Bernstein v. . Nealis

39 N.E. 328, 144 N.Y. 347, 63 N.Y. St. Rep. 638, 99 Sickels 347, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 535
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 328 (Bernstein v. . Nealis) 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
Bernstein v. . Nealis, 39 N.E. 328, 144 N.Y. 347, 63 N.Y. St. Rep. 638, 99 Sickels 347, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 535 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

We think the defendant proved a good title to the premises which he contracted to sell to the plaintiff. They consisted of a house and lot stated in the contract as being Ho. 237 Elizabeth street in the city of Hew York. There was no doubt as to where those premises were or as to their actual width upon that street. The question arises out of the description of them by metes and bounds as contained in some of the conveyances through which the defendant derives title: The deed of 1869 from Bosamond Floyd to Stutzman is the first one which it will be material to consider.

It described a dwelling house and lot on the west side of Elizabeth street between Prince and Houston streets ■ in the city of Hew York, and being 23 feet amd 3 inches wide on Elizabeth street. This was a correct description of and conveyed the premises which the defendant contracted to sell to the plaintiff. Stutzman subsequently mortgaged the premises by a description which commenced “ at a point on the westerly side of Elizabeth street distant 123 feet 2 inches northerly from the corner of Prince and Elizabeth streets; running *350 thence northerly along the said westerly line of Elizabeth street 20 feet 3 1-2 inches.” The other boundaries are immaterial. The mortgage closed by a statement that the mortgaged premises were “ the same premises which were conveyed by deed bearing date the 26th of November, 1869, to the party of the first part by Eosamond Floyd, and recorded in the office of the register in liber 1112 of conveyances, page 549, on the 1st day of December, 1869.”

It is stated and we assume that the premises described in the deed from Eosamond Floyd to Stutzman actually commence at a point 121 feet and 2 inches north from the corner of Prince and Elizabeth streets instead of 123 feet and 2 inches as stated in the description contained in the mortgage from Stutzman, and that they are 23 feet 3 inches instead of but 20 feet 3 1-2 inches wide. The mortgage was foreclosed, and one Maria Venter, a subsequent grantee of the fee subject to the mortgage, was made a party to the foreclosure. The complaint in the foreclosure action followed the description in the mortgage in the same terms as are therein set forth, with the exception that it left out the allegation contained in the mortgage that the premises mortgaged were the same premises conveyed to the mortgagor by the Floyd deed. The decree of foreclosure follows the description contained in the complaint, and the deed executed by the referee in the foreclosure sale also follows the same description. The defendant takes title through mesne conveyances from the purchaser at the foreclosure sale. No criticism is made in regard to the sufficiency of those descriptions, except that they cannot convey more than was conveyed by the foreclosure deed.

It was admitted on the trial that the premises were a house and lot, the house having stood there more than twenty years, and the deed to Eosamond Floyd dated in 1845 describes the property as a dwelling house and lot and by the same description as is contained in the deed from Eosamond Floyd to Stutzman.

The plaintiff, after the execution of the contract, made an examination of the title, and upon such examination the above *351 facts appeared. The plaintiff thereupon refused to take a deed, insisting that by reason of such facts the mortgage did not cover and the defendant had no title to the southerly 2 feet of the premises plaintiff contracted to buy, but that the title to those 2 feet was then vested in Maria Venter, the subsequent grantee of Stutzman, the mortgagor. The plaintiff demanded back the money she had paid, and upon refusal she commenced this action to recover it together with fees for legal services in searching the title, the amount of which is agreed upon. The plaintiff has thus far succeeded in her contention.

Although the description by metes and bounds as set forth in the mortgage does not cover the 2 feet in question, yet the mortgage also contains the statement that the premises are the same which were conveyed to the mortgagor by the Floyd deed which was on record. This statement, taken with the description in the mortgage, would, upon the facts appearing herein, make it a sufficient description to convey such premises. It is not disputed that the Floyd deed covers the whole of the premises contracted to be purchased. They consisted of a lot upon which a house had been built and was then standing. It is scarcely conceivable that the mortgagor intended to cut off two feet in width from his house and mortgage the balance, and it is equally improbable that any one would take such a mortgage. It is clear, therefore, that the statement in the mortgage, that the boundary commenced 123 feet 2 inches from the north corner of Elizabeth and Prince streets, and ran thence north 20 feet 3 1-2 inches, was only a mistaken description of the premises intended to be conveyed. A mistake, however, does not aid the defendant unless it be cured by the subsequent description or statement in the instrument. I think it is cured by that statement. It is there asserted that the premises mortgaged are the same as those conveyed to the mortgagor by the Floyd deed which is of record. Considering the character of the premises, being a house and lot in a city, with houses on each side, and remembering that those very premises are in fact covered by the Floyd deed to the mortgagor, it must be *352 that this statement, when used by him, is as against him equivalent to a conveyance, which includes those premises by metes and bounds. Nothing else will satisfy the statement. It is in substance and effect an assertion by the mortgagor that those premises are included in and pass by the particular description just given. Such a case is wholly unlike that of Thayer v. Finton (108 N. Y. 394). There the description by metes and bounds, in the deed from Thayer to Eggleston, was apt and perfect for the purpose of describing two lots of land. It did not describe a third lot, separated and at some distance from them both. And it was held that the statement following the description, that the premises conveyed were the same premises then in possession of the grantor and conveyed tó him by 0. and wife, did not have the effect of including the third lot, although it had been conveyed by C. and wife, and the grantee in that deed was then in possession of such third lot. It was said the boundaries in the Eggleston deed were capable of exact ascertainment, and described precisely and exactly two specific pieces of property which had been conveyed to the grantor in that deed, and that there was no indication in the Eggleston deed that the grantor therein intended to convey three pieces, or any land other than that which was therein particularly described. The land particularly described was in the possession of the grantor, and had been deeded to him by 0. and wife, and the statement in the Eggleston deed did not assume that such deed conveyed all the land that had been granted to the grantor, or all which he was in possession of. The language was held entirely too loose and indefinite under the facts of that case to include land not described.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 328, 144 N.Y. 347, 63 N.Y. St. Rep. 638, 99 Sickels 347, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernstein-v-nealis-ny-1895.