Conde Nast, Inc. v. Town of North Hempstead

160 Misc. 267, 290 N.Y.S. 300, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1287
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 Misc. 267 (Conde Nast, Inc. v. Town of North Hempstead) 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
Conde Nast, Inc. v. Town of North Hempstead, 160 Misc. 267, 290 N.Y.S. 300, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1287 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Cuff, J.

Brought by authority of section 500 of the Real Property Law, this action tests the title to certain shore front property at Sands Point, Nassau county. Plaintiff not only claims title but also asserts ownership by reason of adverse possession. Defendant denies plaintiff’s adverse possession, claims title .in itself and seeks to eject plaintiff from the land. Such defense translates this suit into an ejectment action brought by defendant against plaintiff. (Real Prop. Law, § 504.) The burden of proof, therefore, rests upon defendant to prove its title. A jury was impaneled, but at the end of the taking of testimony counsel waived the jury.

Reaching into the Colonial era in this State, both sides traced title by an alleged unbroken chain to date. The authenticity of the numerous documents offered in evidence and their accuracy, except where witnesses have added lines, marks or labels, is not in dispute. Questions arise, however, because of incomplete descriptions and ambiguities in old patents. Each side contests the weight to be given to the other’s exhibits.

The defendant town asserts a title that has its inception in the administration of William Kieft, the Dutch Governor of the Province called New Netherland,” who bestowed a patent upon the then town of Hempstead, defendant’s predecessor, on November 16, 1644. (Defendant’s Exhibit 26.) That was an extensive yet valid grant of land. (Town of North Hempstead v. Thompson, 115 N. Y. 635.) By that patent the Dutch Governor established a [269]*269“ body politic ” of about one hundred families, known as Hemp-stead, Queens County.” The land described in that patent, it is conceded, includes the locus in quo which is about seven acres of salt marshland lying between the high-Water line of Long Island sound and the uplands. Eight acres of the latter are concededly owned by plaintiff. The land in dispute and land admittedly the property of plaintiff make one continuous parcel.

On April 17,1685, Thomas Dongan, the English Governor of New York, who had succeeded Kieft, also issued a patent to a Certaine Towne in Queens County called and known by the name of Hemp-stead upon Long Island.” (Defendant’s Exhibit 73.) This grant is known as the Dongan patent. (Defendant’s Exhibit 73.) Near the end of that patent appears the following proviso: “ Provided always that neither this Patent nor any thing herein Contained shall be construed or intended to the prejudice or Infringmerit of any Right Clayme or Pretence which his Royll Highss James Duke of Yorke &c. his Heires and Succefsors now hath or hereafter may have to * * * one Intire Peice of Land containeing seaven hundred Acres lyeing and being on Cow Neck.”

■ The foregoing proviso forms the basis of this law suit because plaintiff maintains that its property is included within the bounds of the 700 acres therein mentioned.

Defendant’s position is that it acquired title to the locus in quo by virtue of the Kieft patent (defendant’s Exhibit 26) and never lost it. Plaintiff argues that if defendant’s predecessor acquired good title to the locus in quo by the Kieft patent (defendant’s Exhibit 26), it was lost by subsequent events. In endeavoring to show that defendant has no title to the locus in quo, plaintiff has adduced evidence for the purpose of proving title in itself. The theory upon which plaintiff attacks defendant’s title and attempts to establish its own follows:

Admitting for the purpose of argument that the Kieft patent (defendant’s Exhibit 26) gave the town title to all of Cow Neck, plaintiff contends that the town applied for and received the confirmatory Dongan patent (defendant’s Exhibit 73) and as a result lost title to the 700 acres on Cow Neck excepted from that grant (defendant’s Exhibit 73), and cites as authority People v. Foote (242 App. Div. 162; leave to go to Court of Appeals denied, Id. 733).

It is conceded by plaintiff that if nothing more appeared than the language above quoted from defendant’s Exhibit 73, no change in title to the 700 acres would have been effected because of the indefiniteness of the exception. To give substance to that exception, plaintiff relies upon later developments. Its attorney points out that within one year after he granted the patent of 1685 to the [270]*270town (defendant’s Exhibit 73), Governor Dongan gave patents for 700 acres as follows: 200 acres to Major Thomas Willett, dated April 25,1686 (plaintiff’s Exhibit 25); 200 acres to Richard Cornwall, dated November 25, 1686 (plaintiff’s Exhibit 17); 100 acres to Elly Doughty, dated November 25, 1686 (plaintiff’s Exhibit 19); 100 acres to Captain Thomas Hicks, dated November 25, 1686 (plaintiff’s Exhibit 23); 100 acres to John Cornell, dated December 13, 1686 (plaintiff’s Exhibit 21).

Could the town be divested of title to those 700 acres on Cow: Neck? Under certain conditions it could. People v. Foote (supra) holds that where a patentee applies for a confirmatory grant, his title thereafter depends wholly upon the terms of the confirmatory grant, even though his confirmatory grant is less in extent than that which he formerly claimed to possess under a prior grant.

The town, not disputing the soundness of that reasoning, contends that no¡ application was made for the Dongan patent (defendant’s Exhibit. 73) and that the principle enunciated in People v. Foote (supra) has no bearing upon this case.

To offset defendant’s contention and to show that the town had good reason to and did apply for a confirmatory patent from Governor Dongan, plaintiff recalls from the old town records many incidents showing that possession of Cow Neck by the town, following the Kieft grant (defendant’s Exhibit 26), was neither continuous, unchallenged nor definitely established. The Indians seemed reluctant to give up Cow Neck. There is evidence that they had not grown fully reconciled to the town’s ownership of Cow Neck up to the time when Governor Dongan took action on April 25, 1685. - (See defendant’s Exhibit 73.) Exhibits offered by both sides chronicle happenings that show that the town, between November, 1644, the date of the Kieft patent (defendant’s Exhibit 26), and April, 1685, the date of the Dongan patent (defendant’s Exhibit 73), was not enjoying peace and quiet in its occupation of the disputed Cow Neck. (Defendant’s Exhibits 51, 52, 58, 59, 60, 71/ 78, 79, and plaintiff’s Exhibits 2, 3, 4, 5, 13, 14, 15, 16, 76, 77 and 80.)

There appears to be no evidence to support the town’s assertion that Governor Dongan thrust his patent (defendant’s Exhibit 73) upon the town. With equally as much evidentiary persuasion, the plaintiff could declare that application by the town must have been made.

The record is silent on the subject of whether the Governor or the town initiated the movement that gave birth to the Dongan patent. (Defendant’s Exhibit 73.) Clearly the Dongan patent (defendant’s Exhibit 73) was valuable to the townspeople. It removed every [271]*271doubt that might have existed as to the validity of the town’s title — a matter of vital cotisequence, the changed sovereignty and the undeveloped character of the tract. Moreover, the Dongan patent (defendant’s Exhibit 73) confirmed titles of those who became, through the town, owners of land granted under the Kieft patent. (Defendant’s Exhibit 26.) It will be remembered that Kieft set up a body politic ” by his patent.

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Bluebook (online)
160 Misc. 267, 290 N.Y.S. 300, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conde-nast-inc-v-town-of-north-hempstead-nysupct-1936.