121 N.Y.S. 884 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
This action has been twice tried. The first trial resulted in a directed verdict for plaintiff, which was afterwards, on defendant’s motion, set aside upon the sole ground that testimony of. deceased witnesses taken on the hearing of a prior action between the predecessor in title of plaintiff and the predecessor in title of defendant, in which the right of possession of the same premises, which are the subject-matter of the present controversy, was involved, had been improperly excluded by the court. That order was affirmed on appeal to this court. (129 .App. Div. 935.)
The premises, title to which is in dispute, are about 260 feet in length and 50 feet in width in the northeasterly corner of the town of Irondequoit, near the southerly shore of Lake Ontario, and adjoin lands Of the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg railroad, of which plaintiff is the lessee, on the north thereof. ■ Both parties claim title to this parcel under conveyances thereof from different grantors. Each party claims to trace title by conveyance back to a deed from the Duke of Cumberland and others to John Hornby, dated September 1, 1815, conveying premises within one or the other of two parcels of which the premises in question in this action áre included. These two parcels are described, one as a lot in the north part of township No. 14, seventh range (now Irondequoit), bounded on the east by
- The Johnson map shows the eastern and northern boundaries of the 100-acre tract as the shore of the bay and the shore of the lake respectively. As shown on these maps and by oral evidence, near the northeast corner of the tract a shallow arm or cove extended Westerly from the bay into the mainland a short distance, narrowing from its mouth.to its westerly end. The land-inclosing this'cove-extended north of and easterly therefrom a considerable distance,
Plaintiff’s title is sufficiently supported for the purpose of establishing its. right to maintain this action, it appearing from the evidence that more than sixty years before the trial Samuel Bradstreet, one of its predecessors in title, built a house which he occupied and also built a barn upon and cultivated and used the 100-acre parcel as a farm. Bradstreet’s possession was under á deed of the whole premises which included the land to the shore of the bay on' the east and the lake shore on the north. The premises in question are within these boundaries. • A deed from a person in possession presumptively establishes title. '(Miller v. Long Island P. JEt. Go., 71 N. Y. 380,) • Possession once established is presumed to continue till the contrary is shown. (Lazarus v. Phelps, 156 IT. 8. 202, 205.) Defendant’s- right of possession must, therefore, rest upon a title established by adverse possession. The acts and occupation disclosed' by the evidence," upon which defendant must rely .to establish adverse possession, aré the acts and occupation of Alfred ' Bronson, and the rights of ownership exercised by him over the western part of the premises in question, 165 feet in lengthy title to which defendant claims under his deed thereof from Bronson . in 1902. The eastern part of the premises, claimed by defendant, came to him by mesne conveyances from Bronson and others it is true, but the Bronson title, if any, had passed from the Bron-. sons' by conveyance as early as 1855. Bronson’s adverse possession being limited, as the evidence discloses, to this western portion, even if it were established as to that part, would leave the plaintiff’s . title to the eastern part unaffected thereby. As to the western part of the premises it appears that in December, 1893, Bronson, who was then, if ever, its owner, began an action in the Supreme Court against Letsie A. Allen, who was one of plaintiff’s predecessors in title, the complaint in which-lie verified December 12, 1893, to recover possession of a parcel of land of which this 165-foot parcel was a part. In this complaint he alleges “ That the defendant is in ' possession of said land and has been for-several years last past, and the defendant has wrongfully and unlawfully ousted the plaintiff therefrom, and the said defendant now wrongfully and unlawfully
Some vague testimony appears in the record, that at one time a cedar post marked the recognized corner of the Woodman 100 acres and the corner of the town. But its location is too indefinite to raise a question of fact as to the practical location of the dividing line between the 100 acres and the sand bar. Some witnesses
Defendant also pleads in abatement the pendency of a former action, involving the same subject-matter. As early as 1882'the Eome, Water-town and Ogdensburg Bailroad Company, plaintiff’s predecessor in title, began an action against Albert Bronson to recover possession of the same parcel of land, which -is the subject of the present dispute, which it is conceded was then in his possession. The action was referred to successive referees, and testimony was taken; but decision was not made because each referee died before finally disposing of the case. The last referee died many years ago. Hothing has since been done in the action. The defendant is now dead, and the plaintiff has parted with its right of possession of the premises. Defendant in the present- action testifies that he bought -the property in question without knowledge that the title was in dispute. Ho notice of pendency of this action was filed, and of course no-judgment roll was ever made up. The statute provides (Code Civ. Proc. § 1524) that, except in cases not material to be here considered, a final judgment in an action to recover real property, rendered upon the trial of an issue of fact, is conclusive as to the title established in. the action upon .each party'against whom it is rendered, and every person claiming from, through or under him by title accruing, either after the judgment roll or after notice of pend-ency of the action is filed. A similár provision as to the time from which a judgment rendered otherwise than upon a trial of an issue of fact in such an action shall be conclusive upon such persons. under the conditions therein specified is found in section 1526. It would seem ■ to follow that in no event could this defendant be bound by any judgment rendered in the former action even if it. were revived. Defendant’s counsel refers us to Sheridan v. Andrews (49 N. Y. 478) as an authority in point that decision, of the prior action would bind the' parties to the present action. The statute in relation to actions of ejectment in force at that time fixed the commencement of the action as the time from which a judgment in such
In specifying plaintiff’s estate in the. property, recovery of which is directed by the verdict, it is apparently by inadvertence stated “ that the plaintiff is the owner in fee of the property in dispute.” The complaint shows, and the proof establishes, that plaintiff is the lessee of the premises. No reference is made by counsel to this inaccuracy, and doubtless it may properly'be corrected when judgment is entered on the verdict.
The defendant’s exceptions should be overruled and motion denied, with costs; and judgment ordered for plaintiff on the verdict.
’ All concurred, except Kruse, J., who dissented, upon the ground that the trial- court erred in directing a verdict for- the plaintiff: (1) That the evidence supports a finding that the plaintiff’s paper title does not extend east beyond a point in line with the west end of head of the cove as it existed when the Woodman deed was given; or, at least, not east of the so-called Johnson traverse line across the sandbar, and that the sandy lowland lying north of the cove is not covered by the Woodman deed ; (2) also that the question of adverse possession should have been submitted to the jury.
Defendant’s exceptions overruled, motion for new trial denied,, with costs, and judgment directed for the plaintiff upon the verdict, with costs. ■ '
See H. Y. Supr. Ot. Cases and Briefs of Counsel [State Law Libr.], Yol. 7315, Ho. 7, p. 130.— [Bep.