Ahern v. . Steele

22 N.E. 193, 115 N.Y. 203, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 295, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1202
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 193 (Ahern v. . Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahern v. . Steele, 22 N.E. 193, 115 N.Y. 203, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 295, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1202 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinions

Earl, J.

The will of John Gardner came under consideration in Greason v. Keteltas (17 N. Y. 491), and it was there held that the trustee under that will took an estate, in fee determinable when the purpose of the trust should cease, and that such a trustee had power at law to lease for a term which might extend beyond the period of his trust estate. The lease executed by the trustee to Phelan for a term of live years from May 1, 1880, was, therefore, valid for the whole term, and had nearly four years to run at the time of Mrs. De Dion’s death, and more than two years at the time of the accident. Hence any reasoning based upon the postulate that the defendants could have terminated the lease before the ' end of the term will lead to inevitable error.

There was no proof, even if that were in any way important, that the pier was out of repair in 181Y, when Gardner i~died. It became out of repair and defective at some time during the existence of the trust estate, and in that condition it was demised by the trustee. By demising the pier while it was in such a condition as to be a nuisance, the trustee was guilty of a misfeasance, and during the existence of his estate, notwithstanding the lease, he would have been responsible for. I any damage caused by the nuisance. Even if he had been I the trustee of Mrs. De Dion’s children, and they had been the | beneficiaries under the trust, they would not have been i responsible for any nuisance created or permitted by him; - and so it was held in People v. Townsend (3 Hill, 479). But he was not trustee for them; they derived no title or benefit .from him, and had no connection whatever with him. They took their title under the will of John Gardner, and were in no way responsible for what the trustee did, or omitted to do, upon the trust estate.

We have, then, this question for our determination: Are the children of Mrs. De Dion, who became full owners' of *209 this pier at the death of then* mother, subje^^o'ajralid outstanding lease, responsible for a nuisance ^pitted thereon during the existence of the precedent estate, without any notice thereof ? I have carefully examined the English and American authorities, and confidently assert that there is not an authority to- be found in the books imposing such responsibility.

It is not the general rule that an owner of land is, as such, responsible for any nuisance thereon. It is the occupier, and he alone, to whom such responsibility generally and prima facie, attaches. (Pretty v. Bickmore, L. R, 8 C. P. 4 01; Kirby v. Boylston Market Assn., 14 Gray, 249; City of Lowell v. Spaulding, 4 Cush. 277; Inhabitants of Oakham v. Holbrook, 11 id. 299.) The owner is responsible if he creates a nuisance and maintains it; if he creates a nuisance and then demises the land with the nuisance thereon, although he is out of occupation; if the nuisance was erected on the land by a prior owner, or by a stranger, and he knowingly maintains it; if he has demised premises, and covenanted to keep them in repair, and omits to repair, and thus they become a nuisance; if he demises premises to be used as a nuisance, or for a business, or in a way so that they will necessarily become a nuisance. In all such cases I believe there is now no dispute that the owner would be liable. But an owner who has demised premises for a term during which they become ruinous, and thus a nuisance, is not responsible for the nuisance unless he has covenanted to repair. It has even been held in some cases that an owner may demise premises so defective and out of repair as to be a nuisance, and if he binds his tenant to make the repairs he is not responsible for the nuisance during the term. (Pretty v. Bickmore, supra ; Gwinnell v. Eamer, L. R., 10 C. P. 658; Leonard v. Storer, 115 Mass. 86.) But these cases are not in entire harmony with the decisions in our own state, and probably would not now be generally received as authority in this country or in England.

*210 7 A grantee or devisee of premises, upon which there is a nuisance at the time the title passes, is not responsible for the nuisance until he has had notice thereof, and in some cases until he has been requested to- abate the same. The authorities to this effect are so numerous and uniform that the rule which they establish ought no longer to be open to question. One of the earliest, if not the earliest case in which this rule was announced, is PennruddoeMs Oase (5 Coke, 100 b), where it was resolved that an action lies against one who erects a nuisance without any request made to abate it, but not against the feofee, unless he does not remove the nuisance after request; and in Pierson v. Gleam, (14 N. J. Law, 37), Chief Justice Hornblower said: “The law, as settled in PennruddoeMs Oase, has never, I believe, been seriously questioned since.” In Plumer v. Harper (3 N. H. 88), ¡Richardson, Oh. J., said: “ When he who erects the nuisance conveys the land he does not transfer the liability to his grantee, for it is agreed in all the books that the grantee is not Hable until upon request he refuses to remove the nuisance.” In Woodman v. Tufts (9 N. H. 88) it was held that where a dam was erected, and land flowed by the grantor of an individual, the grantee will not be liable for damages in continuing the dam and flowing the land as before, except on notice of damages and request to remove the nuisance or withdraw the water. In Eastman v. Company (44 N. H. 144) it was held that no notice»or request to abate the nuisance is necessary before bringing suit-against the original wrong-doer in such cases for the damages doné; but that the grantee of the nuisance is not liable to the party injured until, upon request made, he refuses to remove the nuisance. Sargent, J., writing the opinion, said: • “ The doctrine of the cases in this state and elsewhere is that he who erects a nuisance does not by conveying the land to another transfer the HabiHty for the erection to the grantee; and the grantee is not liable until upon request he refuses to remove the nuisance, for the reason that he cannot know -until such request but the dam was rightfully erected; and there can be no injury in holding to this *211 doctrine, as the original wrong-doer continues liable notwithstanding his alienation.” To the same effect is Carleton v. Redington (21 N. H. 291). In Johnson v. Lewis (13 Conn. 303), where it appeared, in an action for the obstruction of a water-course by raising a dam, that the dam creating the obstruction was erected by the defendant’s grantor, it was held that the plaintiff- could not recover without proving a special request to the defendant to remove the obstruction. Sherman, J., writing the opinion, said: “ The law is well settled that a purchaser of the property on which a nuisance is erected is not liable for its continuance, unless he has been requested to remove it.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 193, 115 N.Y. 203, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 295, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahern-v-steele-ny-1889.