17 How. Pr. 447 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1859
The parties to this action are owners of separate lots of ground adjoining, and upon the west side of Columbia-street in the city of Brooklyn, and this action is brought to recover a small gore of land, six inches wide in the rear, and running out to a point thirty-five feet easterly from the rear of the lots, and which the plaintiff claims is included within the lines of his lot, and is now in the possession of the defendant.
The proof shows that the gore of land in controversy is within the defendant’s inclosure, and on his side of the division fence. George S. Howland owned both of the lots in 1841, and is the common source of title. He conveyed the plaintiff’s lot to Wildes Thomas Thompson, by deed dated June 21,1842, who conveyed to William S. Wetmore, by deed dated September 7, 1848. William S. Wetmore conveyed to the plaintiff by deed bearing date April 19, 1856.
The title deeds of the defendant were not produced upon the trial, so that we do not see precisely when he or his grantors, mediate or immediate, enter into the possession. If the question of adverse possession arose in the case, as the counsel for the defendant supposed upon the argument, this fact would have been important; but in the view I shall take of the case, it cannot be of any consequence.
The complaint sets out the plaintiff’s seizin in fee simple of the entire lot upon the westerly side of Columbia-street, describing it by the same metes and bounds as those contained in the
The title of the plaintiff is not put in issue by the pleadings, for nothing is controverted by the answer but the defendant’s possession, the plaintiff’s demand of the possession, and the unlawful withholding thereof by the defendant. Ho question of adverse possession arises in the case, for if it was the design of the defendant to put in question the validity and force of the plaintiff’s deed to pass the title to the lands in dispute while a stranger was in possession claiming the title, he should have •framed his answer accordingly, and set up the title in himself, or title out of the plaintiff, and thus the title would have been put in issue. Both the surveyors concur that the plaintiff’s deed covers the premises in dispute, and the letter of the plaintiff of the date of the 1st July, 1858, and the defendant’s reply thereto, proves that the possession was demanded and refused.
Judgment should be entered that the plaintiff recover from the defendant the premises described in the complaint, with costs.