15 N.Y.S. 22 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
This is an action in ejectment brought by the city to-recover possession of certain premises lying outside of the high-water mark of the Hudson river between Fifty-Fourth and Fifty-Fifth streets, in this-city. The defendants denied the ownership of the plaintiff in the lauds in question, and alleged an adverse possession-. Upon- the trial the defendants attempted to establish title through a so-called “Dutch grant, ” bearing date in 1642, and also by adverse possession. The jury having found a verdict in. favor of the defendants, from the judgment thereupon entered, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial, this appeal is taken. So far as the defendants attempted to establish any title under the so-called “Dutch grant,” we think there was an utter failure of proof. There was no evidence whatever even of the existence of a Dutch paper, much less that it was a grant, or that it included the premises in question. There was considerable testimony of legendary character in respect to some Dutch paper, and to a paper which had the figures “1642” upon it; but, as to there being any legal proof of the existence of any grant, we have been unable to find it in the record in this case.
The defendants, however, claim to sustain their title' by proof of adverse possession, and the question to be considered upon this appeal is whether that defense is made out by the evidence. It was established that about 1853 the ancestors of the defendant Mott tilled out the premises in question, and occupied the same down to the time of the commencement of this action; and this would probably have been sufficient to establish a title by adverse possession, had there been n'a recognition of the superior title of the plaintiff to the land in question. It is familiar history that the city of Hew York acquired by grant from the state the absolute title of the land in the tideway-lying between high and low water mark; and that, in respect to lands under water outside of the tideway, granted by the state to the city, the title vesting in the city was subject to a pre-emption right in the proprietors of the grants of adjacent lands in the tideway, or in the owner of the uplands in front of the
Upon the diagram, the high and low water mark is attempted to be shown, and the upland owned by Jordan Mott is also delineated, and the only possible object in placing these lines upon the diagram was to show where the grant was to commence. If no application was made for land, except beyond that which was already occupied by him, the existence of the high-water mark lines would have been entirely immaterial. He made this application simply because he was the owner of the upland. There was nothing upon the diagram to show that there was any land beyond the high-water mark, or that any claim to ownership of land beyond high-water mark was made. Having made this application in that form as the owner of the upland, it cannot now be said that such application was no recognition of the land under water which he was then occupying, and to fortify the title to which the application for a grant was made. The land which was filled in was, in no sense of the word, upland. The provisions of the statute, when they give a right of preemption to the grantee of land which had been under water, distinctly mention an owner of that description. In all other cases where adjacent owners are spoken of, it is apparent that those who own the land above high-water mark are meant. Under these circumstances, this application for a water-grant upon the part of Jordan Mott was a clear recognition of the superior title to the land in question in the plaintiff.
But it is said there was proof from which the jury had a right to find that, at the time of this application, Jordan Mott was an imbecile, and incapable of doing any act which would have any binding force. That he was a drunkard, and that his habits were bad,was established beyond question. But there was no evidence from which it could be inferred that he was unable to transact business in 1870. In fact, we find at and about this time, and subsequent thereto, that he was transacting his own business, executing deeds and leases, and in 1869, over a year after the medical testimony showing him to be an imbecile, making a will which was admitted to probate, and never questioned. He seems to have been considered by those around him sufficiently intelligent to transact any and all business, except to make an application to the commissioners of the sinking fund for a grant of land upon which his ancestors had squatted. But it is urged that Mott never accepted a grant from the city; and that, even if he had, there was no rule which prevented