68 N.Y. 246 | NY | 1877
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *248 The appellants, Cossett and Higgins, were severally, and not jointly, the purchasers of several lots of ground in the city of New York, at a sale by auction under the decree of the court, of a portion of the real estate of which Valentine Mott, the testator of the respondents, died seized. Each refused to complete his purchase and accept the title offered, and applied to the court to be relieved from their contracts, and for a return of the moneys paid at the time of the sale. The plaintiffs and respondents made cross applications to compel them to accept the title and pay the purchase-money. The Supreme Court denied the applications of the appellants, and granted those of the respondents, and the purchasers bring their appeals to this court.
The objections to the title, except as to two lots formerly a part of the old Bloomingdale road, bought by Cossett, are common to both appellants. The lots last named were purchased separate from all the other lots bought by Cossett, and while a title in fee to the other parcels was put up and sold, the vendors in express terms offered for sale these lots "as forming the westerly half of the Bloomingdale road, then closed," and "the estate, right, title, and interest of the testator therein." This was stated and understood by Cossett at *250 the time of his purchase. The road had been closed pursuant to chapter 697, of the Laws of 1867, and the statute assumed to, and in terms did, vest the title to the fee of the road to the center in the owners in fee of the adjoining lands. The testator was the owner of the lands abutting on the west side of the road, and entered upon and took possession of the portion sold to the appellant Cossett, and his executors were in possession up to the time of the sale.
It does not appear that the title has been questioned, or that any adverse claim has been made to the lots. The title is apparently good and indefeasible, but whether it is or not is not material upon this appeal. The purchase Cossett will, under the deed to which he will be entitled, get precisely all that was offered to be sold, and for which he bid, and which he agreed to purchase, viz., all the estate, right, title and interest of Dr. Mott, the testator, to the lots named. The purchaser took the risk of the title, and was not misled or deceived in respect to it, but with full knowledge of the public statute under which the vendors made title, and of every circumstance affecting the title, entered into the contract of purchase, and cannot, upon any fact disclosed in the papers before us, be relieved from his undertaking. There was neither fraud, warranty or mistake in the sale or purchase, and he should perform the contract on his part.
A more serious question is presented in respect to lots 6, 7, 8 and 9, bought by Cossett in one parcel, and all the lots sold to Higgins except lots 48 and 49. The lots, the title to which is disputed, are either wholly or in part within the exterior lines of a lane twenty feet in width, leading from the old Bloomingdale road west in the direction of the Hudson river, or were sold in the same parcel with lots partially or wholly within the boundaries of such lane. It is conceded that if the title to any part of the lands which were put up and sold as one parcel, although consisting of several distinct lots, is defective, the purchaser is not bound to accept and pay for any one of the lots included in the one sale. This necessarily follows from the fact that the lots were put up and *251 bought together, and the purchaser is entitled to his whole purchase. He cannot be compelled to take a conveyance of the lots to which a good title can be made, if the title of any embraced in the same purchase is defective. Non constant that he would have bought any if he could not have all, or that he would have given the same proportionate price for a part of the lots that he would pay for all. The contract for each parcel was an entirety, and if the plaintiffs and respondents cannot perform specificallyin toto, they cannot compel a performance in part. The title to all the lands came by several mesne conveyances from the heirs at law of Charles W. Apthorpe, who died in 1797. The title of Dr. Mott is made through two deeds from the heirs, the one of lands north of the lane to David M. Clarkson, bearing date October 15, 1799, and the other of lands south of the lane to Oliver Vanderbilt, bearing date February 28, 1800, and if by these deeds a title to the land within the boundary lines of the lane did not pass to the grantees respectively, each taking to the center of the lane, the vendors had no title to the fee unless a title had been acquired by adverse possession, which is not shown. If the grantees under those deeds took merely an easement in the lane as a private way of which they had the user in common with their grantors and their heirs and assigns, the objection to the title to the parcels affected by it must be sustained.
The lands were at the time of these conveyances suburban lands, and used for agricultural purposes. The Bloomingdale road from which the lane started was on the east of the lands, and the lane gave access to lands of the grantors between the parcels granted and the Hudson river, and perhaps extended, either directly or by uniting with other lanes or private roads, to the river on the west. The lands of the grantors were bounded on the west by the river, and the grants to Clarkson and Vanderbilt only conveyed a portion of the same on the east and adjoining the Bloomingdale road. The family dwelling was between the portions conveyed and the river, and one means of access to *252 it, and other parts of the grantors' lands not sold, was through the lane before mentioned. The lane was in existence and in use at the time of the conveyances, and continued to be used until Dr. Mott acquired the title to the lands embraced in the conveyances in 1833 and 1834, and since that time it has been closed by a gate, but was for a time used more or less as a lane and a road or highway, but not by the public. The lane has ceased to be used as such, and Dr. Mott, in his lifetime, to some extent, used the land for other purposes, and the necessity for its continuance as a lane no longer exists. The opening of the streets and avenues of the city in the vicinity, and through the premises conveyed to Clarkson and Vanderbilt as well as the other lands owned by the grantors, as a means of access to which the lane was a convenience, if not a necessity, has removed all occasion for it, and as said by the learned counsel for the respondents, it "has ceased to have any attribute of a way or private road."
Whether, notwithstanding this fact, the title to the fee of the land passed to the parties Clarkson and Vanderbilt, depends upon the true interpretation of the grants to them, for unless it did so pass the vendors have nothing but a possession with the legal title to an easement in loco.
The lane is not included within the boundaries, that is, the measurement by courses and distances given in the deeds, and if it passed at all, it so passed because of the intent of the grantors as expressed by the terms of the deed, read as a whole, to convey the same. When lands are granted bounded upon a highway or a stream not navigable, unless by the terms of the grant, or by necessary implication, the highway or the bed of the stream are excluded, a title will pass to the center of the highway or stream. The reason is obvious. Ordinarily, in a conveyance of that kind, there is no purpose to be served in the retention by the grantor of a narrow strip of land along the boundaries of the land conveyed, and between it and the lands of other proprietors, or in the bed of a stream, and the intent to grant them will, therefore, be presumed by a conveyance of the adjacent lands bounded "by," *253
or "upon," or "along," such highway or stream, or other equivalent phrases. It depends upon the intent of the parties to be gathered from the description of the premises read in connection with the other parts of the deed, and by reference to the situation of the lands and the condition and relation of the parties to those and other lands in the vicinity, whether the grant extends to the center of the road or stream. This is the recognized rule of interpretation, and it is a question of interpretation and intent. (Jackson v. Hathaway, 15 J.R., 447; Seneca Indians v. Knight,
The grantors do not reserve the use of the lane as would be proper had the fee of it been granted, but grant the use, as the owner of the fee might well do, thus, in terms, granting two things, the fee of the land on the north side of the lane and an easement in the lane itself. The boundary along the Striker lane, on the north or first course of the boundary, is the same as in the twenty-feet lane in question on the south, but we do not learn that it has been sought to extend the grant so as to include any part of that lane. The boundary upon each, and the grant of the use of each, is the same in all respects. This grant, when read in the light of the circumstances of the parties and the locality, goes far to *255 control and limit the effect which but for it might be be given to the description of the land granted. Standing as it does in juxtaposition with the description of the land, and following it, and purporting to describe a separate and distinct right granted, to the passing of which the clause was thought necessary, it is a part of the description of the whole premises, and all the rights granted, and avows the intent to be in accordance with the words of the grant, viz.: To grant the land described, and an easement in lands outside of the actual boundaries.
The true meaning of the description, therefore, is, that the line brought to the "side of the lane," and made to run "thence along the same," was intended to run along the side "of the lane," and the word "same," as used, means, not "the lane," but the "side of the lane" particularly mentioned.
The deed to Vanderbilt, under which a title to the south half of the lane is claimed, is still more indicative of an intent to exclude the lane from the lands granted. The boundary line on the Bloomingdale road, although the course and distance of the line is given, is described as along the "west side of Bloomingdale road," which might carry the conveyance to the center line, but when that line is brought by measurement "to a lane on the south side of Mr. Clarkson's land" (the lane in question), the description carries it not in terms along the lane or the side of the lane, but "thence north fifty-five degrees, west twenty-three chains forty links to Hudson river aforesaid," and the whole description closes with stating the quantity of land included within the boundaries, "according to a map" annexed to the deed. The boundary lines, by the map, exclude the lane, although the north boundary line of the granted premises, as given in the descriptive part of the deed, and as laid down on the map, is coincident with the south line of the lane. This deed does not grant with the lands a right to use the lane, but does grant the right to use a private road on the south side of the granted lands from the Bloomingdale road to the wharf on *256 the river, and the privilege of using the wharf. It does not appear that any claim was ever made to any part of the lane, or a right to use the same, by the grantees under the deed or their successors in interest, unless Dr. Mott's possession and user may be regarded as such. The use of the lane remained in the heirs of Apthorpe, and those entitled under the deed to Clarkson.
Those taking under the Vanderbilt deed had no occasion, so far as appears, to use the lane, and could not have closed it by an entry upon, and taking possession of, the south half of it, and notwithstanding the grantors reserved no right in the lane, it is very evident they parted with no interest in it, and had the use of it.
The subsequent conveyances by and through which the title to the premises conveyed to Clarkson and Vanderbilt became vested in Dr. Mott, need not be especially considered, as they could not act retroactively and add to, or vary the effect of, the deeds mentioned. They differ from the deeds to Clarkson and Vanderbilt, and from each other in the description as well as other parts, and the condition of the lands and the relation of the parties to the lands conveyed and in the immediate neighborhood, may have been very different than in 1799 and 1800, when the first deeds were given. It might have been important to determine what apparently passed under them to Dr. Mott, had the evidence in the case presented the question of adverse possession. But as the evidence did not show an adverse possession for a sufficient length of time under claim of title to bar the real owner, we are not called upon to pass upon those deeds and mesne conveyances.
If this lane had been a public highway, the Vanderbilt deed would not have included any part of it within the case ofJackson v. Hathaway (15 J.R., 447), which has never been questioned as authority, and as the respondents must make title under that deed to the south half of the lane, the title is to that extent defective. The boundary in the case quoted began at a stake by the side of the road, and ran thence by specified courses and distances, which did not include the road, *257 but did give the quantity of land called for. The Vanderbilt deed conveyed the land bounded by lines, the courses and distances of which are given, and which embrace the area called for, and which bring the plot to the south line of the lane, but do not include any part of it, and that line is as distinct a monument as was the stake in the case quoted.
The original owners had a valid and very obvious reason for retaining the ownership and control of the lane, and the intent to do so and exclude the same from the grants under which the executors of Dr. Mott claim title, is very manifest, not only by the descriptive terms, but other parts of the deeds, and the circumstances under which the deeds were made. The case has been treated as if the boundary upon a lane of this character running through the lands of the grantor, and upon one side of the granted premises was to be treated as a highway when constituting a boundary line. But it is not conceded that the effect of a conveyance of lands bounded by such a lane, when the lane has no connection with the granted lands, and its use is not necessary to the full enjoyment of the same, is in all cases the same as when lands are bounded by a public highway. Codman v. Evans (1 Allen, 443) and Jones v. Cowman (2 Sandf. S.C.R., 234) are very much in point and adverse to the claim of the respondents. In the first case named the land was conveyed, bounded southerly on a passageway lying between the land granted and the house of the grantor, and the grant was described by measurements which did not include the passageway, and the privilege of using the passageway was conferred by the deed upon the grantee, and reference was made to a plot or map of the granted premises which did not include the passage, and it was held that the grantee took only an easement in, and did not acquire title to, any part of the way. In all its controlling features the deed was quite like the deed to Vanderbilt, and not unlike that to Clarkson. In the case reported by Mr. Sandford (supra), the premises as here were bounded by exact measurement, and two sides by two several streets and southerly by the northerly line or side *258 of T.B.'s lane, and further described as lot 21 on a map referred to, and it was held that the grant did not convey to the center of the lane. The title to the lane remains in the heirs of Apthorpe or their assigns, and is not upon the evidence or the facts reported by the referee in the executors of Dr. Mott, the present vendors.
It is of no practical value to the owners, whoever they may be, for the owners of the adjacent lands on the north, and possibly on the south or west, or both, are entitled to have it kept open as a lane, and kept in repair by the ratable contributions of the owners of the tract, and it is not at all probable that the present occupants will ever be disturbed in their possession and use of the land, but the fact remains that the title is not perfect, and may not be marketable, and is not, therefore, such a title as a purchaser at a judicial sale can be compelled to take. (Seaman v. Hicks, 8 Paige, 655.)
Had Dr. Mott owned the fee of the land with the exclusive right to use the same and also the lands upon each side of it, the unity of title would have operated to merge the easement, and his title would have been perfect. (Corning v. Gould, 16 Wend., 539; Pope v. O'Hara,
The order should be modified accordingly, and as modified affirmed, without costs to either party as against the other in this court.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly.