Opinion
Argued June 10, 1895
Decided October 29, 1895
Arthur O. Townsend for appellants. E.W. Tyler for respondent.
It is impossible to decide this appeal correctly without a full and definite appreciation of the difference between the case of Bohm ( 129 N.Y. 576) and that of Becker ( 131 N.Y. 509). Both belonged to the class of actions in which the abutting property was shown to have seriously increased in value since the construction of the elevated road, so that, presumably and apparently, benefit instead of damage had resulted; and in each it was, therefore, necessary to show as ground of recovery two things; first, that when the road was built the locality was increasing in value from the tendency toward it of incoming population and normal city growth, and, second, that in the continuance of that progressive increase of value the plaintiff's property would have shared if the railroad had not been built, but was prevented from so sharing to its due extent by the presence of the road operating more or less as a barrier to a normal advance. In the earlier case we held that there was no evidence of either essential fact, and reversed an award of damages; in the later case we decided that there was some evidence of the necessary facts and so a reversal was not possible, however just such a reversal might have been. Since the evidence in the two cases was very much alike the real difference in its effect was necessarily due to the wide difference of situation and surroundings existing when the new structure was built, and some consideration of that difference and of its results may prudently precede a reference to the facts now before us.
Where an elevated street railroad enters a vacant and uninhabited locality, which normal growth has not effectively reached, which improvement has not seriously touched, which remains to be developed, and which has no element of growing value except such as lies in hope and expectation, and thereupon and thereby population and growth, tending elsewhere, are diverted to the new line of rapid transit, and build up the vacant locality, creating a demand for lots and a steady and persistent increase of values both directly on the line and in the side streets near by, the only reasonable and sensible inference is that the increased values are the sole and substantial product of the newly opened line which has brought prosperity to a neglected locality. So far as normal growth or incoming population has had anything to do with the increase of value they are themselves as operating causes due to the new mode of access, and in no respect separate from or independent of it. In and of themselves they would have done the locality no good; would have spent their force elsewhere; would have built up homes even in other states whence steam would give rapid and easy passage, and left the locality to its normal solitude. Of course, in such a case, it is little short of an absurdity to say that the coming of the road prevented the abutter from having his share of the normal city growth, since it is the coming of the road that enables him to participate in that growth at all; that brings it to his vacant and unmarketable lots; that sets it in operation as a cause of increasing values. It is the obvious truth of such a situation that the removal of the road to some other locality would at once diminish the value of the abutting property by taking away the adequate cause of its advancement, and diverting the growth which had begun to the new line adopted. It is further true of such a case that no ingenuity and no proof can separate what is called the normal city growth as a cause of increasing value from the chief and principal cause, which is the rapid transit system. The two are not only interwoven and inextricably mingled, but the former has no existence in the supposed locality separate from and independent of the latter. It follows that in the supposed situation neither proposition essential to a recovery is or can be proved, for it is not true that the local values were seriously increasing when the road was built, nor that the increase when it came was due to any cause independent of the stimulating effect of the road. Such was the Bohm case, and we were justified in refusing an award of damages, in disregarding the guess of experts, and in denying any force to a greater increase in the side streets.
But the situation changes materially when the elevated road enters an area already substantially built up and improved. In such a locality normal growth has come, and built the blocks up solidly, or nearly so, and caused an increment of value due to itself alone, and with which the rapid transit line had nothing whatever to do. Such normal growth it is evident had its own independent existence and operation because it had already worked and was continuing to work its result of an increase of values when the railroad did not exist. The average rate of that observed increase in such locality can be approximately ascertained, and if the rate continued after the construction of the elevated road in the side streets, but a less rate of increase is found on the avenue occupied by the cars, and facts are shown explaining such loss by evil effects of the new line, it is possible to infer that the avenue property has not shared as it should in the normal and independent increase of value to the extent to which it was entitled. That I understand to be the substantial basis of the Becker case. The distinction I have sketched was plainly drawn in the opinion. It was there said, "that although certain of the side streets were not all built upon when the road was erected and put in operation, yet it does appear that the locality where this property is situated was fairly built up before the road was operated, although to some extent the adjacent side streets have been more compactly built upon since that time. There has been no such change from absolute vacancy within large and extensive portions of the city limits as has occurred in the vicinity of Harlem, where it has appeared in evidence the side streets and the avenues have been practically brought into existence and peopled since the building and operation of the elevated roads. It was in regard to such a locality that we said in the Bohm case there was no proof whatever of damages." I have thus repeated the language of Judge PECKHAM'S opinion, pointing out the difference between the Becker case and that of Bohm, to show that I have strictly followed it and merely further explained and discussed it, and that no new doctrine is in any manner asserted. The distinction is not narrow or argumentative, but radical and real. It will enable the courts below to put an end to any such injustice as awarding damages where benefits have instead accrued, and upon speculative theories destitute of actual foundation. If the proof shows that before the coming of the elevated road in the particular locality that locality was substantially or mainly vacant and not built up, and that after the road came the building and improvement swiftly followed, accompanied by steady and serious increases of value, it will be the duty of judge or jury to award no damages and dismiss the complaint, even though experts may guess, or side streets appreciate more rapidly. But if the proof shows that the elevated road has occupied a locality already substantially built up, in which normal city growth is operating and seriously increasing values, but as a consequence of the road the natural advance has halted or palpably lessened, while in the adjacent side streets it continues, there is possible an inference of fact that the abutter has been injured. But even in those cases a trial court may well hesitate, and require decided and clear proof, and refuse to be misled by deceptive comparisons. It is very rare that in any case or any locality, where the value of the property has largely increased from the date of the coming of the road, and is more or less coincident with it, that any damages ought to be awarded by the process of entangling one's common sense in a web of theory. There may be here and there some exceptional case. We thought the Storck case was one, and affirmed it as such, though with much of doubt and hesitation. The property involved was in the same locality with that owned by Bohm, and a similar decision denying damages would have been inevitable but for the proof of some exceptional facts and circumstances. There was evidence of a diminution of rentals because of the erection of the road, and that the influx of population which usually and naturally tends to increase values was of such a character as to prejudice rather than benefit the values in question. We thought there was something to raise a question of fact, and, without approving the judgment, felt bound to affirm it. That case was not intended to overrule the Bohm case, and must be deemed exceptional and to stand on its own facts.
The present case comes clearly within the scope of the Bohm decision. It is specifically and explicitly found, and upon the evidence no other finding was possible, as to all the property except No. 261 Third avenue, that the locality was substantially vacant and unimproved, or at the most only partially built up, while soon after the construction of the elevated road it was compactly built up. It is found that the rental value of No. 261 was increased after such construction, and that the fee value rose from $22,500, in 1869, to $40,000, in 1890, and that the premises were worth more in 1890 than at any time prior to the coming of the new line. It is further found that the presence of the railroad, with its stations near by, has brought multitudes to the locality, increased business and benefited the fee and rental values, a benefit in which property on the adjacent side streets has also shared.
As to No. 1028 it is found that its rental increased from $2,400, in 1875, to $5,500, in 1892, and the fee value from $36,000, in 1881, to $75,000, at the date of the trial. And the same facts as to the beneficial effect of the railroad upon values are again found.
As to Nos. 1240 to 1248 and 1255 a similar state of facts appeared. The rents of the former in 1877 were $9,136, and in 1892 had grown to $11,855, and in that year the rents were greater than ever before the construction of the road. The great change was in the rental of the stores. While the rental of the flats overhead diminished, evidently because of the new supply of better apartments, the business rentals increased from $3,440, in 1876, to $8,200, in 1893, showing a gain of 138 per cent. It must have been difficult to persuade the owner who took that gain that nevertheless he had been damaged. The value of the lots as distinguished from the buildings was, in 1872, about $66,000, and at the time of the trial about $120,000. The value of No. 1255 was $15,000, in 1873, and at the time of the trial about $20,000. It is further found that, in 1873, the streets and avenues in the vicinity were practically vacant and have all been built up since 1877; that the increased accessibility has induced the settlement and building; that the same improvement would not have occurred in the absence of rapid transit, and that the defendant's road has been one of the great and efficient factors in building up the locality.
We have thus before us a state of facts corresponding to that disclosed in the case of Bohm. The result must be the same. That there may have been a greater increase in the side streets, due in part, at least, to the influence of the defendant's road, does not prove or even indicate damage in a situation like the present. For in every case where a vacant area is built up and gains an increase of value coincident with the coming of the railroad and obviously stimulated by it, the appreciation of property in the adjacent side streets is largely due to the same cause, and the case is one in which benefits only have accrued, and they do not become injury on the avenue because they help more largely the residence lots near by. In such a case there is no normal city growth operating independently, or capable, by itself, of severance or measurement. It is, relatively to the unimproved locality, a secondary cause set in operation by a primary one, and the primary one originating the general benefits flowing from the secondary one, does not become hurtful to one lot because it helps to a greater degree some other. The railroad in the vacant locality cannot be said to hinder what it in fact produces.
It follows that the judgment rendered is erroneous. The finding that plaintiff's property was injured by the railroad over and above all benefits conferred is wholly unsupported by proof and contradicted by the specific findings.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
I feel constrained to dissent from the opinion in this case, not because I am unwilling to agree to the particular rule therein adverted to; but because I think there was some evidence upon which the decision of the trial court could rest. It may be considered unsatisfactory and it may be vague; but that consideration is no ground for reversing the judgment, as we held in the Becker case, ( 131 N.Y. 509). I do not object to the rule which prohibits an award of damages where there has been no proof of damage, or where it must rest upon theoretical inferences. That rule was laid down in the Bohm case, ( 129 N.Y. 576), and must be regarded as established by that decision; but I do object to the application of the rule to the facts as developed in the present case, which disclose a different condition of things from what was found to exist in the Bohm case. It cannot be said with respect to the entry of the elevated railroad into the neighborhood of the properties described in the complaint, that that part of the city was brought into existence and peopled through the agency of the defendants, unaided by a normal city growth which was operating to increase city values. It seems to me that consistency with our prior decisions, which have affirmed recoveries based upon comparisons of property values in the neighborhood in connection with other facts relating to the railroad, as the only practicable proof within the reach of the complainant, requires us to affirm the recovery here. The Becker case, ( supra), is an authority which we cannot well overlook in the consideration of the disposition of the present case.
ANDREWS, Ch. J., PECKHAM and HAIGHT, JJ., concur with FINCH, J., for reversal; O'BRIEN and BARTLETT, JJ., concur with GRAY, J., for affirmance.
Judgment reversed.