9 N.Y.S. 829 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The plaintiffs commenced this action in May, 1887, for the purpose of procüring an injunction to restrain the operation of the
Upon the trial in the court below, one of the grounds upon which it would appear that the learned court disposed of the question before it was that the plaintiff, the purchaser at the auction sale, had no notice of the Schnarr judgment, or of its scope. If that judgment had been obtained by Daniel Schnarr, and had been paid under the circumstances disclosed in this case, it seems to us that the law would presume that the purchaser had notice of all the rights which the Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company had acquired by reason of the judgment, because it was in possession of the easement. It is a familiar principle of law that where a party is in possession of property, whether real or personal, it is notice to all the world of all the rights which he claims in respect to such property. A party in possession of real estate under an unrecorded deed is protected by his possession, as that is notice to the world that he has some claim, and puts the purchaser of that property upon inquiry, and lie is held not to be a purchaser in good faith until he exhausts the means of ascertaining the nature of the claim of the person in possession. Therefore the defendant in this action, being in possession of these easements, was giving notice to all the world of a claim in respect thereto,
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.