
    George H. Close et al., Plaintiffs, v. Clark Witbeck, Defendant.
    (Supreme Court, Schenectady Special Term,
    December, 1906.)
    Injunction — Who and what may be enjoined — Interference with property rights by private persons — Erections.
    Nuisance — Actions for abatement, injunction and damages — Public nuisances.
    Where the owner of a building, adapted for business purposes, in a city, erects a steel and glass front which extends twelve inches into the street and constitutes an encroachment, without any permission from the municipal authorities; and, in an action brought by the owners of another business building on the same side of the street, which is "separated from the first by an interval of twenty-six feet, to require the removal of such encroachment, it appears that, with the projecting front of defendant’s building, the building of plaintiffs is worth from $1,000 to $2,000 less than it would be without it; held, that such projecting front constitutes both a public and private nuisance and, as it produces a substantial injury to plaintiffs and their own building is without pro jections beyond the street line, they are entitled to a mandatory injunction for the removal of the projecting front and for the damages they have sustained thereby.
    Action for an injunction.
    A. J. Dillingham, for plaintiffs.
    Daniel Naylor and E. C. Whitney, for defendant.
   Van Kirk, J.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs to require the defendant to remove a certain structure on the south side of State street in the city of Schenectady, so far as it is an obstruction to the said street, to restrain the defendant from reconstructing the same so that it will be an obstruction to the street, and to recover the special damages suffered by the plaintiffs because of such obstruction.

The plaintiffs are the owners in fee simple of lands known as Nos. 422 and 424 State street in the city of Schenectady, being a lot about twenty-seven feet wide along the street and one hundred and five feet deep on the south side of the street. The defendant is the owner of lands to the west on the same side of the street known as Hos. 416 and 418 State street, which lot is twenty-six feet wide along the street and one hundred and five feet and six inches deep. The defendant removed the building then on his premises and constructed a new building, the ground floor or first story of which extends beyond the building line about twelve inches. This front is made of an iron or steel frame with large plate glass windows and a door in the center. Between the plaintiffs’ premises and the defendant’s premises is a lot about twenty-six feet wide, upon which is a building now occupied as a ticket office and waiting-room by the Schenectady Railway Company, which premises are owned or leased by the defendant.

The evidence does not show how or when State street was laid out as a public highway, but it has been used for many years as such and is the principal business street of the city of Schenectady. Along the south side of this street the front walls of the buildings are constructed practically upon a line which has been recognized as the building line. This building line accords with the front wall of the buildings owned by the plaintiffs and by the defendant. There are steps or approaches to buildings extending beyond this building line and also bay windows and other ornaments of buildings above the first story which extend beyond this building line. The front of the defendant’s building, covering the first story, extends beyond this building line twelve inches. It is this projected front of which the plaintiffs complain.

Ho survey of State street or definite proof as to its actual width appears in the evidence, except by a map and survey which shows the distances between the front lines of the buildings on the south and north sides of the street, the distances between which two building lines at different parts of the street vary a few inches; the building line or fronts of the buildings on the north side of the street being more irregular than those on the south side. The evidence also shows that, at the rear of the lots owned by the plaintiffs and the defendant, is an alleyway or lane fourteen feet in width; that the north side of this alleyway is practically a straight line, and the rear of the buildings belonging to the plaintiffs and the defendant is upon this line. The deeds give the depth of the lots, showing that the lots are from 105 feet,to 105 feet and 6 inches deep. The buildings erected upon these lots are practically of the same depth' as the lots as described in the deeds; and the side lines run to State street, the lots being bounded on the north by State street. This evidence being undisputed, and there being no evidence in the case from which the court can draw a different conclusion, I find that the building line or main fronts of the plaintiffs’ and the defendant’s buildings are upon the southerly line of State street, and the projected front, to the height of the first story, of plaintiffs’ building is an encroachment upon the street. This projection is not of the kind or character which should be denominated a bay window. It rests directly upon the pavement and is a permanent part of the .building.

Before the erection of this front, the defendant filed his plans for the building with the city authorities, and a resolution was offered before the common council granting permission to build a glass front or-projection of the building eighteen inches- beyond the building line in front of the defendant’s building about to be erected. An objection was made and the matter was thereupon referred to the committee on laws and ordinances. A written protest against the passing of the aforesaid resolution, signed by several parties claiming to be property owners along the south side of State street in the neighborhood of the premises in question, was then filed. The aforesaid committee reported against the passage of the resolution, and it does not appear in the evidence that the resolution was ever adopted by the common council. The plans presented by the defendant show that the glass front projects beyond the building line twelve inches. The defendant does not claim in his brief, nor do I recall that he claimed upon the trial, that he had received permission from the common council or other city authorities to construct the proposed glass front according to his plans.

The present charter of the city of Schenectady was granted May 6, 1903. Upon that date there was in force in the city of Schenectady an ordinance, amended from time to time, which, at the time in question in this action, provides as follows:

“ Section 8. !No stoop, step, porch or cellar door shall project into or occupy more than one-third the width of the sidewalk from the building line, nor shall any sign, show, bow-, or bay-window project more than twenty-four inches beyond the said building line, and no bay-window, bow-window, steel front or Boston front shall hereafter be constructed or erected over or beyond the building line from or upon the first story, exclusive of basement, of any building within this city.”

The charter of the city of Schenectady, section 36, subdivision 4, gives to the common council power:

“ To regulate or prevent the incumbering of the streets or public grounds with any material whatever or any encroachment or projection in, over or upon any of the streets or public grounds or any excavations immediately adjacent thereto.”

And section 37 provides:

“ The common council shall adopt ordinances regulating and prescribing plans and methods for the erection and repair of buildings within said city or any district or districts thereof which the common council shall establish. Such ordinances and all amendments and modifications thereof shall be known as the ‘Building Code of the city of Schenectady,’ and shall not take effect until at least thirty days after their adoption. * * * When such office is established, the common council may require all plans and specifications for the construction or repair of buildings, within the district or districts established by it, to be filed in the office of such inspector and approved by him before such buildings are erected or repaired and he shall have such other powers and duties as are prescribed by the common council.”

The common council adopted a building code August 23, 1904, in part as follows:

“ Section 5. ISTo building shall be erected in the city of Schenectady so that any portion of such building below the second story projects over or encroaches on the street line, except that door-steps may occupy not over one-third of the sidewalk as determined by ordinance or by the curb stone at the time said building was erected, not however to exceed three feet; such occupation to be considered as had under a revocable license as to any street or part of a street. ¡No bay-window, or other portion of a building above the first story, shall project into the street more than two feet beyond the street line.”
“Section 6. No building or structure shall be erected, altered or added to or moved without a permit granted by the inspector of buildings, if any. Application for such permit shall be made in writing and shall state the name of the owner, the location of the property as well as the estimated cost of the plans and specifications of the proposed structure. * * * After granting a permit as above, it shall be the duty of the city engineer to determine the street line for the applicant without additional charge, if the building is to be erected on or within three feet of the street line. The amount of the fee to be deposited with the city treasurer shall be one dollar, except that, should the applicant desire the street line determined on any street that is not graded, the amount of the deposit shall be the actual cost to the city as previously estimated by the city engineer, not to exceed $10.”

So far as the evidence shows, no .resolution was passed by the common council of the city of Schenectady, and no action was taken by any public official of the city of Schenectady other than as above stated. While it appears that the defendant filed his plans for his building with the city authorities, it does not appear that any city official ever took any action upon said plans. And, so far as I am informed, there are no other provisions of the charter or ordinances of the city of Schenectady than those above quoted bearing upon the question at issue. No special ordinance or permission to construct the aforesaid encroachment over State street authorized the defendant to construct the same.

The questions, therefore, presented are:

First. Is the projected front of the defendant’s building a substantial encroachment upon the public street ? and
Second.- Can the plaintiff, who alone complains, require the removal of the same?

In Ackerman v. True, 175 N. Y. 353, the Court of Appeals has discussed the question at issue in this case at considerable length. The court there held that the fget that an encroachment upon a street was also a public nuisance did not prevent the plaintiff, from maintaining the action, not only to abate the nuisance but also to recover the damages occasioned thereby. Mere silence upon the part of the plaintiffs, during the construction and continuance of the encroachment, unless continued for such length of time as would authorize the presumption of a grant, does not constitute such laches and acquiescence upon the plaintiffs’ part as will deprive them of the right to a mandatory injunction. Where there is an actual and substantial interference with the use of the street, and the plaintiffs have no erection upon the adjoining property extending into it, and there is a very substantial loss to the plaintiffs resulting from the encroachment, and there is no statute expressly or by a clear unquestionable implication authorizing the encroachment, the plaintiffs are entitled to relief by mandatory injunction.

In the Ackerman case, the plaintiff and the defendant owned premises on the Riverside drive in the city of Hew York. The defendant built a house extending three feet and six inches beyond the street line and having a swell front or bay-window in addition extending into Riverside drive. The plaintiff alleged that this unlawful structure injured her property, obstructed her view, interfered with her easements of light, air and access appurtenant thereto and otherwise injured her property to the amount of $10,000,

The Court of Appeals held, reversing the lower courts, that the proof in the case showed that the erection and maintenance of the encroachment affected the value of the plaintiff’s property to the extent of $15,000; and the court held, in estimating the damages, the true rule is to prove the value of the property with the defendant’s encroachment, and its value with that encroachment removed, and the difference is the measure of her loss. Page 360.

The same rule of damages was applied in this case at bar. The plaintiffs’ evidence does not show to the satisfaction of the court that this projected front of the defendant’s building occasions substantial damage to the plaintiffs in the,, way of interfering with the easements of light, air or approach to the building. The nearest point of this projected front is twenty-six feet from the westerly corner of the plaintiffs’ building; and it can hardly be said, that so much of the obstruction would interfere with the access of light or air or with- the display of goods to be made in the front windows of the plaintiffs’ building. But the plaintiffs’ witnesses have testified that the plaintiffs’ building was worth at the time of the trial from $1,000 to $2,000 less with this projected front on the defendant’s building than with the projected front removed. There are other elements of damage than those above mentioned.

The evidence shows that the buildings occupied by the plaintiffs and the adjoining owners to the west are used for mercantile and business purposes. It can hardly be said that the defendant would have constructed the projecting front except that it would make his building more attractive for lessees for the business purpose to which it is appropriate. Such attractiveness and advantage would add to the rental value of his premises, as compared with the rental value of the premises belonging to the plaintiffs; and the estimate of the witnesses that the value of the plaintiffs’ premises was less after the projected front had been constructed' by the defendant than it would be if that projecting front was removed, was justified.

The provisions, of the charter and the ordinances of the city of Schenectady forbid such an encroachment upon a street; and no city officer, without the authority of a city ordinance, would be permitted to grant a permit in violation of the charter and of the ordinances, which permit would make that which otherwise would be a public and private nuisance anything else than a public and private nuisance. See Ackerman v. True, supra.

The projecting front was, therefore, a public nuisance, and as to the plaintiffs it was a private nuisance. The obstruction of a public highway is an act which in law amounts to a public nuisance, and a person who sustains a private and peculiar injury from such an act may maintain an action to abate the nuisance and to recover the special damages by him sustained. Wakeman v. Wilbur, 147 N. Y. 663.

The extent of the injury is not generally considered very important. It should be substantial, of course, and not merely nominal, and the fact that numerous other persons have been injured by the act is not ground for a denial of the relief. Wakeman v. Wilbur, supra.

I have examined with a good deal of interest the case of Sautter v. Utica City National Bank, 45 Misc. Rep. 15. That case is distinguished from this case by two very important elements: The first is that the construction there complained of was specifically authorized by provision of the city charter, which permitted the use of sidewalks for business purposes which did not interfere with the public use and allowed the erection of columns, pilasters and ornamental portions of any building to encroach upon any street; and the common council of the city had adopted a resolution permitting the defendant to construct its building as it did construct it.

And the second is that the plaintiff had suffered no damage by reason of the construction and maintenance of the defendant’s building.

The opinion in the Sautter case seems well considered, but is not in conflict in any respect with the holding in the Ackerman case. If the charter of the city of Schenectady permitted encroachments upon the street by means of projections from the first story, upon resolution of the common council, and the common council had authorized the construction of this projecting front in question, such authorization would have justified the defendant in erecting his building, and the projecting front would not be a public nuisance. There are no ornaments, projections or permanent structures connected with the plaintiffs’ premises of such' a character as to deprive them of the right to maintain this action.

The plaintiffs, therefore, are entitled to a judgment that the said projected front is a public and private nuisance; that the plaintiffs have suffered, by reason of the construction and maintenance of such projected front, damages in the sum of $ ; and that the defendant must remove

said projected front and be restrained from constructing the same beyond the street line.

Ordered accordingly  