Connelly v. Fish

152 N.Y.S. 371
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 152 N.Y.S. 371 (Connelly v. Fish) 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
Connelly v. Fish, 152 N.Y.S. 371 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

KILEY, J.

This action was tried at a term of the Supreme Court held in the county of Chemung on the 23d day of November, 1914. It is an action in ejectment, brought by the plaintiff against the defendants to recover possession of a strip of land which plaintiff alleges defendants withhold from him. Jury was waived, and the case tried before the court without a jury. A general outline of the situation and facts surrounding the controversy, before the dispute arose, is briefly as follows :

Previous to the 3d day of March, 1900, Wilbur W. Fish and Eliza F. Fish, his wife, sold to Thomas Connelly, the plaintiff in this action, by contract, a vacant lot situate on the east side of State street in the city of Elmira. At the time of such sale said Fish owned the adjoining lot on the north, and I conclude the lot he sold and the lot he retained constituted, at the time he purchased- it, a single lot.- Immediately to the north of the vacant lot sold to Connelly there stood upon the portion retained by Fish a four-story brick building. Subsequently, and on March 3, 1900, the said Fish executed, acknowledged, and delivered to Connelly a warranty deed of the property so sold to him. On April 10, 1913, Wilbur W. Fish died. Conveyances of the property were made between the Fish heirs, so that the defendant Edwin C. Fish became the owner of the property immediately north of plaintiff’s property; the defendant Wilbur P. Fish taking a mortgage upon that property from the defendant Edwin C. Fish, which mortgage still exists. The defendants Norman J. Thompson and Merle D. Thompson, a co-partnership, are tenants of said brick building on defendants’ lot. The building stood there at the time of the sale to plaintiff. The foundation was of stone, the height was 7 feet, and it was 2 feet wide. The four stories built upon the stone foundation were of brick 16 inches wide, and so constructed as to stand 8 inches each side of the center line of the stone foundation. The defendants Edwin C. Fish and Wilbur P. Fish are sons of Wilbur W. Fish, plaintiff’s grantor. Previous to the death of Wilbur W. Fish, and in the year 1900, the plaintiff, Thomas F. Connelly, constructed a brick building upon his vacant lot, [373]*373using the south wall of the building upon the Fish lot as his north wall, and occupied it from the time of such construction until March 13, 1913, when both the Fish and Connelly buildings were destroyed by fire, rendering the south wall of the Fish building and the north wall of the Connelly building (being a single wall, and the same) so impaired that it was of no value down to the stone foundation. The defendant Fish immediately rebuilt a brick building four stories in height, placing his south wall upon the former stone foundation, in the same position occupied by the original wall, viz., a 16-inch brick wall 8 inches each side of the center line of the 2-foot stone foundation. The plaintiff sought to be considered in the building of that wall. The defendant stated, and continues to assert, that the plaintiff, Connelly, had no interest in the wall; that he did not own the land under the wall, and excluded, and continues to exclude, him from the use of the wall, or the 12 inches constituting the south one-half of the stone foundation, and the 8 inches constituting the south one-half of the four-story brick wall, and the land upon which the structure stands.

[ 1 ] The first question to decide is whether the plaintiff or defendant owns the 12 inches of land under the south one-half of the stone foundation, and the 8 inches occupied by the south one-half of the four-story brick wall. To determine that question we must have recourse to the description contained in the deed—what the evidence shows as to what occurred between the parties at the time the deed was given and the use of the wall between the parties entitled to use the same before its destruction. The description in the deed to the plaintiff from his grantor reads as follows:

“All that tract or parcel of land, situate in the city of Elmira, county of Chemung, and state of New York, bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a point in the east line of State street, in said city, at the southwesterly corner of first party’s brick building; thence easterly along the line of said brick building and including one-half of the southerly wall thereof one hundred feet; thence southerly on a line parallel with State street twenty-five feet and six inches, more or less, to an iron wall; ' thence westerly on a line parallel with the aforesaid brick wall and twenty-five feet and six inches, or thereabouts, distant therefrom, one hundred feet, to State street; thence northerly along State street twenty-five feet and six inches, or thereabouts, to the place of beginning.”

It will be seen that the line involved here is the first line run in the description and which reads as follows:

“Beginning at a point in the east line of State street/ in said city, at the southwesterly corner of first party’s brick building; thence easterly along the line of said brick building and including one-half of the southerly wall thereof one hundred feet.”

The contention of the defendant is that this line commences at the point where the outside brick was exposed, the southwest edge of such brick, and that the line then runs east along the outside of the wall of the building. Assume that the corner was round; where would the line commence? The starting point refers to the brick column between the internal and external lines. And in describing the lot conveyed to plaintiff, where could the measurement of plaintiff’s north line be made, except along the south side of the brick building ? It will be [374]*374noted that the grantor of the plaintiff included one-half of the southerly wall. It was recognized between plaintiff and his grantor that he owned one-half of the southerly wall. Under this description, did plaintiff’s line run south of what was conveyed to him, viz., on the outside of the southerly wall? What the parties actually did, in view of the uncertainty of the line involved in this dispute, must be considered in reaching a conclusion as to where the line was intended to be when the property was conveyed to plaintiff. Plaintiff swears that at the time he purchased the property, and prior to that time, he made measurements of the property on State street. It will be noted that the consideration for this 25 feet and 6 inches furnished was $4,200, not quite $200 a foot. It may be fairly inferred that the parties made measurements of the property to be conveyed, as a small fraction of a lineal foot was worth a considerable sum in dollars. It is not left wholly to inference, as it will appear from the evidence.

Plaintiff swears that the measurements were 25^ feet, and that that distance measured from the center line of the south wall to an iron wall 25 feet and 6 inches. That that iron wall was corrugated sheet iron covering the north wall of the Baldwin building; that he measured the foundation of the brick wall on the south side of the Fish building, and that they were found as given above, 24 inches and 16 inches, respectively. He was asked, upon cross-examination, who measured with him, or whether anybody did, and he stated that he did not keep a memoranda of the measurements, and did not state if anybody was with him, or who was with him. On cross-examination he stated that he made these measurements in 1900, before and after he purchased the property; that he used a steel tape. He said he would not say that he did it himself, but had no recollection of anybody helping him.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.Y.S. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connelly-v-fish-nysupct-1915.