
    ELIAS v. MANHATTAN RY. CO. et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    March 15, 1895.)
    Elevated Bailroads—Damages to Abutters.
    A judgment against an elevated railroad company for injuries to abutting property cannot be sustained where plaintiff merely shows that he bought the property for a certain sum after the road was built, and states the rental value, which had not changed, but does not show what the property rented for before the building of the road, or that he was unable to rent portions of the building because of the road.
    Appeal from special term, New York county.
    Action by Michael Elias against the Manhattan Railway Company and the Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company for an injunction and damages. There was a judgment in favor of plaintiff, and defendants appeal. Reversed.
    Argued before VAN BRUNT, P. J., and PARKER, J.
    Alfred A. Wheat, for appellants.
    Edwin M. Felt, for respondent.
   PARKER, J.

Defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint, made after the plaintiff had rested his case, should have been granted. There was no evidence upon which an award for either rental or fee damages could be based The case seems to have been tried upon the theory that about all the plaintiff had to do was to show the presence of the elevated railroad, and ask the court to guess the amount of damage. Upon the question of rental damages the plaintiff testified that he bought the property in 1886,—six years after the railroad went into operation,—for about $75,000, and paid

out about $6,000 in putting it in repair. It then rented for about $7,910 annually, and there has been no substantial change since. He did not show what the property had rented for before the build-of the railroad, the course of rents of other property in that immediate vicinity, but not along the line of the railroad; offered no proof of complaint of the railroad by tenants, or of inability to rent stores or apartments, or decline of rents in any of them. Some of these facts may have existed, but not one of them was proved by plaintiff, nor any other fact upon which the court could predicate a finding of rental damage. As to question of fee damage, he did produce a witness who testified that certain lots off the line of the elevated railroad, and in the immediate vicinity of plaintiff’s property, had increased in value more proportionately since 1880 than the lots on Second avenue. But this, standing alone, was not sufficient. Said the court in the Becker Case, 131 N. Y. 510, 30 N. E. 499:

“We then said (Bohm’s Case [N. Y. App.] 29 N. E. 802) there was no other evidence to sustain a finding of damage than the fact that property on the side street had increased in value to a greater proportional extent than land on the avenue in question, and we said that fact was not sufficient upon which to base such finding.”

Plaintiff’s case was barren of other testimony tending in that direction. It did not even contain an expression of opinion that the elevated railroad had in any way harmed plaintiff’s property. Nor was plaintiff’s situation improved by the testimony offered on the part of defendants. It is true that Meagher testified that he purchased the property after the buildings had been built up one story, subsequently completed them, and he estimated the total cost of the property to him at $12,000 a lot. There was no evidence as to its market value when completed, and the evidence is that its present market value is about the same. Meagher also testified that he rented the property, after it was completed, for $6,636 a year, while according to the plaintiff’s testimony its present rental value is about $7,938 a year. The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.  