Akasa Holdings, LLC v. 214 Lafayette House, LLC

2019 NY Slip Op 6447
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket155738/16 9279
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 NY Slip Op 6447 (Akasa Holdings, LLC v. 214 Lafayette House, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akasa Holdings, LLC v. 214 Lafayette House, LLC, 2019 NY Slip Op 6447 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Akasa Holdings, LLC v 214 Lafayette House, LLC (2019 NY Slip Op 06447)
Akasa Holdings, LLC v 214 Lafayette House, LLC
2019 NY Slip Op 06447
Decided on September 3, 2019
Appellate Division, First Department
Friedman, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided on September 3, 2019 SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION First Judicial Department
David Friedman,J.P.
Dianne T. Renwick
Barbara R. Kapnick
Marcy L. Kahn
Jeffrey K. Oing,JJ.

155738/16 9279

[*1]Akasa Holdings, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v

214 Lafayette House, LLC, Defendant-Respondent.


Plaintiff appeals from the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Kathryn Freed, J.), entered March 14, 2018, which granted defendant's motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.



Slarskey LLC, New York (David Slarskey and Evan Fried of counsel), for appellant.

Butler, Fitzgerald, Fiveson & McCarthy, P.C., New York (David K. Fiveson and Claudia G. Jaffe of counsel), for respondent.



FRIEDMAN, J.P.

A bona fide purchaser of real property — one who purchases land "in good faith and for a valuable consideration" (Real Property Law § 291) — takes the property free and clear of any prior conveyance, encumbrance or servitude of which the purchaser did not have actual or constructive notice at the time of the purchase (see e.g. Witter v Taggart, 78 NY2d 234, 239 [1991]; Dale A. Whitman, Ann M. Burkhart, R. Wilson Freyermuth & Troy A. Rule, Property [hereinafter, Whitman] § 11.10, at 774 [4th ed 2019] [bona fide purchaser status "has two elements: paying value and taking in good faith with no notice of the prior conveyance"]). The question presented by this appeal is whether plaintiff, in purchasing a parcel of land in Manhattan, had constructive notice that the property (57 Crosby Street, a vacant lot) was burdened by a prior express easement that had been granted for the benefit of the parcel (214 Lafayette Street) diagonally to its rear. This question arises because, although the easement had been properly recorded and indexed upon its creation in 1981, the process of finding it through a title search at the time of plaintiff's purchase in 2011 was complicated by a change that had been [*2]made in 1984 to 57 Crosby's lot number on the Tax Map of the City of New York.[FN1]

In brief, at the beginning of the 1970s, 57 Crosby was designated as Lot 9 of Block 482. At some point after February 2, 1972, 57 Crosby was merged into Lot 30 of Block 482, along with a parcel next door to it and the aforementioned 214 Lafayette [FN2]. As noted, the easement was created in 1981, while 57 Crosby (the servient parcel) and 214 Lafayette (the dominant parcel) were both parts of Lot 30. About three years later, in 1984, Lot 30 was subdivided into three separate lots and 57 Crosby was redesignated as Lot 9, the same designation that had been used for it up until the merger into Lot 30. No document memorializing the subdivision of Lot 30 was indexed against Lot 9, nor was the easement reindexed against Lot 9 at the time of the subdivision. Accordingly, it is undisputed that, in 2011, a 40-year title search on ACRIS of 57 Crosby, under its designation as Lot 9, would have yielded (1) instruments recorded up until the parcel's merger into Lot 30 in the 1970s and (2) instruments recorded after the 1984 subdivision and redesignation of the parcel as Lot 9, but (3) no instruments (such as the declaration of the subject easement) that were recorded during the intervening period, when the parcel was part of Lot 30.

The question that emerges from the foregoing is whether, in 2011 (the year of plaintiff's purchase), a reasonably prudent prospective purchaser would have realized, after completing a search limited to documents indexed against Lot 9, that the results of that search did not provide a full picture of 57 Crosby's title status. The record establishes, as a matter of law, that the need for additional inquiry, not limited to instruments indexed against Lot 9, would have been obvious, given that (as more fully described below) a search limited to Lot 9 at that time would have shown an apparent gap in 57 Crosby's chain of title. Further, had elementary steps then been taken to extend the search beyond Lot 9, the subject easement readily would have come to light. Accordingly, we hold that plaintiff acquired 57 Crosby with constructive notice of the easement and lacks standing as a bona fide purchaser to void it.

Factual Background

We now turn to a more detailed account of this appeal's factual background. The setting of the dispute is a contiguous block of four rectangular properties, each about 100 feet long by 25 feet wide, between Crosby Street (to the west) and Lafayette Street (to the east) in Soho. Two of the properties front on Crosby Street (55 Crosby and 57 Crosby) and the other two front on Lafayette Street (214 Lafayette and 216 Lafayette). At this location (between Spring Street to the north and Broome Street to the south), Crosby and Lafayette are roughly parallel, north-south streets, with the street numbers ascending south to north. Thus, 57 Crosby is next door to, and directly to the north of, 55 Crosby; 216 Lafayette is next door to, and directly to the north of, 214 Lafayette; 57 Crosby and 216 Lafayette adjoin each other at the rear; and 55 Crosby and 214 Lafayette adjoin each other at the rear. The two parcels affected by the easement at issue — 57 Crosby (now owned by plaintiff) and 214 Lafayette (now owned by defendant) — are situated diagonally, or "catty corner" (the colloquial description used by one email in the record), to each other, 57 Crosby to the northwest and 214 Lafayette to the southeast.[FN3]

The 1970s: 57 Crosby, Previously Designated

As Lot 9, is Merged into Lot 30

As of July 1971, all four of the properties described above — 55 Crosby, 57 Crosby, 216 Lafayette, and 214 Lafayette — were owned by Aaron and Rosalyn (or Roslyn) Epstein, a married couple. The Epsteins had purchased 216 Lafayette (which at all relevant times has been designated Lot 28) in 1967 [FN4]. In July 1971, the Epsteins' purchase from Consolidated Edison (Con Ed) of the remaining three parcels was recorded. At that time, 55 Crosby and 214 Lafayette (which, to reiterate, adjoin each other back to back) were designated as Lot 30, and 57 Crosby was designated as Lot 9.

The record contains an ACRIS printout of the results of a search of documents indexed to Lot 9 (57 Crosby) indicating that, after the 1971 deed to the Epsteins, three additional instruments were indexed against Lot 9 in 1971 and 1972, the last of which was a release recorded on February 2, 1972. It is undisputed that, at some unknown point between February 1972 and August 1979, 57 Crosby was merged into Lot 30 (which already included 55 Crosby [*3]and 214 Lafayette). At that point, the Lot 9 designation fell into disuse.

1979: 57 Crosby is Conveyed to a

New Owner While Part of Lot 30

By deed dated July 12, 1979, the Epsteins conveyed all four contiguous properties (55 Crosby, 57 Crosby, 216 Lafayette and 214 Lafayette) to an entity known as Spacemakers Two.

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Related

Akasa Holdings, LLC v. 214 Lafayette House, LLC
2019 NY Slip Op 6447 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2019)

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