169 N.Y. 221 | NY | 1901
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *225 The single question is presented by this appeal, whether the plaintiff was justified in refusing to take title under his contract to purchase from the defendant the house and lot in question for the reason that a portion of the party wall on the southerly side thereof stood wholly upon the adjacent lot.
The position assumed by the plaintiff, in which he has been sustained by the courts below, is, that the defendant having agreed to convey to him a lot with the buildings thereon, described as twenty-seven feet wide and eighty-four feet deep, is in default of his contract, it appearing that a portion of the party wall on the south stands wholly upon the adjacent lot.
It is true that the contract to sell makes no reference to the party walls standing on either side of the building in question, and that the deed tendered conveys the premises by the exact description contained in the contract of sale, and refers to the party walls only at the close of the description of the property.
It appears that these party walls are not maintained under *227
perpetual covenants running with the land, but are to last only so long as the present buildings endure. It also appears that the plaintiff has a beam right in that portion of the party wall standing wholly on the adjacent lot on the south so long as the present buildings stand. The learned Appellate Division stated in this connection as follows: "The right or easement, however, does not answer to confer upon the plaintiff the title to which his contract of purchase entitled him. As he contracted to purchase a lot with a house upon it, he was entitled to receive a conveyance which gave to him a house with walls standing upon the lot conveyed. The contract made no mention of a party wall, and in no particular did it create any exception or limit in any respect the obligation to give perfect title to the lot, the house and its walls. This was the conclusion reached by this court inSpero v. Shultz (
We are of opinion that the position of the Appellate Division cannot be sustained. The fact that these houses were erected by a common owner and afterwards conveyed separately as described, has not been given due weight in the disposition of this case by the courts below. The plaintiff made this contract after a personal inspection of the premises in question, and the condition of affairs, if not known to him, is his own fault.
In Hendricks v. Stark (
In the case from which we have quoted, the objection to taking the title was based upon the claim that a party wall was a legal incumbrance. In the case at bar this claim is not made, as the existence of the party wall is not protected by a perpetual covenant requiring its restoration in case the buildings were destroyed or removed. A party wall existing by virtue of a perpetual covenant running with the land is an incumbrance under the authorities. (O'Neil v. Van Tassel,
The claim made in the case at bar is that, notwithstanding the fact that the party wall on the south is to continue only during the existence of the present buildings and that plaintiff's beam right is secure during that period, nevertheless as he contracted to purchase a lot with a house upon it, he was entitled to receive a conveyance which gave to him a house with walls standing on the lot conveyed.
By the deed tendered to the plaintiff he received all of the land to which he was entitled under the contract of sale. The exact dimensions of the lot as contained in the contract are set forth in this conveyance. The fact that the party wall on the south for a distance of twenty-seven feet stood entirely *229
off the line of the lot purchased was no injury to the plaintiff, but rather a benefit, it being clear that his beam right was secure during the existence of the party wall in question. If this party wall ceased to exist by reason of its destruction or removal, the plaintiff would then be in undisputed possession of the lot which he purchased under the contract of sale. The plaintiff's right to rest the beams of his house in this party wall during its existence, springs from the fact that the common owner who erected the buildings on the three lots created thereby a servitude imposed upon the lot on the south of the premises in question. The northern boundary line of the lot on the south runs through the center of this party wall by the express terms of the deed from the common owners. This right is clear and indisputable, and the plaintiff is subjected to no risk of interference with the existing state of affairs during the continuance of the party wall. This position is fully sustained by Rogers v. Sinsheimer (
The case of Spero v. Shultz (
In the case before us, we have these buildings erected by a common owner, and the plaintiff's beam rights secure to him beyond all question during the existence of the party wall. The fact that a portion of that wall stands wholly upon the lot adjacent has no effect upon the legal rights of the parties. The title tendered to the plaintiff by the defendant was good and marketable, and to hold otherwise would be not only contrary to authority but calculated to unsettle a very large number of titles in the city of New York.
The judgments of the Trial Term and Appellate Division should be reversed, and new trial granted, costs to abide event.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, VANN, LANDON and CULLEN, JJ., concur; MARTIN, J., dissents.
Judgments reversed, etc.