Summary
In Matter of Squire, 125 N.Y. 131, the Court of Appeals held that the provision in section 18 of chapter 490 of the Laws of 1883, which authorized the commissioners, in proceedings by the city of New York to acquire lands for an aqueduct to provide an increased water supply, to award damages to the owner of lands contiguous to land taken "which may be affected by the construction and maintenance" of the aqueduct and its appurtenances, did not make the city liable to adjacent lot owners for damages for the temporary inconvenience occasioned by the prosecution of the work.
Summary of this case from Matter of Bd. of Water SupplyOpinion
Argued December 1, 1890
Decided January 13, 1891
James A. Deering for appellant.
D.J. Dean for respondent.
The appellant Asbury Lester presented a claim for damages to his lot in the city of New York, contiguous to lands actually taken for the purpose of a public aqueduct, under chapter 490 of the Laws of 1883. Section 18 of the act authorizes the commissioners to award damages to the owner of lands contiguous to land taken, "which may be affected by the construction and maintenance" of the aqueduct and its appurtenances. The lot adjacent to the lot of the claimant was taken by the city, and upon it was erected an engine-house and fixtures, and coal was deposited thereon to be used in the construction of the aqueduct, but, so far as appears, the appropriation of the lot for that purpose was temporary, and was to be continued only while the work was in progress. The claimant has a house on his lot, which he occupied as a residence, and he was seriously incommoded by the noise and by soot and smoke from the engine on the adjacent lot, and the dust from the coal deposited thereon. The remedy sought in this proceeding is purely statutory, and the only question is whether the injury which the claimant suffered is within the statute, and one for which the commissioners were authorized to award compensation.
We are of opinion that the language of the 11th section, authorizing damages to the owner of lands "which may be affected by the construction and maintenance" of the aqueduct and its appurtenances, applies only to permanent injuries to the land from the completed works and their use thereafter. It may be supposed that the legislature understood that the construction of the aqueduct would injuriously affect rights appurtenant to contiguous lands, and that the structures which were to form a part of the aqueduct system might interfere with the enjoyment or impair the value of such contiguous lands, and that for consequential injuries merely, sustained in consequence of the construction and maintenance of public works under legislative authority, the parties would not, under the general rule of law, have any redress. It was, we think, to meet this class of cases that the provision in question was made. It would require very clear language to impose a liability upon the city for damages for the temporary inconvenience which would be occasioned to adjacent lot owners from the prosecution of the work and during the course of construction.
The view we have taken is illustrated by the cases which have arisen in England under the "Lands' Claims Consolidation Act," and "The Railways' Claims Consolidation Act," of 8th and 9th Vict. The 68th section of the act first mentioned authorized compensation "in respect of any lands or any interest therein which shall have been injuriously affected by the execution of the works." The 6th section of "The Railways' Claims Consolidation Act" requires compensation to be made for all lands taken "or injuriously affected by the construction" of a railway. In Ricket v. Directors of Metropolitan Railway Co. (L.R. [2 Eng. Ir. App.] 175), the plaintiff claimed to recover compensation for temporary obstruction of the highway during the construction of the defendant's railway, which prevented free passage of persons and resort to the plaintiff's inn. The clauses in the two acts mentioned were elaborately considered by the judges, and the cases reviewed, and it was held that the case was not within the act. Lord CHELMSFORD, referring to the words "injuriously affected by the construction," etc., said that they "appear to me to apply not to temporary, but to permanent works of companies," and Lord CRANWORTH was of opinion that "the injury must be an actual injury to the land itself, as by lowering the foundation of the buildings on it, or obstructing its light or its drains, making it inaccessible by lowering or raising the ground, or by some such physical destruction" to bring a case within the act.
We think the injury of which the appellant complains was not within the language of the 11th section of the act of 1883, and that the claim was properly disallowed.
The order of the General Term should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concur.
Order affirmed.