Auburn & Syracuse Electric Railroad v. Headley

119 Misc. 94
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 119 Misc. 94 (Auburn & Syracuse Electric Railroad v. Headley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auburn & Syracuse Electric Railroad v. Headley, 119 Misc. 94 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

In a deed in which plaintiff’s predecessor is the grantee, and the lessor of the defendant is a successor to the grantor, is found the following clause: “ The premises above described are subject to the following reservation, easements, contracts and reservations; to-wit: The parties of the first part reserve from the premises aforesaid a street or highway running from the bridge that now crosses the new channel or outlet of the Owasco Lake at least three (3) rods wide, and extending from said bridge across said outlet to Owasco Street on the highway leading from Owasco Lake to the City of Auburn,” and the decision of this case depends upon the meaning here to be'ascribed to it. The plaintiff claims it is a reservation of an easement of a right of way, only, the fee passing, while defendant insists it is an exception, and, therefore, that the fee did not pass.

Plaintiff’s grant, now an amusement park, "consists of about twenty acres of land, lying at the foot of Owasco lake; the road in question is located practically across its center. At the time of the conveyance the grantor also owned lands lying immediately west of the lands conveyed and separated from them only by the waters of Owasco outlet; these lands are now known as Island park. The land in suit is a roadway or street extending between Lake avenue and the east shore of the outlet where it meets a bridge which spans the outlet, the roadway and bridge giving access to and from Island park across Lakeside park to and from Lake avenue, a public highway leading to Auburn. The defendant has erected and maintains a refreshment stand on the roadway in question and in this action, brought for an injunction, justifies under a lease from one Fitch Bills, present owner of the Island park property, and successor in title to the grantor in the deed in suit. Both Island park and Lakeside park have been in existence [96]*96as amusement parks for about thirty years. The question here is, did the parties to this deed intend by the words used to reserve a right of way or did they intend to except and take out the fee of the roadway? Gerard Titles to Real Estate (5th ed.), 554; Beardslee v. New Berlin Light & Power Co., 207 N. Y. 34.

In construing a conveyance of real estate every reasonable intendment must be resolved in favor of the grantee, and where there exists an ambiguity, or there are two descriptions which are to some extent contradictory, by one of which the fee of the street would be included, and the other standing alone would indicate an intent to exclude the fee of the street, effect will be given to the description which, from the contemporaneous acts of the parties and the situation of the property as it existed at the time of the conveyance, appears best to carry into effect the intention as thus ascertained. Potter v. Boyce, 73 App. Div. 383; 9 C. J. 200.

And the question whether or not the fee of a road passes is a question of intention, which justifies the courts in looking beyond the mere words of description, and considering the situation of the property, the circumstances under which the deeds are made, and the purpose sought to be affected. Matter of City of New York (,Jerome Avenue), 120 App. Div. 297, citing Potter v. Boyce, supra.

The dealings and conduct of any of the parties who are successors in title to the parties to this deed may also be considered in arriving at the meaning of this clause. Wilson v. Ford, 209 N. Y. 186, 198.

The presumption is that the soil of a right of way between two properties belongs to the owners of the property and this presumption is not affected by the fact that the way leads to a third close and is used only by the owner thereof. Smith v. Howden, 14 C. B. (N. S.) 398.

The question arises what is the intent of such a grant? This depends upon the intention of the parties as gathered by the terms of the deed, the situation of the land, and where there is doubt as to the intent, from the practical construction of the grantor and grantee and their successors in title. The same reasoning applies to this case as in the case of a grant of land bounded by an existing street; in such case the presumption is that the deed carries the fee to the center, because a narrow strip, such as half a street, is much more valuable to the grantee than to the grantor and the parties are supposed to have so dealt with the property as to bring out its greatest value. Matter of La Due, 118 N. Y. 213, 219.

Ordinarily, the grant of an easement implies a reservation of the fee, and where no privilege of user is given it indicates that none was deemed necessary by the parties. Matter of La Due, supra, 223.

[97]*97I think the clause in question must be construed as a reservation. The clause preceding it reads: this conveyance is intended to convey all the land lying east of the new outlet south of the south line of Van Middlesworth west of the center of Owasco Lake Road and north of Owasco Lake.” Surely here is evinced intention to yield total and absolute title, possession and estate of all lands coming within these hues; and immediately following a most careful and complete description by metes, bounds and surveyor’s measurements and observations; it was no doubt intended to characterize and establish the intent and understanding of the parties, and is of outstanding value as testimony in the case.

Again I am impressed by the fact that this clause is a sentence forming a part of a paragraph devoted wholly to the description of the premises, and is its final word. And I further note the absence from this paragraph of any of the familiar terms usually employed when an exception is designed. 8 R. C. L. 1096.

So, also, it might be asked, why if these parties intended excepting the fee to this roadway, are there no provisions in the deed for its use by the grantee or that it be allowed to cross over it in gross or at indicated point or points, or that it be kept open or how far closed, so as not to modify in all respects the grantee’s full use and enjoyment of its purchase?

Another significant fact is that the clause here to be construed is made a part of a new and separate paragraph, and the particular words used in limiting and relating it to the preceding parts of the deed, thus: “ The aforesaid premises are subject to the foregoing reservations, easements, contracts and reservations, to-wit:” Can it be said that the words subject to ” are words of exception or taking out? I think not; on the contrary, the term means “ charged with ” or “ subservient to;” nor is it equivalent to the term “ upon condition.” 7 Words & Phrases, 6712.

Can it be claimed that the words reservations,” contracts,” “ easements ” should be given such interpretation? These terms in such place not only cannot affect a transfer of the fee but only mean as they plainly say, the reserving of something issuing out of the thing granted; that is, an easement in the road. Beardslee v. New Berlin Light & Power Co., supra.

And now may we consider a moment the practical construction put on this conveyance by the conduct and dealings of the grantor and grantee and their successors in title. Matter of La Due, supra, 219; Wilson v. Ford, supra.

The deed itself plainly speaks of the contemplated use of both properties as vacation parks. Its many restrictions as to use; [98]

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119 Misc. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auburn-syracuse-electric-railroad-v-headley-nysupct-1922.