152 N.Y.S. 605 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
Lead Opinion
This is an action in equity involving the location and establishment of the division line between adjoining residential properties of the parties on Arnold park in the city of Bochester. The plaintiff avers that defendant is about to erect a division fence separating the lands of the parties, and in so doing will encroach upon plaintiff’s lot, and seeks injunctive relief to restrain the defendant.
A careful examination of the record leads me to the conclusion that the differences between these neighbors involve property rights of little or no substantial value, and that this controversy, like many another of its sort arising over boundary disputes, might well have been avoided by the exercise of a small measure of charity and the application of the Golden Bule. One marvels that in these days of advanced civilization, men will suffer a brief earthly tenure to be riven by acrimonious litigation arising from circumstances of such trifling substance as in this case. But human nature seems prone to jealously guard what it conceives to be its legal rights, and this court is required to equitably adjust the differences of the parties to this litigation. Indeed, the somewhat aggressive attitude of the defendant in seeking to place the “ornamental ” posts at the point where he contends his south line reaches the street, and which act on his part could have no other object than to establish the division line to his own liking, and in some manner thus to foreclose plaintiff from thereafter disputing its location, furnishes some excuse to plaintiff for seeking relief in the courts.
Arnold park was laid out nearly forty years ago as a residential tract lying southerly from East avenue in the city of Bochester. An avenue was opened leading southerly from said
The plaintiff is the owner of lot No. 12, and the defendant lot No. 11, lying adjacent to plaintiff on the north. The title deeds of these lots describe them as seventy-five feet wide, front and rear, although some question seems to have arisen when plaintiff’s predecessor in title received his deed, and the lot was described as about seventy-five feet wide. As a matter of fact, in some manner not clearly explained, plaintiff’s lot in the rear seems to have, many years since, been somewhat nar
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the division fence in the rear does not mark the true line between the lots of the parties. Defendant claims, and it seems to us is sustained in such contention, that by the erection of the barns on the assumed line between the parties and their predecessors in title and the location of the fence in the rear, the division line became practically located and through a long period of years that the fence has occupied its present position it became by acquiescence the true line between the parties. The defendant further claims that the division line along plaintiff’s house and extending easterly to the street should be defined by a projection of the line so fixed by the fence. However, the evidence shows that in some manner the fence, as it stood at the time of the commencement of the action, was not entirely straight, but at a distance from the rear line corresponding substantially with the length of the barns as they heretofore stood upon the fine, there is an angle of something more than one-half a foot in the fence line. The learned trial court decided that the division
In an attempt to establish a line by practical location along the front of the lots, defendant seizes hold of a few circumstances and argues therefrom that such line has by act of the parties and their predecessors in title, received practical location. It appears that the curb line in front of plaintiff’s, property is turned in at a point where the line contended for by defendant would meet it, and it also appears that for some years a driveway existed near this division line and which led to defendant’s barn; also that a small ornamental tree, known as an umbrella tree, was planted by plaintiff and was situated at or near the line claimed by defendant. We do not think these facts sufficient to show any practical location of the line in question. It does not appear that the curb line was turned at the driveway with the knowledge or consent of either of the parties or their predecessors in title, but, according to the testimony of plaintiff’s engineer, Ryan, these driveway turns were made by hoys in the engineer’s office, and were not at all accurate as defining boundaries of lots. While it appears that the driveway maintained for some years must have encroached somewhat on plaintiff’s property, yet we do not think that fact is of sufficient significance to he important. A vent pipe leading from plaintiff’s house extended for some distance over the line as contended for by defendant, and the ornamental tree, instead of being evidence of the boundary between the parties, would seem rather to indicate that the party at least responsible for ■ it believed that the line ran somewhat northerly therefrom. At the present time and for a considerable number of years no driveway has existed, and its location has now been graded and is kept as a part of the lawn.
It seems to us that the more equitable disposition of this case would he to hold that the line of the board fence as maintained between the parties in the rear marks the division line, and that from the easterly end of said fence the properties of the parties are divided by a straight line running easterly to the street
It is apparent that this controversy involves property rights between these parties of more fancied than real substance. The lots are occupied by the residences of the parties. There is no indication that there will ever be a demand for these properties for commercial purposes, nor can the excuse be urged that the disputed strip is valuable for gardening or agricultural purposes. No division fence is required, as the landscape scheme of the street seems to omit all division fences between the property owners, giving to the tract a parklike appearance. There is no physical appearance of a division line between the parties. Their lawns have been graded together, and no monument tells where the line separated. No reason is furnished why a division fence should be built. Hence, as before stated, this controversy has little substance so far as property values are concerned. With the line located as herein indicated no violence will result to the rights of either of the parties. Plaintiff, while somewhat contracted in the rear of his lot, will still have his seventy-five feet of frontage, and would not suffer the serious damage to his dwelling house which would result from the establishment of the line as indicated by the learned trial court, and defendant will have seventy-five feet, both rear and front, which would seem to be all that in equity and j ustice he should demand.
All concurred, except Kruse, P. J., and Robson, J., who dissented, in a memorandum by Robson, J.
Dissenting Opinion
It is conceded that the west end of the present fence marks the west end of the line dividing the lots of plaintiff and defendant. While plaintiff’s surveyor testifies that the line of this fence is not straight, there being, as he claims, an angle in it, which at its extreme point makes a deviation of about six inches from a straight line, no such condition was discovered by defendant’s surveyor. So slight a deviation from a
That the line as practically located should include the whole division fine between the lots, and was so intended, would be consistent with what would ordinarily be the intention of the parties agreeing upon location of a line, and such an inference is warranted by the facts. Naturally such a line would be a straight line, as the trial justice points out. The descriptions by which the lots were conveyed show that the division lines of lots are straight lines. An extension of the fence line to the street coincides exactly with the line of occupation by defendant so far as occupation consistent with the use of the premises for residential purposes as then used admitted. A driveway extending from the street was maintained for many years by defendant on the south side of his lot, the south line of the driveway being coincident with the fence line extended. The driveway also extended along the fence to the barn. So far as the turning in of the curb line and the physical features as to the sidewalk, and other natural objects, including the umbrella tree, are concerned they all point to the extended fence line as the line of practical location. Practical location of an uncertain boundary line is ordinarily a question of fact, provided evidence is furnished from which an inference
Kruse, P. J., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide'event, and the findings of fact numbered 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 in the decision are disapproved.