117 Misc. 340 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1921
The action is to restrain the defendant from interfering with pipes laid across his premises to conduct water to the plaintiffs’ house and premises or with the supply of water therefrom. In 1914 one Thomas Grilday was the owner of the premises on the southerly side of Bast Two Hundred and Thirty-first street, in the borough of The Bronx, New York city, known by the street number 1094 Bast Two Hundred and Thirty-first street, and the defendant was the owner of the premises known as No. 1050 Bast Two Hundred and Thirty-second street in said borough, the said premises being situated on the southerly side of the street last mentioned. By a parol agreement made in that year between Grilday and the defendant a water pipe was laid from the defendant’s house through a lot owned by him and a lot in the rear thereof and through the roadway of East Two Hundred and Thirty-first street' to Crilday’s premises for the purpose of conducting a supply of water from the defendant’s house to that owned by Grilday. Subsequently a receipt was signed by the
Judgment for plaintiffs.