125 N.Y.S. 201 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
The premises in controversy consist of a strip about 40 feet in width by about 100 feet in depth, bounded on the north by the south line of One Hundred and Fifty-eighth street, and on the west
In its decision the court found that Dennis Harris entered upon said premises under the deed from Lucy Audubon, dated November 5, 1851, and in 1853 erected a substantial building on the premises in suit and used and occupied the same.
Harris gave a mortgage to David Banks, president of the East River Bank, dated January 29, 1855, to secure the payment of $5,000, wherein the description is as follows: “ Beginning at tlie point where the Hudson River Railroad intersects the southwesterly corner of One Hundred and-Fifty-eighth street ;• thence southerly along the line of the Hudson River Railroad one hundred feet; thence easterly and parallel with One Hundred and Fifty-eighth street fifty feet; thence northerly and parallel with the Twelfth avenue one hundred feet; thence westerly and along the line of One Hundred and Fifty-eighth street to the place of beginning.” A judgment of foreclosure and sale, filed January 15, 1858, of this mortgage was had and in the said judgment it was adjudged that the
Under the foreclosure sale the referee deeded the property to the East Biver Bank on March 20, 1858, repeating the description of the judgment, and the bank conveyed by the same description to Catherine F. Knapp, August 3, 1858. Mrs. Knapp having died, the present plaintiffs hold title by descent and devise. ■
In 1906, plaintiffs having contracted to sell this strip of land under consideration in conjunction with the land adjoining it on the east, a title company which examined the title for the proposed purchasers raised the objection that the premises described in the complaint were west of the original line of high water of the Hudson river, and that title thereto had under the Dongan Charter vested in the city of Hew York. The plaintiffs thereupon, in February, 1907, for the purpose of quieting title and avoiding litigation, petitioned the commissioners of the sinking fund for a quitclaim deed of the strip from the city. The said petition set forth that the petitioners were the owners of the described premises; - that they had contracted to sell the premises and that the vendee had rejected the title on the ground that a portion thereof lies west of and below the original liigh-water line of the Hudson river, and that the fee thereof is vested in the city of Hew York ; that they were informed and believe that the claim of said vendee is wholly based and founded upon the fact that the map made by Eandel dated April 10, 1819, shows the high-water mark at that time as set forth on a certain survey made by George C. Hollerith, dated May 16, 1906 ; that they were informed and believe that said map is erroneous and that said high-water mark at the time said map was made was in fact further west than is indicated on said map and survey. “Fifth. That your petitioners and their predecessors in title have occupied and claimed said property as it now exists and that their predecessors and grantors have held and possessed said premises adversely to the pretended title (if any) of the city of Hew York for over fifty-three years last past, under claim of title" in fee, exclusive of any other right, and have occupied and
The sinking fund commissioners declined to grant the petition and this action was brought against the city for the purpose of quieting title.
In its decision the learned Special Term found as a conclusion of
Upon the question of fact there is strong evidence that the property in question lies above the original high-water mark and so that title thereto never was in the city. In any event it is clear that the plaintiffs have good title by adverse possession against the city. Harris went into possession under a deed in 1851, and erected a substantial building on the premises in 1853, and inclosed the land with substantial fences which have existed from that time to the present day. Plaintiffs and their predecessors were in open and undisputed possession, exercising acts of ownership .and claiming title against the world, paying taxes and assessments without claim or question from any source down to the time of the objections raised by the title company in 1906.
In Barnes v. Light (116 N. Y. 34) Vann, J., said : “ An action of ejectment founded only upon adverse possession can be maintained even against the true owner. * * * A claim of title may be made by acts alone quite as effectively as by the most emphatic assertions. As was said by the chancellor, when speaking for the Court of Errors, in La Frombois v. Jackson (8 Cow. 589, 603): ‘ The actual possession and improvement of the premises, as owners are accustomed to possess and improve their estates, without any payment of rent, or recognition of title in another, or disavowal of title in himself, will, in the absence of all other evidence, be sufficient to raise a presumption of his entry and holding as absolute owner, and unless rebutted by other evidence,.will establish the fact of a claim of title.’ Possession, accompanied by the usual acts of ownership, is presumed to be adverse until shown to be subservient to the title of another.”
The subject of title by adverse possession was carefully considered in Baker v. Oakwood (123 N. Y. 30). After citing numerous cases, O’Brien, J., concludes: “ These authorities, and others that might be cited, show that title to an estate in land may be acquired by one and lost by another by means of adverse possession. This
In Timpson v. Mayor (5 App. Div. 424), this court said: “The sole remaining question is whether the title to land underwater in the Hudson river * * * may, in the absence of statutory restrictions, be acquired by adverse possession and prescription against the city of Hew York. * * * The defendant’s counsel do not distinctly dispute that title by adverse possession may, as a general proposition, be acquired against the city of Hew York. That it'may is hardly open to doubt. * * * There being no doubt as to the general doctrine, no satisfactory reason has been assigned why land under water in the Hudson river should form an exception to'the general rule. * . * * Our conclusion is that there was .nothing to prevent the plaintiffs from acquiring title by adverse user to the bulkhead and wharfage rights for which they sue. We know of no principle, and none has been suggested to us, which prevents the acquisition of title in this manner, unless the circumstances negative the presumption of a grant.”
But it is claimed, and the learned court below has held, that the application to the sinking fund commissioners in 1907 for a quitclaim deed is such a recognition of superior title in the city as conclusively disposes of the claim to title by adverse possession, and Mayor, etc., v. Mott (60 Hun, 423) is relied upon as controlling authority to that effect. That was an action of ejectment to recover possession of certain premises lying outside'of the high-water mark of the Hudson river between Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth streets. Defendants denied the ownership of the plaintiff and alleged an adverse possession. The facts in that case as appear in the record on the appeal show that the premises in dispute were tilled in in 1853 and 1854. Whatever claim of title by adverse possession there was commenced then. But in 1853 application to the city was made for a grant of land under water. This application was based upon ownership of the upland, and the pre-emptive right of such owner to such grant given by statute. The application was granted but was never consummated. There was a partition proceeding of the lands of claimants in 1865. Ho mention was made of this property in such proceedings and the deeds given in consummation thereof bounded the lands “ along the river as it winds and turns.” Another similar
Sherman v. Kane (86 N. Y. 57) is an instructive case. There Miller, J., said : “ The contention is that the possession must be twenty years ‘immediately before or next before’ the suit is brought to make out a case within section 368 [of the Code of Civil Procedure]. If this construction is correct, then any lapse of time without possession would interfere with the meaning of the statute and bar a title which had become fixed and established by adverse possession. The effect of the position contended for would be that while in 1852 the defendant’s title had become [perfect by an adverse possession of forty-eight years, and it was entitled to the land, its title became forfeited by reason of the premises being allowed to remain unoccupied for fourteen years. If the title had been acquired by grant such an act could not affect or invalidate it, and as a title by adverse possession is equally strong as one obtained by grant, no reason exists for making an exception against the latter. A perfect answer also to the position of the learned counsel is that the city had title by advérse possession and that title continued after it had become
So, under the facts in the case at bar, adverse possession, evidenced by the building of the house and inclosing the property by the fences and the other acts set forth certainly began in 1853 and so title was complete at the expiration of twenty years, to wit, in 1873, and as said in the Sherman Case (supra), the title by adverse possession was then equally as strong as one obtained by grant.
In Greene v. Couse (127 N. Y. 386) the question of the effect of negotiations upon title was before the court. It said: “ The plaintiff and Alexander Couse at the time such contract was made respectively claimed to be the owner of the premises and for the purposes of the question it may here be assumed that Alexander Couse and his grantor had been in the actual and continuous possession of the premises for forty or more years, and the plaintiff and those under whom she claimed had not during that period, if ever, been in the actual possession and that neither the said defendant nor any of his grantors had ever entered into or retained possession of the premises with any permission of or privity with the plaintiff or her predecessors in title. In the absence of any of these relations, the defendant and his grantors owed no duty or obligation to the plaintiff and was, therefore, at liberty to fortify his title or purchase peace at any price and of whomsoever he chose. If, however, the adverse possession of the defendant’s grantor and those under whom he entered and claimed had not ripened into a title" at the time the contract of March, 1875, was made, * * * the right to assert the continuance thereafter of such possession to perfect and support title as against the plaintiff would have been defeated by it. * "" * The rule in relation to estoppel does not apply ‘ where, at the time of the purchase, the vendee is in as owner, claiming 'title, and his entry was not under the vendor.’ (Glen v. Gibson, 9 Barb. 634-640.) ‘ Where a man is in possession of land as owner having title,
In the case at bar the title by adverse possession had ripened in 1873 and in 1907 it had been so held for fifty-four years. The application to the sinking fund commissioners upon its face asserted title and denied any right, title or interest in the property in the city. It merely asked for a quitclaim'deed to satisfy a doubt raised by a title company, and was in no sense an admission of superior title. Irrespective of the nature of the paper and its disclaimers, plaintiffs had a perfect right, their title having ripened, to fortify that title in any way they pleased,' and such acts could not destroy that which had become perfected.
The judgment appealed from is erroneous and should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs and disbursements to the appellants to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abidé event.