This is the familiar suit of a property owner for a conditional injunction against the maintenance of an elevated railroad and for damages incurred by reason of its past maintenance and operation. Two pieces of property are involved. As to one of them the plaintiff’s right.to recover was undisputed and it was conceded that he was entitled to an award of $1,000 on account of the damage to that piece. As to the other, however, the defendants relied upon a written instrument executed by the plaintiff’s predecessors in title as a bar to the action ; and the determination of the present appeal depends upon the effect which should be given to that instrument. If it is nothing more than a revocable license, as has been held at Special Term and by the Appellate Division, the defendants concede that the judgments below were right. If, on the other hand, this constituted an effective grant of the easements now claimed by the plaintiff or an estoppel against the plaintiff’s claim for relief, the judgment in his favor is too broad so far as the injunction is concerned, and is too large by the sum of $400.
The title of the plaintiff to the property in question, which is situated on Fulton street in the borough of Brooklyn, was derived from the Brooklyn City Bailroad Company, and extends to the middle of the street. On the 3d of June, 1893, the Brooklyn City Bailroad Company, as party of the first part, executed and delivered to the Kings County Elevated Bailroad Company, the predecessor of the defendants, as party of the second part, an instrument in writing under seal which recited that the Kings County Elevated Bailroad Company then'maintained and operated its elevated railroad in front of *338the premises, and that the Brooklyn City Bailroad Company had agreed that it might so maintain and operate the same and further provided as follows: “ B ow, therefore, in consideration of the premises and the sum of one dollar, paid by the party of the second part, to the party of the first part, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, said party of the first part doth hereby consent that the party of the second part may pass all depots, stables, power stations on the said above described premises and maintain its elevated railroad structure on and over said street, and operate its elevated railroad thereon, as the same is now constructed, without compensation therefor to the party of the first part.
“ And the party of the first part, for itself, its successors and assigns, hereby releases and discharges the party of the second part, its successors and assigns, from any and all claims and demands for any such compensation arising from or connected with such maintenance of said structure, and the operation of its railroad, as now constructed and operated.”
The trial court found that the said consent “ was not intended as a grant and gave the defendant no easements or interests in the land involved in this case; that it created a mere license as between the parties thereto and that the plaintiff is not thereby precluded from maintaining this action as to said premises; and that said elevated railroad was neither constructed nor put in operation upon the faith of said consent.” The learned counsel for the respondent insists that in view of the unanimous affirmance of this finding by the Appellate Division the Court of Appeals is without jurisdiction to review this case; in other words, that we cannot pass upon the legal effect of the instrument of consent. As to this objection it is only necessary to point out that the finding, although denominated a conclusion of fact, is, except the last clause therein contained, only a statement of conclusions of law. The exception to this finding, therefore, brings up a question of law which can be reviewed in this court.
We are unable to agree with the courts below in the construction which they have placed upon the instrument in ques*339tion. When that instrument was executed and delivered, the Brooklyn City Railroad Company appears to have been in occupation of the property for its corporate purposes. The Kings County Elevated Railroad Company had erected its elevated railroad structure in front of the premises and had operated its trains over the same for many years. If the instrument had been intended to be a mere license revocable at will it is difficult to perceive any adequate reason for its execution so far as the future was concerned. Thus viewed, it effected no change in the legal relation of the parties. The preexisting oral license was just as good. When, however, we consider the situation of both parties to the instrument and the language of the paper itself it seems to us quite clear that it was the intent of the property owner to give much more than a license. The party of the first part consented that the party of the second part might “maintain its elevated railroad structure on and over said street, and operate its elevated railroad thereon, as the same is now constructed, without compensation therefor to the party of the first part.” This phrase is vitally significant. “Compensation” is the word used in the constitutional provision which regulates the taking of private property for public use. (Const, of 1894, art. 1, § 7.) The term as used in this consent could have no natural application to the release of any claim for past damages. That was dealt with in a subsequent part of the instrument. The phrase indicates that the parties contemplated the continued invasion of the property owner’s easements in the street without insisting upon the payment therefor to which the property owner would otherwise have been entitled.
We have here, as in the case of White v. Manhattan Railway Co. (139 N. Y. 19), a full, unconditional and absolute consent given by the property owner for the maintenance and operation of an elevated railroad in front of his premises. The learned court below, however, distinguished the effect of the release in this case from that in the White case in that the plaintiff there was a mere abutter while in the present *340case the plaintiff’s predecessor in title was the owner of the fee. There is doubtless a distinction between the two cases. The mere abutter has only an easement in the street and when he gives a consent for the eonstrifction and maintenance of the railroad he releases or abandons so much of the easements as is interfered with or taken by the railroad. Where the abutter also owns the fee of the street in front of his laud the railroad takes from him an easement in the land in the street. Bnt this distinction in circumstance leads to no difference in the effect to be attributed to the consents in the two cases. Both the easements of the mere abutter and the fee of the sti’eet are alike within the constitutional protection, and neither can be acquired by a railroad company except by the procedure prescribed by the Constitution unless the owner voluntarily seeks redress in a court of equity. The invasion of the easements of the abutter can be authorized only by grant or prescription for twenty years, and the easement in the fee of the street can be conferred only iu the same manner. The same rule of construction should, therefore, apply to the instruments in both cases. The defendant, it is true, was at the time of the execution of the instrument merely a trespasser, but it was not in the situation of an ordinary trespasser. It had the power and authority to maintain its railroad provided it acquired by condemnation the necessai’y property lights. Of course it did not intend to abandon its costly structure iu the city streets. - Beither the parties nor any one else contemplated such a course of conduct. All understood that practically, though not in law, the abutters, whether owning the fee of the street or not, would obtain, not the removal of the structure, but compensation for their rights. What the plaintiff’s predecessor intended to release was the right to compensation, not merely for any past entry, but for the acquisition of its property rights by the railroad company which would otherwise be compelled to institute condemnation proceedings to ascertain the amount of that compensation. Assuming, but not conceding, that the instrument would be inoperative as a grant, certainly it was effective as *341an estoppel for any compensation that might be awarded in condemnation proceedings.' The plaintiff can be entitled to no greater relief in this action in equity than he would have been had the defendant instituted proceedings to condemn the property.
The judgment should be modified by excluding from the operation of the injunction that portion of the defendant’s railroad in front of the plaintiff’s property running 20 feet from the corner of South Portland avenue, and by reducing the award of damages from $1,400 to $1,000, with costs to the appellants in this court.
Cullen, Oh. J., Grat, Vann, Werner and Hiscook, JJ., concur; Chase, J., dissents.
Judgment modified.