for and during the term of his natural life and after his death I give and devise the same to his children then living and to the issue, per stirpes, of any deceased child of him, their heirs and assigns forever. If my said son should not survive my wife or be living at her remarriage, then upon her death or remarriage I give and devise the said residence to his children then living and to the issue, per stirpes, of any deceased child of him, their heirs and assigns forever. In the event that no child nor any issue of any child or children of my son George Tuttle Brokaw shall be living at his death, or at the death or remarriage of my wife should he not survive her or be living at her remarriage, then upon his death or the death or remarriage of my wife, as the same may be, I give and devise my said residence in equal shares to my surviving children and the issue, per stirpes, of any deceased child of mine, their heirs and assigns forever.”
In the 13th paragraph of testator’s will, which devised 984 Fifth avenue to Howard Brokaw, and in the 14th paragraph, which devised 985 Fifth avenue to Irving Brokaw, each for life, there is contained a reciprocal restricting clause to the effect that “ This property is devised, however, upon the express condition that so much of the land devised as has not been built upon shall forever remain open and unobstructed, in order that it may give access for light and air to this and the adjoining lot on the south (north), and that the airshaft occupying a portion of this lot, and which was provided for the common u~e and benefit of the buildings upon this lot and the lot adjoining it on the south (north), shall in no way be closed or obstructed. These restrictions of the use of the property hereby devised are intended as conditions subsequent, and immediately upon the violation of them or either of them the title of the devisees hereunder to said house and lot No. 985 (984) Fifth Avenue shall cease and determine and said property be and become a part of my residuary estate; either or both of
There is neither a similar nor any restriction in paragraph 15 in respect of premises No. 7 East Seventy-ninth street, the trust created for the testator’s daughter, Elvira Brokaw McNair, during her life. There is no reference to a restriction or limitation upon No. 1 East Seventy-ninth street, either in the will or codicil. The testamentary scheme, therefore, which the defendants claim was contained in the will and codicil, clearly has no existence. The plaintiff received a plain, unconditional life estate. The plaintiff’s estate in the premises involved is independent of the other life estates of the other defendants in their respective dwellings. (Wiggin v. Wiggin, 43 N. H. 561, and cases therein cited.)
Since the four life estates of the part'es are separate and there is no testamentary scheme, it follows that the properties not being in a common ownership can have no plottage value, and such contention by defendants is entirely without merit. The claim of the unsoundness of the venture is also without merit. Indeed, defendants made little effort by proof to uphold such defense. If permissible it would be sound.
That the determination of the proceedings for leave to mortgage the premises is not res adjudicóla upon the issues in this action is amply sustained by authority. (Williams v. Barkley, 165 N. Y. 48, at p. 54, and cases cited; also Everett v. Everett, 180 id. 452; Perry v. Dickerson, 85 id. 345.) Plaintiff moved to “ dismiss ” defendants’ affirmative defenses. Since the entire action is being decided on the merits, the motion is denied with exception to plaintiff.
Plaintiff claims the Farmers Loan and Trust Company, made a defendant by him, has no real interest and cannot be heard to object to plaintiff’s prayer for relief. Such trustee undoubtedly was a proper party defendant. In Kidd v. Dennison (6 Barb. 9, 17) it was said: “ The general rule is that all persons materially interested in the subject-matter of the suit ought to be made parties; and that the cestuis que trust, as well as trustees, should be brought before the court, so as to make the performance oi the decree safe to those who are compelled to obey it, and to prevent the necessity of the defendant’s litigating the same question again, with other parties.”
Coming, therefore, to plaintiff's claimed right to demolish the present residence and to erect in its place the proposed apartment, I am of the opinion that such demolition would result in such an injury to the inheritance as under the authorities would constitute waste. The life estate given to plaintiff under the terms of the will and codicil is not merely in the corner plot of ground with improvements thereon, but, without question, in the residence of the testator. Four times in the devising clause the testator used the words “ my residence.” This emphasis makes'misunderstanding impossible. The identical building which was erected and occupied by the testator in his lifetime and the plot of ground upon which it was built constitute that residence. By no stretch of the imagination could “ my residence ” be in existence at the end of the life tenancy were the present building demolished and any other structure, even the proposed thirteen-story apartment, erected on the site.
It has been generally recognized that any act of the life tenant which does permanent injury to the inheritance is waste. The law intends that the life tenant shall enjoy his estate in such a reasonable manner that the land shall pass to the reversioner or remainderman as nearly as practicable unimpaired in its nature, character and improvements. The general rule in this country is that the life tenant may do whatever is required for the general use and enjoyment of his estate as he received it. The use of the estate he received is contemplated and not the exercise of an act of dominion or ownership. What the life tenant may do in the future in the way of improving or adding value to the estate is not the test of what constitutes waste. The act of the tenant in changing the estate, and whether or not such act is lawful or unlawful, i. e., whether the estate is so changed as to be an injury to the inheritance, is the sole question involved. The tenant has no right to exercise an act of ownership. In the instant case the inheritance was the residence of the testator —“ my residence ”— consisting of the present building on a plot of ground fifty-one feet two inches on Fifth avenue by one hundred and ten feet on Seventy-ninth street. My residence ”— such is what the plaintiff under the testator’s will has the use of for fife. He is entitled to use the building and plot reasonably for his own convenience or profit. To demolish that building and erect upon the land another building, even one such as the contemplated thirteen-story apartment house,
In Agate v. Lowenbein (57 N. Y, 604, 607) the court said: “ Had there been no license given to the defendants to do the acts of which the plaintiff complains, the injuries done to the property would have been, apparently, acts of waste, for which the plaintiff could, by the rules of the common law, have brought an action on the case in the nature of waste, (2 B, S, 384; Taylor on Landlord and Tenant, § 348, and cases.) The right which the tenant,has is to make use of the property. The power of making an alteration does not arise out of a mere right of user; it is, therefore, incompatible with his interest for a tenant to make any alteration, unless he is justified by the express permission of his landlord, (Taylor, § 348.) Holroyd, J., in Farrant v. Thompson (5 B. & Ald. 826), defines the extent of a lessee’s rights. By a lease, the use, not dominion, of the property demised, is conferred. If a tenant exercises an act of
In Kidd v. Dennison (6 Barb. 9, 13) the court said: “ So, if the tenant materially changes the nature and character of the buildings it is waste, although the value of the property should be enhanced by the alteration. * * * 'The tenant has no authority to assume the right of judging what may be an improvement to the inheritance. He must confine himself to the conditions of his lease.” (See, also, Cosgriff v. Dewey, 164 N. Y. 1; Andrews v. D. B. Co., 132 id. 348; Agate v. Lowenbein, 57 id. 604; McGregor v. Brown, 10 id. 114; McDonald v. O’Hara, 117 Misc. 517; Lehmeyer v. Moses, 69 id. 476; Regan v. Luthy, 16 Daly, 413; 11 N. Y. Supp. 709; Jackson v. Andrew, 18 Johns. 431; Douglass v. Wiggins, 1 Johns. Ch. 1; Sarles v. Sarles, 3 Sandf. Ch. 601; Pynchon v. Stearns, 52 Mass. 304; Anstays v. Anderson, 194 Mich. 1; Stevens v. Rose, 69 id. 259; King v. Miller, 99 N. C. 583; Kimble v. Newark, 91 N. J. L. 249; McCullough v. Irvine, 13 Penn. St. 438; Dooley v. Stringham, 4 Utah, 107; Keeler v. Eastman, 11 Vt. 293; Melms v. Pabst Brewing Co., 104 Wis. 7; Doherty v. Allman, 3 L. R. [App. Cas.] 709.)
The cases given by plaintiff are either cases where a prohibitory injunction against future waste has been sought and the parties have been refused the injunction and relegated to an action for damages for waste, or where, in condemnation proceedings or actions in equity, it appears that the equities between the parties are such that the technical waste committed has been ameliorated. The three cases upon which the plaintiff principally relies are Melms v. Pabst Brewing Co. (104 Wis. 7); N. Y., O. & W. Ry. Co. v. Livingston (238 N. Y. 300), and Doherty v. Allman (3 L. R. [App. Cas.] 709). These are readily distinguishable from the case at bar. In Melms v. Pabst Brewing Co. (supra) there was a large expensive brick dwelling house built by one Melms in the year 1864. He also owned the adjoining real estate and a brewery upon part of the premises. He died in 1869. The brewery and dwelling were sold and conveyed to the Pabst Brewing Company. The Pabst Company used the brewery part of the premises. About the year 1890 the neighborhood about the dwelling house had so changed in character that it was situated on an isolated lot standing
The facts in the above case are clearly not analogous to the facts here. Especia’ly is this recognized from the fact that the plaintiff’s dwelling house is far from being “ isolated and alone, standing upon just enough ground to support it, surrounded by factories and railroad tracks, absolutely undesirable as a residence.”
N. Y., O. & W. Ry. Co. v. Livingston (supra) was a condemnation proceeding. The railroad company entered lawfully upon the land and under color of right improved it in good faith with buildings costing $49,000. A hostile right being asserted by the remaindermen, condemnation proceedings were instituted to acquire same. It was held that the railroad company, under the circumstances, could exclude the value of the improvements from the compensation due such remaindermen. Doherty v. Allman (supra) was an action for an injunction to restrain the converting of the building containing one old large store, which, the neighborhood having materially changed, had no practical use and yielded no income, into tenements which were useful, in demand, and profitable. The court refused the injunction, leaving the aggrieved party to an action for damages, stating, among other things, as follows:
“ the external walls of the building are to be retained, and those external walls, where one part of the building is of a lower height than the rest, are to be raised, so that the building may be of a uniform height; internal changes are to be made, internal party walls are to be introduced, the flooring is to be altered in its level and six dwelling-houses are to be made out of this which is now one long store." (P. 717.)
“ Suppose the change which is contemplated by the Respondent here is made in the internal arrangements of this which is now a store, will the injury be irremediable? Clearly not. Beyond all doubt as regards the immediate effect it would be beneficial and not injurious to the reversioner; he will have a much better security for his rent, and the property undoubtedly will be increased in value, and if, when the lease comes to an end, he should have that predilection which he now appears to have for a building of the character which we see represented in this photograph, it would be merely a question of money, and that not a very large sum of money, in order that the building might be brought back to the state in which it now is. Therefore there would be no injury which would be irremediable.
“ Then will damages be a sufficient compensation?"
From the foregoing I am of the opinion, and it will accordingly be adjudged and declared that, upon the present facts, circumstances and conditions as they exist and are shown in this case, regardless of the proposed security and the expressed purpose of erecting the proposed thirteen-story apartment, or any other structure, the plaintiff has no right and is not authorized to remove the present structures on or affecting the real estate in question.
Proposed findings and conclusions passed upon. Submit decision and judgment accordingly on notice.