34 A.D. 415 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
Lead Opinion
A purchaser át a sale made under a judicial decree is entitled to all property and title which the referee undertook to sell and which he rightfully supposed he was to receive; but “ a purchaser upon
The objections of the purchaser may be divided into three classes: First, encroachment upon adjoining premises by the buildings erected upon the premises sold; second, encroachment upon the premises sold by buildings on adjoining premises; -and, third, encroachments of buildings on the premises sold upon the street abutting in front of such premises. The premises described in the advertisement of sale consisted of three separate parcels of land, fronting upon Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth streets, in the city of Hew York, west of First avenue. The most northerly piece of
The first question to be determined is, whether- or not such. encroachments were a substantial injury to the property. It is quite apparent that an encroachment might be so insignificant that no injury could result. The property was sold by metes and bounds, and it is not claimed but that the purchaser will obtain a good title to all of the property included within the boundaries specified in the advertisement of sale. But he claims that, because of such encroachments, he will not receive a good title to the buildings on the property purchased. It appeared from the affidavit of the surveyor, presented by the purchaser, that the building on the property on the west of the plot on the north side of Forty-fifth street encroaches one-half inch upon the plot purchased the whole length of the wall, a distance about sixty-three feet: There is also a claim that, upon the westerly line of the plot fronting upon the northerly side of Forty-fourth street, the building of the owner adjoining on the west encroaches one-half inch upon the plot purchased for a distance of about twenty-five feet, the encroachment of one-half, an inch continuing nine and one-half feet, and then gradually wearing down to nothing at a point on the northerly side of Forty-fourth street. The existence of these encroachments is quite doubtful, even to the extent claimed by the purchaser. Other surveys show that the encroachment
Great stress is laid, however, upon the encroachment of buildings on the property purchased upon adjacent property and upon the street. In considering these encroachments, and in determining whether or not they are substantial injuries to the property sold, we must bear in mind the character of the buildings, the purposes to which they were put, and the possibility of the purchaser being interfered with in the possession of these buildings as they existed at the time of the purchase. In determining questions of this character, each case must be determined upon the facts presented. No hard and fast rule can be laid down that one inch or two inches of encroachment, irrespective of the nature of the building, and the effect of such encroachment upon the value of the property, will be sufficient to justify the court in relieving a purchaser of his purchase. The casés cited in which the court has relieved a purchaser, where an encroachment of an inch and a half or two inches has existed, are cases where a substantial permanent building had been erected •upon the property which encroached upon property other than that of the vendor, or where the encroachment was upon the property which the vendor had agreed to sell, and where the court could see
An examination of the record in this case has satisfied us that-these alleged encroachments, the extent of which is seriously disputed by witnesses who had made surveys of the premises, are not. substantial injuries to the property purchased. Most of the buildings which encroach upon the adjacent premises are old buildings that have been in use many years, and it would seem from the evidence produced by the respondents that the purchaser has acquired the right to use the adjacent lands for the support of his walls by implied grant- or adverse possession. The question here is, not whether he has acquired a good title to the land upon which his walls are built, but whether, by reason of such adverse possession, he has acquired a right ■ to have'the walls remain in the condition they are for the support of his buildings so long as the buildings shall stand upon the property. Whether or not, in any case a purchaser should be compelled to accept a title based only upon the adverse possession, it is not
As to the encroachments upon the street', it is quite apparent that they are not a substantial objection to the property. These buildings have been there for many years in their present condition. There has been no objection by the municipal authorities to their continuance, and the extent of the encroachment is such 'that it is not probable that such an objection will be now taken; but whatever objection the city could make, it is quite apparent that under chapter 410 of the Laws of 1882 (§ 471), as amended by chapter 610 of the Laws of 1896, the city would not be allowed to remove the wall, and we do not, therefore, think that the objection is substantial. On the whole case we are satisfied that the objections taken by the purchaser are not such as will justify, the court in relieving him from his purchase.
Certain provisions were inserted in the order to protect the purchaser from any possible expense or injury on account of these
Upon the whole ease we think the order .appealed from is right and should be, affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Yan Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the affirmance óf the order, The encroachments were insignificant, and, under all the circumstances, did not furnish ground for rejecting the title.. The case is an extraordinary one in many respects — by reason of the size and nature of the property; the knowledge, of the real purchasers of its exact condition, and the satisfactory evidence of adverse possession. Every such case must depend more or less upon its own particular facts, and it Cannot be said here that reasonable doubt was thrown upon the title. In fact the attitude of the respondents appeals much more strongly to a ' court of equity than that of the appellant. The title being free from reasonable doubt, it was proper for the court to allow compensation for the material defects which appeared, and to appoint a referee to determine the amount which should be awarded. This Course was adopted in at least one case in this State (King v. Bardeau, 6 Johns. Ch. 38, 44), and there are numerous other- cases containing dicta that a purchaser may be forced to accept compensation as an indemnity against trivial defects (Smyth v. Sturges, 108 N. Y. 498; Winne' v. Reynolds, 6 Paige, 407; Keating v. Gunther, 10 N. Y. Supp. 734). The cases cited to thé contrary are not in point. (Sternberger v. McGovern, 56 N. Y. 12; Martin v. Colby, 42 Huh, 1; Bonnet v. Babbage, 19 N. Y. Supp. 934; Sabriski v. Veloski, 25 Abb. N. C. 185.) These cases hold that, in the case of a contract for the exchange of real property, if one of the parties is unable to perform in full; he will not be forced to convey what he has and pay damages for the balance' of the property, and that if the vendor in a.contract of sale cannot obtain a conveyance of his wife’s right
In all of these cases there was a substantial breach of the contract which would have justified the vendee in rescinding it. The vendor had forfeited all rights under the contract, and the sole question related to the measure of relief which the vendee might obtain. But here the vendors have not forfeited their rights. The defects are not of sufficient substance to justify a rejection of the title, and the court is practically enforcing the agreement in the vendors’ favor. There is no authority holding that in such a case equity may not do full justice by awarding compensation for immaterial defects. The sum reserved is large, but not in proportion to the value of the property; and it is not awarded to the appellant, but simply set apart as a fund out of which-to pay him what, if anything, the referee shall find to be reasonable.
Rumsey and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.