Court Opinion

ID: 5544303
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 18:55:45.382295+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:53.207841
License: Public Domain

Pryor, J.
Appeal from a judgment of injunction and for damages. Action to restrain the maintenance and operation of defendants’ railway along the highway in front of plaintiff’s premises, and to recover for past injuries to plaintiff’s property from the presence and operation of said railway. The single error urged in impeachment of the judgment is the refusal of the referees by whom the case was tried to find, as a conclusion of law, that “plaintiff is not entitled to recover damages for deterioration of the neighborhood caused by the construction and operation of defendants’ road.” So far as this refusal may be supposed to affect the amount to be paid by defendants in avoidance of the injunction, if error at all, it is not an error available for reversal of the judgment. Lawrence v. Railway Co., ante, 546, (now decided.) But the refusal of the finding is no error, even in respect of the recovery for past damages. It is a preposterous assumption that the learned referees allowed anything to plaintiff, as a substantive ground for recovery, for the deterioration of the neighborhood, i. e., for injury to other people’s property; *550and a court cannot, with propriety, be called upon to negative an obviously atid indisputably absurd proposition. Besides, the conclusion of law propounded by defendants was utterly irrelevant to any claim of plaintiff apparent in the complaint or presented on the trial, and for that reason alone was properly rejected by the referees. But that the fact of the deterioration of the neighborhood caused by defendants’ railroad was competent and relevant evidence on the issue as to the deterioration of plaintiff’s property, is expressly-affirmed in Drucker’s Case, 106 N. Y. 157, 12 N. E. Rep. 568, where the court say: “To measure and appreciate the individual loss to plaintiff, the nature and extent of the general injury was properly and necessarily considered.” We see no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
All concur.