33 Barb. 386 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
By the Court,
The plaintiff must fail to recover in this action, I think, upon two grounds : First, the failure to show any title in himself; and second, the adverse possession of the defendant and those under whom he-claims.
The lands sought to be recovered are two small tracts situate in the town of East Hampton in the county of Suffolk, and said to constitute what was formerly part of a public highway running from the east corner of John Merry’s house lot to the three-mile harbor, laid out May 16th, 1700. The commissioners of highways of the town, on the 24th June, 1737, reduced the width of the highway, for its entire length, to nine rods wide. Again in 1746 the commissioners altered the highway, increasing its width to 16 rods or poles, north of the premises in dispute. The plaintiff produced and proved, upon the trial, the town records of East Hampton, showing the laying out and the several subsequent alterations of the.highway. But who owned and was seised of the fee of the lahds over which the road was laid does not, as far as I understand the evidence, appear. The plaintiff produced no
In the second place, the defendant showed a good title to the premises by an adverse possession of more than 20 years. He produced and read in evidence a deed of conveyance from Gardner Miller to Benjamin Miller, dated April 6th, 1833, .conveying all that “ tract of land with the buildings thereon, known and distinguished by the name of homestead, containing about 45 acres, be the same more or less, situate in the town of East Hampton, &c. bounded as follows: westwardly by land of Benjamin Parsons and Joseph Osborne, jun. ; northwardly by the highway; eastwardly, partly by the highway, and three sides of David Conklin’s house lot, and likewise bounded upon three sides of Benjamin Parsons’ house lot; southerly by an highway and a small piece of land at present occupied • as common land.” The highway which partly bounds the lot upon the east is the same highway leading from John Merry’s corner to the three mile harbor, which was first laid out twenty rods wide. The deed carries the grant to the middle of the highway, and includes the premises claimed. The defendant then produced and read the will of Benjamin Miller, the grantor, by which the lands in the deed are devised to the defendant. He was then sworn as a witness, and testified : “ My father died in October, 1833. His name was Benjamin Miller. I then came in possession of the premises where I now live, which my father bought of David Talmage. I put up a fence in 1839 or 184Q, inclosing a small part of the premises in dispute. Dominy, the grandfather of the plaintiff, was there. He did not like the shape of my yard, and suggested that it be put out further. My wood-pile has been on the premises since 1833. I buried potatoes on the premises the first five or six years I was there, and once or twice or more within the last six, eight or ten
Lott, Emott and Brown, Justices.]
The judgment should be entered upon the verdict for the defendant.