2 Wend. 472 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1829
The court adhere to the opinion pronounced in the case of Seventeenth-street, (1 Wendell, 262,) that in the city of New-York the fee of the land comprised in the space called a street, previous to its being opened by the corporation, does not pass to the purchasers of the- lots hounded upon it, as it would do were the lots bounded on a public highway out of the limits of the city; but that it remains in the grantor, the owners of the lots having a perpetual right of way over the space called a street.
The principal part, if not the whole of the island of N. York, is laid out into avenues and streets, and so designated on a map of the city, although not actually opened. Purchases are made of lots for the purpose of erecting buildings thereon, and not for agricultural or horticultural uses ; and when a purchase is made of a lot bounding upon a street in the city of New-York which is not yet opened, the purchaser is entitled to all the'benefits and advantages belonging to the property of which he has become the owner; one of the most essential of which is, that when the street is opened, upon the application of the corporation conformably to the law regulating streets in that city, he will have a lot fronting upon a street upon which a building may be erected, without being subject to an assessment to compensate the owner of the fee to the full value of the land thus appropriated, the presump