Tbe plaintiff, owner in fee of" a. plot of land abutting upon the northerly side of One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street between
From a judgment dismissing his complaint upon the merits the plaintiff appeals. The defendant is the owner in fee of the bed of the street in front of plaintiff’s property, and claiming to hold it free from any easement in favor of plaintiff’s property, has inclosed it with a fence and erected a building thereon. It is not to be disputed that if plaintiff is entitled to the easements he claims, the structures erected by defendant are violative thereof. The property involved in this litigation, as well as that now, owned by defendant,* constituted part of a large tract owned at one time by Samuel Watkins who, on August 16, 1843, conveyed a tract, including the southerly half of One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street, to Victor G. Audubon, and on November fifteenth of the same year conveyed another tract, including the premises now owned by plaintiff, and the northerly half of One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street, to Matthew Morgan. Up to this time no streets had been opened, and no official map had been filed laying out .the city above One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street, which was the northernmost transverse street shown on the map of 1807. The territory north of that street was ■ wild woodlands, except so much thereof as was-occupied by the residence of John J. Audubon and a serpentine road which led up to his house. The deed to Victor G. Audubon conveyed a tract of land extending to and bounded on the north by the center line of One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street. It is to be noted that although this deed mentions One Hundred and Fifty-sixth and One Hundred and Fifty-seventh streets and uses their center line as boundaries, it does not refer to- any map or plan on which these streets were shown, nor was any such map or plan then on record. There was such a map, however, attached to the deed from Watkins to Morgan dated November 15,1843, upon which the streets from One ' Hundred and Fifty-sixth to One Hundred and Sixtietllstreets inclusive are shown, and by express reference to .which that deed was made..
Whether or not Watkins and Audubon had this map in mind when
Sacchi had other lots which he retained and subsequently sold.
The question was whether or not Sacchi had impliedly reserved, in favor of the lots retained by him, easements of light, air and access ' over the bed of the street which had been in terms conveyed to the
The judgment will, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted; but without costs in this court.
Patterson, P. J., McLaughlin, Houghton and Lambert, JJ., concurred. '
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered,...hut without costs in this court.
