Opinion
November, 1918.
Egan O'Reilly (Dominic L. O'Reilly, of counsel), for vaious owners.
Philip B. La Roche, Jr., for Estate of Margaret Armstrong.
Merle I. St. John (Thomas C. Blake, of counsel), for Margaret M. Gleason.
Neier Van Derveer (Lawrence E. French, of counsel), for Catharine O'Rourke et al.
William P. Burr, corporation counsel (James Regan Fitzgerald, of counsel), opposed.
Two sets of objections to the confirmation of the commissioner of awards herein are presented, one by city of New York and the other by the present owners of the damaged property. The city opposes confirmation on the ground that the awards made are excessive and beyond the damage suffered by claimants. My attention has not been called to any error in principle adopted by the commissioners herein or any irregularity on their part going to the merits of the proceeding, and as it appears that the property involved was duly viewed by them and experts heard on the question of damage I am not inclined to disturb the determination reached in respect thereto. The present owners of the several properties known as damage numbers 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 object to the awards made therefor to Margaret M. Gleason for the reason, firstly, that she is neither legally nor equitably entitled thereto, the whole thereof being due and payable to said objectors, and, secondly, because a dispute as to the title and right to said award having arisen the commissioners should have made the award to "unknown owner or owners." The contention of the objectors is that on December 3, 1896, thirteen months after the accrual of damages, viz., on November 2, 1895, Margaret M. Gleason transferred by deed said property abutting on Kingsbridge road to one Dowd for a consideration of $4,000, which deed contained the clause "together with the appurtenances and all the estate and rights of the party of the first part in and to said premises," and as a result thereof sold and assigned any award to which she was then or theretofore entitled to for the extinguishment of the easements involved herein. The basis of this claim is section 255 of the Real Property Law, which was in force and effect prior to the deed of December 3, 1896, above mentioned. That section provides as follows: "Section 255. Construction of grant of appurtenances and of all the rights and estate of grantor. — In any grant or mortgage of freehold interests in real estate the words, `together with the appurtenances and all the estate and rights of the grantor in and to said premises,' must be construed as meaning, together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in anywise appertaining, and the reversion and reversions, remainder and remainders, rents, issues and profits thereof, and also all the estate, right, title, interest, dower and right of dower, curtesy and right of curtesy, property, possession, claim and demand whatsoever, both in law and in equity, of the said grantor of, in and to the said granted premises and every part and parcel thereof, with the appurtenances." It seems to me, in view of the language used in the deed to Dowd and the construction placed on such use of words in the statute quoted, that if Margaret M. Gleason had the right to the award in question that she conveyed it under the deed mentioned. Matter of Colvin St., 140 N.Y.S. 882, 884. That right having been by mesne conveyances transferred to the objectors, those owners are entitled to succeed to the award in question unless, as claimed by Margaret M. Gleason, there is a final judgment of this court holding that Dowd by reason of his deed to the premises in question is not entitled to compensation for damages. The judgment referred to is on the report of the commissioners in Matter of Grote Street, confirmed by order dated December 23, 1910, which held that Dowd was not entitled to recover the damages caused to the lands formerly owned by Margaret M. Gleason because not the owner of the premises on November 2, 1895, the time when the damage thereto accrued. It seems to me that this was an adjudication final and binding against Dowd, not only on all questions actually litigated, but which could have been litigated. That he could have litigated, but did not do so, his claim that Margaret M. Gleason had transferred her right to damages to him by her deed of the property in question is strong proof on the question of intent that the transfer was not so made, but also a binding judgment against Dowd and his successors in title on that question. It is urged, however, that Margaret M. Gleason is in no better position to assert her claim to the award in question than Dowd. I do not think, as claimed, that the affirmance by the Appellate Division ( Matter of Grote St., 139 A.D. 70) of the order denying the application of Margaret M. Gleason to have the commissioners in the Grote street proceeding ascertain her damages in connection with closing of the street abutting property formerly owned by her can be considered a judgment finally determining her right of recovery of such damages. The order was a discretionary one, made pursuant to section 14, chapter 1006, Laws of 1895, and remained such on affirmance by the Appellate Division and was not as of right appealable to the Court of Appeals. It simply disposed of Margaret M. Gleason's application to have the Grote street commissioners estimate her damages pursuant to said section 14, but in nowise affected her rights under section 4 of said act to compel the corporation counsel to institute the proceedings which that act provides for. As the corporation counsel has himself voluntarily proceeded herein under said section 4, and as the six years' Statute of Limitations provided by said act within which a claim for damage must be filed with the comptroller has been declared unconstitutional ( Matter of City of New York [ Newton Ave.], 219 N.Y. 399), I conclude that the commissioners herein properly awarded the damages for the parcels in question and that said report should be confirmed.
Ordered accordingly.