13 Misc. 205 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1895
The defendant, Jacob Schlosser, on October 7, 1893, contracted to sell to the plaintiff, Thomas Ford, for $34,500, three lots of land in the city of New York, known by the street numbers 323, 325, and 327 West Eleventh street, formerly Hammond street, and described as follows: “Beginning at a point on the northerly side of West 11th street, distant 117 feet 3 inches westerly from the westerly side of Greenwich street, and running thence northerly 95 feet 4 inches, running thence westerly 25 feet, thence southerly 2 inches, thence again westerly 48 feet 1 inch, and thence again southerly 95 feet 5 inches, to the said northerly side of West 11th street, and thence easterly 73 feet 6 inches, to the point or place of beginning,”— subject to certain leases. The plaintiff paid $1,000 of the purchase price on the execution of the contract, and this action is brought to recover it back, as well as for damages, on the ground that the defendant was not able to give a good and merchantable title to a portion of the said premises, being a strip of land on the westerly side thereof, 2 feet 10 inches wide, by the entire depth, besides a strip of 4 or 5 inches in the rear. The land which defendant contracted to convey has been in possession of the vendor and his grantors or their tenants since 1836, or nearly 60 years, and has been built upon and inclosed by them since 1854, or over 40 years; and defendant claims title to the strip in question not only by deed, but by prescription and acquiescence of the adjoining owners in the practical location of boundaries, and by adverse possession sufficient to confer a good, merchantable title. The defendant’s chain of title is as follows: A deed to him from the executors of Richard V. Kissam, dated April 28, 1891, conveying the property by the above description, and two deeds to Richard V. Kissam,—one from John J. Herring and wife, dated May 9, 1836 (which includes the disputed strip on the west side), and one from Stuart F. Randolph and wife, dated May 24, 1836, which embraces all the remainder of the premises. These latter deeds together convey four lots on the north side of Hammond street with a frontage of 98 feet, which, from the descriptions given in the deeds, are supposed to be situated 115 feet west of Greenwich street, and 168 feet east of Washington street.
The only question in the case arises from a conveyance by Kissam to Lambert Suydam of a portion of the premises, made October 13, 1836'. The portion conveyed to Suydam is a lot 25 feet in width by 95 feet in depth, described in such conveyance in different ways,
The facts established the title as claimed by defendant to the whole property which he contracted to convey. His grantor, Kissam, had an undisputed title by deed in 1836; and that portion of the premises which in that year he conveyed to Kissam was practically located between the adjoining owners so as to leave Kissam in full and undisturbed possession, ever since that time, of the premises which his ■executors conveyed to defendant and which defendant sold to plaintiff. The possession of the lot by defendant and his grantors for so long a period, the acquiescence of the adjacent owners, and the absence of any dispute about it, make the plaintiff’s objeption to the title not meritorious, but technical. Meyer v. Boyd, 51 Hun, 291-294, 4 N. Y. Supp. 328. The judgment in favor of the defendant at the trial term was correct, and should be affirmed, for the reasons given by the learned trial judge.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.