223 A.D. 211 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1928
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment dismissing his complaint upon the merits in an action to foreclose a vendee’s lien upon real property, that is, an action to recover a payment of $500 made on a land contract where the plaintiff as purchaser refused to take title on the ground that defendants did not offer him a marketable title. It was tried before the court without a jury. The court found that there was clear record title to the premises except as to a strip four feet wide running full depth of the premises on its westerly side and that as to this four-foot strip there was undoubted title by adverse possession and that the boundary line between the premises in question and the premises immediately adjoining on the west for upwards of fifty years had been fixed and established by the west wall of a brick building located on the premises, the west wall of a shed in the rear thereof and a fence connecting the two, and also by the fact that for upwards of fifty years there had existed immediately abutting said brick dwelling on the west two frame dwellings. It seems to have been decided many times that title by adverse possession or by practical location of boundaries clearly established, although by parol evidence, is a marketable title which the purchaser has been compelled to accept. (Freedman v. Oppenheim, 187 N. Y. 101; Kahn v. Mount, 46 App. Div. 84, 88; Taub v. Spector, 124 id. 158; Ford v. Schlosser, 13 Misc. 205; Katz v. Kaiser, 154 N. Y. 294; Wentworth v. Braun, 78 App. Div. 634; Ruff v. Gerhardt, 73 id. 245; Condon v. Quigley, 209 id. 362; Weil v. Radley, 31 id. 25.)
So, it seems to me, the real question in the appeal is whether the defendants have proved a marketable title free from reasonable doubt.
The property in question is on the south side of Central avenue in Albany, between Robin and Perry streets. Perry street is now called North Lake avenue. In the early days of Albany all that property belonged to the old Dutch Church and was laid out in lots, each 33 feet wide and 160 feet deep. A map known as the old Dutch Church map is in existence and includes lots by number for this whole block on the south side of Central avenue, between Robin and Perry streets. These lots run through to Bradford street on the south and the lots facing Central avenue were really only the north half. So we are dealing with only the north half of lots 60 and 61 but for convenience I will speak of them as lot 60 and lot 61.
Patrick Downey was owner of lots 59, 60 and 61 in June, 1847, and he acquired lot 62 in 1853. Anne Downey was the owner of lots 59-62, inclusive, in 1854. In 1869 she conveyed lot 60 to Bridget McGraw. The defendants’ two-story and basement brick house which, with the balance of the premises, is the subject of this litigation, is located on lot 60 and on the easterly four feet of lot 61 as laid out on the old Dutch Church map. It does not appear in the record just when this brick house was built, but an old city engineer’s map of Central avenue made in 1863, shows an actual occupancy by the defendants’ predecessor in title of thirty-six feet, ten inches, for the premises in question, which coincides
We have proof also of an act of ownership in the collection of rent as far back as 1871 in addition to the acts of ownership of improving and fencing in of the property and actually building a brick house upon it. We have proof of acts of ownership in the collection of rent from 1896 on. Mrs. Gick became a tenant then and remained such for seven years and always paid rent to defendants’ predecessor in title without question. So did Turnbull from 1914 on. Myslow, record owner from 1909 to 1913, says nobody ever made any claim to her. Scuderi, who bought in 1920, says the same thing. Nobody ever questioned the defendants as to ownership until this controversy arose. There is nothing in the record to show that anybody ever did and the presumption is-against it because it has been so freely bought and sold and the defendant Papa says there was a bank mortgage on it when he bought in 1921 and since then the National Savings Bank has taken another mortgage on it.
So there is clear proof of open and notorious occupancy adversely claimed for over thirty years prior to 1913; and ever since 1913, when the deed was corrected to conform to such adverse claim, there has been no adverse claim suggested and banks have loaned upon the strength of the title. Appellant suggests some recognition
If we need any further proof that this is a clear ease of adverse possession and practical location of boundaries it is in the weakness of the record title of the property on the west. It is important to note in this connection that in the successive deeds conveying that property there is a reference to not only lot 61 and the easterly four feet of lot 62 but there is a specific description by metes and bounds in which the starting point (the northwest corner of the property) is given at 194 feet east of Perry street, which is the cross street to the west on Central avenue. According to the old Dutch Church map, such starting point should have been two hundred and six feet and according to O’Hara, the surveyor, who measured the distance from the corner, the distance was two hundred and four feet, eight and one-quarter inches. Thus it is seen that the property to the west is described as including a strip four feet wide on the easterly side of lot 62 and there is a wide discrepancy between the starting point given in the successive deeds to that property and the actual location of it as shown by the old map and present measurement, which makes its record title very uncertain and tends to show the necessity for adopting a rule as to adverse possession and practical location of boundaries.
I reach the conclusion that the situation is free from reasonable doubt and that the court below was right. The facts are undisputed and there is no doubtful question of law. On its facts this case is well supported by such cases as Ruff v. Gerhardt (73 App. Div. 245); Weil v. Radley (31 id. 25; affd., 163 N. Y. 582); Belotti v. Bickhardt (228 id. 296); Kahn v. Mount (46 App. Div. 84, 88); Freedman v. Oppenheim (187 N. Y. 101); Granada v. D’Allesandro (96 Misc. 468); Lane v. Jacobs (166 App. Div. 182); Sherman v. Kane (86 N. Y. 57); Ford v. Schlosser (13 Misc. 205); Katz v. Kaiser (154 N. Y. 294); Wentworth v. Braun (78 App. Div. 634).
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Kirk, P. J., Davis and Whitmyer, JJ., concur; Hill, J., dissents, with an opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Defendant rests his entire case as to the westerly four feet on proof of occupation since 1863. The occupants held without color of title until 1913, when a grantor who had received a deed of thirty-three feet frontage purported to give a deed of thirty-seven feet. The devisees of Fogarty have refused to quitclaim their interest. Two of these devisees, being remainder-men, not in possession, are now under disability. So far as the evidence shows, there may have been disability as to all or part of the owners continuously since 1863. The defendants should negative this possibility. (Woolley v. Newcombe, 87 N. Y. 605.) A purchaser is not required to accept this title. (Shriver v. Shriver, 86 N. Y. 575; Heller v. Cohen, 154 id. 299; Simis v. McElroy, 160 id. 156; Freedman v. Oppenheim, 187 id. 101; Crocker Point Assn. v. Gouraud, 224 id. 343, 350.) At the time the deed was tendered evidence even of occupation had not been collected, and was not exhibited to plaintiff. Even if this proof was sufficient to require plaintiff to accept, the fact that it had not been collected and definitely disclosed to him would justify his refusal to complete the transaction. (Trimboli v. Kinkel, 226 N. Y. 147.)
I dissent, and vote for reversal.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.