123 N.Y.S. 1012 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
The plaintiffs seek to enjoin the impairment of their easements in a park. In October, 1880, Dubois, the ownér of land, caused a map thereof (attached to the complaint) to be filed in the office of the clerk of the county of Queens, wherein the land was, and there
The map shows a square marked Park,” surrounded by lots and avenues. The plaintiff, the Village' of Sea Cliff, was organized in 1883. At that date Dubois retained his title to the lands, and the complaint alleges that he “ did not in any manner or form revoke the dedication of the said lands as a park made by him as aforesaid,” and “ immediately after the incorporation of the said village, and while the said dedication remained in full force and effect, the' plaintiff Village of Sea Cliff duly accepted the dedication of the lands referred to-in paragraph ‘ III’ hereof as a park, and since its incorporation has had the care and control of the same as a. park for the benefit of the public, has maintained and repaired the same, and made improvements thereon; during all of said time the said lands have freely and without molestation been used by the general public as a park;” and that at no time since the dedication has the land comprising the park been assessed for the purposes of taxation, nor appeared upon the assessment roll' for such purposes, nor has any person paid any taxes or assessments thereon for the village of Sea Cliff or the town of Oyster Bay.-
The defendant, succeeding to the - interest of Dubois in the park since the 22d of June, 1909, has attempted to assume control and dominion of the land, in the park and to prevent and deprive the plaintiffs and -the general public from using the land as a ■ park. Some of the detailed acts of the defendant in such regard sufficiently support this charge.
The defendant demurs upon grounds in effect reduced to three : 1. That all the plaintiffs who are lot owners have separate property, separately acquired, claiming separate - easements, and have separate and distinct causes of action and cannot join, 2. That the village of Sea Cliff is not united in interest with any of the other ' plaintiffs either in possession or title ór interest, and attempts to allege a cause of action totally distinct from that of another plaintiff. 3. That not sufficient facts are alleged to constitute a cause of action in favor of any of the plaintiffs.
These allegations show the pleader’s conclusion that the filing of the map showing a park, the sale of surrounding lots by reference, to the map, and free travel by the public over the park and use thereof since 1880, show a dedication to the village. Although the conclusion is limited to these facts, the complaint shows, as already stated, that since .1883 the village has had the “ care and control of the same as a" park for the benefit of the public, has maintained and repaired the same, and made improvements thereon,” and that it has “ freely and without molestation been used by the general public as a park.” These combined facts show both dedication and acceptance. A park as regards the present question partakes of the nature of a street, and dedication of a street would be inferred from asimilar state of facts. The park must remain such for the surrounding households, for those licensed to share their privileges. But shall it be said that it is not a park wherein the public have like privilege ? The statement in the complaint is that the public have traveled over it and used it as a park for more than twenty years, and that meantime all the burdens that usually accompany ownership, repair, improvement, maintenance, have been transferred from the owner of the title to the village, so that the former has not been even regarded as a taxpayer for the same. This status has existed for nearly thirty years, undisturbed by such owner. By his deeds the owner proclaimed that the. reserved place was a
The rule that when owners of land in a city or village lay out the same into lots, with streets and avenues intersecting the same, and. sell the lots with reference to such streets and avenues, they cannot thereafter deprive their grantees of the benefit of having such streets and avenues kept open, applies to a similar dedication of urban lands to be used as an open square' or public walk or .park.. (Trustees of Watertown v. Gowen, 4 Paige, 510.)
When lands are dedicated to the use of the inhabitants of a city or incorporated village for a public square, a bill may be filed in the name .of the corporation to restrain a nuisance thereon or to protect the equitable rights of the corporators to the use of the public square or land. (Trustees of Watertown v. Cowen, supra; Burnet v. Bagg, 67 Barb. 154.) In the second case it was decided that the .owners of lots fronting on a square dedicated to public use, not grantees of an interest or easement therein, could maintain Suit against the corporation to enforce the trust, but could not in tlieir own names proceed against a stranger to the trust unless Ms acts were productive of special injury to them.
The grantee of a lot adjoining a public square, who has a special covenant from the original owner of the square that it shall be kept' open for the benefit of the lot or a subsequent grantee, may file a bill in equity to restrain the grantor from violating the covenant, and may join with the corporation in such suit. (Trustees of Watertown v. Cowen, supra, where there was such express covenant.)
Each purchaser of a lot acquired as above stated, by implied covenant, has an easement that may not be abridged. (Johnson v. Shelter Island G. & C. M. Assn., 122 N. Y. 330, where, however, it was held that the map did not designate any portion of the lands as public grounds.)
The holding in Trustees of Watertown v. Gowen (supra), that .the abutting owner and corporation may unite, is sustained by the holding that, where a nuisance is a common although not a joint injury to
The interlocutory judgment should be reversed and the demurrer overruled, with costs.
Jenks, Burr, Rich and Care, JJ., concurred.
Interlocutory judgment reversed and demurrer overruled, with , costs.'