108 N.Y.S. 289 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This action was brought to partition certain real property on West Ninety-sixth street in the city of New York, the complaint alleging that the plaintiff and the defendant Adolph Béhn are seized and possessed as tenants in common of the property in question. The complaint also alleges that the defendants Disch, Cunningham and Ogden claim to have some estate, right, title, interest, lien, claim or demand. in and upon said premises, the exact nature of which is unknown to the plaintiff, but which is a cloud upon the title to said premises and upon the said undivided share therein of the plaintiff and the defendant Behn. The complaint then demands judgment for a partition of the property; that it be adjudged that neither of the defendants above mentioned nor the city of New York has. any estate, right, title, interest, lien, claim or demand in and upon said premises or any part thereof; and that the property be sold and the proceeds distributed according to the rights of the respective parties. The answer of defendant Behn admitted the allegations of the complaint and asked judgment in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. The defendant Disch answered denying that the city of New York had any claim upon the premises, alleging that since February 7, 1902, the defendant Disch had been and is seized and possessed in fee simple absolute of the premises in question, comprising the easterly half of the old Bloomingdale road, and since the 27th of February, 1906, has been and is seized and possessed of the remainder of the real property described in the complaint as a tenant under certain tax leases from the defendant the city of New York, for the term of 1,000 years; that thereafter while the whole of the real property described in the complaint was and is in this defendant’s possession as said owner and lessee thereof respectively, and on or about June 4,1906, the defendant Behn executed a written instrument purporting to grant three undivided one-quarter parts of the premises described, in the complaint to the plaintiff; that such grant is illegal and void on the ground that the real property was and still is in the possession of this defendant who was then and
Upon the trial the court found that by -deed" dated February 6,. 1850, certain lots Nos. ,26 to 39, both inclusive, on a map of property, between Tenth avenue and the Bloomingdale road and between Ninety-fifth and Ninety-sixth streets, were conveyed to Phillips - and Cohen by a conveyance which was sufficient to convey to the grantees the fee of the Blooming.dale road upon which the.property conveyed .abutted; that in pursuance..of chapter .697 of the Laws of 1867 Bloomingdale road between Ninety-fifth and Ninety-sixth streets was declared .to be and was -abandoned and closed on and after March 8, 1868;. that. Phillips conveyed his interest in • this property to Cohen by a conveyance which included the fee of the Bloomingdale road by deed delivered February- 17, 1874; that Cohen conveyed the property subject to thé saíne description to one Higgins by deed dated November 3? 1875; that Higgins died
The property sought to be partitioned commences on the northerly side of Ninety-fifth street distant 168 feet westerly from the corner formed by the intersection of the. westerly line of Amsterdam avenue and the northerly side of Ninety-fifth.street, running thence westerly to the center of the old Bloomingdale road so that it is quite clear that none of the property described in the complaint was ever conveyed by Cohen to Doyle, by’Doyle to Lynes, or by ¡the executors of Lynes to Disch,
This judgment was, therefore, right and should be affirmed, with costs.
Patterson, P. J., Laug-hlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.