Corning v. Gould

16 Wend. 531
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 16 Wend. 531 (Corning v. Gould) 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
Corning v. Gould, 16 Wend. 531 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1837).

Opinion

By the Court, Cowen, J.

Whether the original documental title of those under whom these parties claim, carried a right in severalty to each owner in the soil of one half the alley, it is not now material to inquire; for there is no doubt that the user had fixed the title to a common right of way, long before 1825, when the building of Craig was erected. An uninterrupted adverse user of twenty years, in analogy to the statute limiting a right of entry, has long been held to confer a complete prescriptive title to a way or other easement, the extent of which is also to be conclusively governed by the user. Campbell v. Wilson, 3 East, 294. Per Lord Mansfield, C. J., in Folkes v. Mad, 3 Doug. 343. Livett v. Wilson, 3 Bing. 115. 10 Moore, 409. S. C. Per Abbott, C. J., in Doe, dem. Rutland v. Hilder, 2 Barn. & Ald. 791. Wright v. Freeman, 5 Harr. & Johns. R. 497. Hill v. Crosby, 2 Pick. 466. Commonwealth v. Low, 3 Pick. 408. Per Wilde, J., in Coolidge v. Learned, 8 Pick. 509. 1 Chit. Gen. Pr. 214. These authorities relate particularly to ways. There are various methods of meeting, qualifying, and explaining the evidence adduced to establish the user during the twenty years; and where a case the least questionable is made, it [535]*535has commonly been the course to leave it to a jury to say whether they will presume a grant. Campbell v. Wilson, 3 East, 294. Livett v. Wilson, 3 Bing. 115. 10 Moore, 409. But the fact of adverse enjoyment for twenty years being beyond dispute, the law itself raises the presumption, which is very strong ; and in one case it was even held to be a presumption juris et de jure. Tyler v. Wilkinson, 4 Mason, 397. And see 3 Kent’s Comm. 444, 5, 3d ed. The ease of Tyler v. Wilkinson was that of a right arising from twenty years’ adverse enjoyment of flowing water ; but this depends on the same general principle with the prescriptive right of way. Upon the authorities cited, and many others, to which it is unnecessary to refer, I entertain no doubt that the learned judge who tried this cause was entirely right in directing a verdict for the plaintiff unless the right of way, so clearly established in the first instance, was afterwards either abandoned or extinguished by the proprietors of lot No. 106 ; and this forms the only serious question in the cause.

Abandonment is a simple non-user of an easement; and in order to make out an effectual answer to the claim upon that ground, I find it perfectly well settled that the enjoyment, nay all acts of enjoyment, must have totally ceased for the same length of time that was necessary to create the original presumption. We are to inquire first, was the way used continuously and adversely for twenty years? If so, the presumptive title becomes vested. Secondly, has the use, then, been altogether discontinued for twenty years ? If not, there is no abandonment. Wright v. Freeman, 5 Harr, & Johns. R. 467, 476, 477. Emerson, v. Wiley, 10 Pick. 310. Cuthbert v. Lawton, 3 M‘Cord, 194. On the contrary, if the non-user for the twenty years clearly appear, this affords a presumption either that the former presumptive right was extinguished in favor of some other adverse right; or, where no such adverse right appears, then simply that the former has been surrendered, or that it never existed. Prescott v. Phillips, 2 Ev. Poth. 136. Per Lord Erskine, C., in Hillary v. Waller, 12 Ves. 265. Per Story, J., in Hazard, v. Robinson, 3 Mason, 275, 6. Mr. Evans’ [536]*536remarks on Prescott v. Phillips, in 2 Ev. Poth. 136. 3 Kent’s Comm. 448, 3d ed. The two latter writers incline with the civil law, to hold that some thing beyond mere non user for- the prescriptive term is" necessary to work the legal abandonment, such as the erection or permission to erect some permanent obstruction. The doctrine in the English and American cases cited, is otherwise; and, in 1823, the court of appeals, in Maryland, expressly recognized the effect of simple non user. Wright v. Freeman, 5 Harr. & Johns. R. 467. Lawrence v. Obee, 3 Campb. 514, S. P. But the inquiry is not important to the case in hand. The non user here was not to exceed four or five years ; and the defence stands on a footing entirely independent of prescription.

If there be any defence, it must rest on the ground that the various permanent obstructions erected from time to time by the immediate vendor of the plaintiff, and continued by himself, and insisted on by the defendant, operated to extinguish all right to the use of this way as a servitude. If that be so, then the plaintiff’s way, as he calls it in his declaration, has not been obstructed. Being extinct, there was nothing left of it as a way ; and it is not necessary to inquire whether the fence built by the defendant was or was not over the dividing line, and on the land of the plaintiff which was the principal ground taken by his counsel at the trial. The remedy for that would be an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, if there be any propriety in supposing that the plaintiff can pass the fence erected by his vendor as a dividing line between the soil of the two lots.

There are certainly some things which render the idea of re-opening, not to say resuscitating this way, rather repulsive. In the first place, Craig, the plaintiff’s vendor ran the west wall of his large brick building, I mean the thirty-five feet of it which extends south of the old foundation, considerably on to this alley. When I say considerably, I must be understood as speaking comparatively. The way was already so narrow that the plaintiff’s witness, Mr. Easton, [537]*537said he had great difficulty to use it as a horse way for sleigh loads of wood. The little remnant of an entry oi| fourteen inches wide between his piazza at the rear of his' new house and the old fence, might have served his own turn ; of that he had a right to judge. But it came far short! of the full half way of three feet which is now so rigidly ex-1 acted of his neighbor. Looking at the old partition fence in the rear, which has stood the immemorial representative of the true centre, and which still indicates the full three feet for the west side of the alley, there is some reason to believe that this heavy brick wall is not the first encroachment upon that side. Cotemporaneously with the erection of this wall, the workmen of Craig were directed to continue the old fence directly through the ancient centre of the alley to State street; in virtue of which he entered into the exclusive possession on his side, leaving the tenants of the defendant’s house to an exclusive occupation on the other. With this, Craig did, on one occasion, interfere; but in such a way, as rather to acknowledge than deny the general exclusive right to the western three feet. On the tenants of the defendant’s house depositing offensive articles next the fence, Craig set up no right of way or soil in himself, but threatened a complaint to the city police as for a public nuisance.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Wend. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corning-v-gould-nysupct-1837.