132 A.D. 183 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Lead Opinion
On the 19th of December, 1896, the plaintiffs wei-e the ^owners of certain real estate situate on Park avenue in the city df Hew York, and on that day entered into a written contract to. convey the same, in exchange for other property, to one Hodges. The contract contained the following provision : “ And whereas! in this exchange df property that agreed to be conveyed by the parties of the second part [the plaintiffs in this action] is valued by both parties hereto at a less sum than it otherwise would bé valued at by
The answers of the railroad companies and Wheeler put in issue the material allegations of the complaint. The trial resulted in a judgment, directing .Wheeler to deliver to the plaintiffs, upon demand, a good and sufficient deed conveying to the HeW York and Harlem Railroad Company and to the Hew York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company a marketable title to such of the easements appurtenant to the premises in question as are.required for or taken by the maintenance and use of the railroad viaduct in Park avenue in front of said . premises, and that if: the plaintiffs shall then tender such deed to such' railroad companies and they shall neglect for ten days after such tender to pay the'plaintiffs the
All the parties, seem to agree that when the plaintiffs conveyed the land to Wheeler, this by operation of law took with it the easements of light, air and access, and. if they did not, that question has been so definitely and thoroughly settled by this court and the Court of Appeals that it is no longer open for consideration. They could, however, as between themselves and as a part of the consideration, create “a resulting trust by virtue of which the grantee becomes a trustee for his grantor as to all moneys received or judgments recovered for the invasion or destruction of such easements.” (McKenna v. Brooklyn Union El. R. R. Co., 184 N. Y. 391.) As between the plaintiffs, therefore, and the defendant Wheeler, if the easements were reserved, then that reservation operated to retain in favor of the plaintiffs certain rights which Wheeler could not, and ought not in equity, to disregard. (Pegram v. Elevated R. R. Co., 147 N. Y. 135 ; Freund v. Biel, 114 App. Div. 400.) The principle by which such trust relation is created, and the reason why it should be enforced in a court of equity, is fully discussed by Judge Landon in Western Union Tel. Co. v. Shepard (169 N. Y. 170).
The main question presented, therefore, is whether the plaintiffs, when they conveyed to Wheeler, reserved all the damages, fee and rental, then accrued or thereafter to accrue by reason of the erection and maintenance of the structure referred to, and. constituted him a trustee for their benefit in collecting or receiving the same. The answer to the question necessarily depends upon the construction to be put upon the conveyance to Wheeler and the agreement which was executed in connection with it.- ■ The agreement between the plaintiffs and Hodges has no bearing upon the subject and ought not to have been admitted in evidence. Wheeler was neither party nor privy to it, and did not, by the assignment, bind himself in any way to do what Hodges had agreed to.
There are many authorities to the effect, and I have been unable to discover any to the contrary, that in the absence of an agree
In any aspect of the case, therefore, in order to succeed the plaintiffs were bound- to prove that according to the terms of this iinstru
But if it could be held that under the agreeznent between the plaintiffs and Wheeler he was constituted a trustee for their benefit, I do not even then see how this judgznent could be sustained. He would be at most a trustee for them for money received from 'or judgznent recovered against the railroad companies for the damages which they had occasioned. (McKenna v. Brooklyn Union EL. R. R. Go., supra.) He has neither received money nor recovez-ed a judgment. He holds nothing which belongs to the plaintiffs.
The judgment appealed from, therefore, is reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event.
Patterson, P. J., Ingraham and Clarke, JJ.; concurred.
Sic.
Concurrence Opinion
■ I Concur in the reversal of the judgment herein, but not upon the grounds stated in the prevailing opinion. I agree that the rights of the plaintiffs depend upon their contract, not with the defendant Hodges, but with, the defendant Wheeler. -I do not, however, agree that the intention of the parties was to assign any cause of action which, the plaintiffs had against the defendant, railroad companies for trespass. ' That, if it existed, was a personal action for damages and remained in the grantors. The parties, evidently assumed that the plaintiffs then had a cause of action against the defendant railroad companies for a continuing trespass, in which, as a condition of not énjoining the use and operation of the structure erected in Park avenue and of not compelling its removal, both' rental and fee damages would be required to be paid. I am of opinion that the agreement indicates that the conveyance of the premises was intended to be made upon the basis; of their - depreciated1 value caused by the erection of the structure and by the operation of trains thereon ; and had they framed their agreement properly to carry out that intention, Wheeler would be deemed a trustee for the
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellants tc abide event; appeal from order dismissed.'