71 N.Y.S. 537 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The appellant is the owner of an island in Mount Sinai harbor, known as Tooker’s island. The respondent is the owner of the mainland near said island, known as Crystal Brook neck or Tooker’s neck. Nathaniel Tooker, the common source of title, died in 1799, leaving a will, the material portions of which read as follows, viz.: “ Item. I give and bequeath to my oldest daughter, Huldah Tooker, all my neck of land that I now live on call (sic) Christie crook neck together with all the salt meadow adjoining said neck. * * *
The plaintiff derived title to the island through mesne conveyances from Nancy Tooker, to whom the island passed under her father’s will. The title to Crystal Brook neck came by successive conveyances. to the defendant. This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for being prevented from spreading on the neck of land in question the hay cut on the island. . The vital point in the plaintiff’s case is involved in the construction and mean ing which should be given to the clause of the will granting this privilege to Nancy, since he cannot succeed in this action unless the privilege granted was of such a character as to be in the nature of an easement which attached and passed as an appurtenance to the land devised to her. It is quite obvious from reading the will that no such easement was granted. The principal requisite- of an easement is that it be imposed upon corporeal real property for the benefit of corporeal real' property, and that there be two distinct estates, the dominant and the seíwient. (Bouv. Inst. 1602; Nellis v. Munson, 108 N. Y. 453.)
The will did not provide in terms or by implication that Nancy shall have the privilege of spreading Or carting the hay cut on the island or. from any other land devised to her. No distinct dominant estate is described or mentioned in the will, to which the privilege could attach or be appurtenant. The contention that the clause should be read as if the testator had written: “ It is my will that Nancy should have the privilege always of spreading hay that she may cut on the island,” is subject to the objection that such a construction requires something to be inserted that her testator never assented to. He used no words which necessarily connected the privilege granted with the occupation or enjoyment of any land owned or devised by him. There is nothing in the will to indicate that the testator intended to connect the privilege granted with another tenement. The words, “ hay that she may cut in the har
It is clear from the provisions of this clause standing alone that the privilege impressed upon the land was intended as a mere personal privilege or right in gross in favor of the plaintiff’s grantor which terminated with her death. The intention of the testator to create an easement, right or privilege personal to the plaintiff’s grantor also appears from the fact that the grant is without words of inheritance dr perpetuity, which was then necessary to convey anything more than a life estate. Prior to the adoption of the Revised Statutes (1 R. S. 748, § 1), in 1830, the term “heirs” or other words of inheritance were required to create or convey an estate in fee.
It is a familiar proposition that a testator is always presumed to use the words in which he expresses himself according to their strict and primary acceptation, unless from the context of the will it appears that he has used them in a different sense. (Harvey v. Olmsted, 1 N. Y. 489.)
It is evident that the testator knew that words of inheritance were necessary, from the use of them in the clauses of the will devising the real estate, and the omission of them in granting the privilege must be construed as evidence of his intention to limit the grant to the lifetime of RTancy. The whole instrument shows an unmistakable intention that the privilege should not be permanent or apply to any one but the grantee named. That was the established construction of a devise containing no words of limitation at the time of the making of the will. It is the literal and hence natural interpretation of the language used, and as the parties stand in the place of their common grantor each is held to a strict construction of the? words of the grant.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.