Cramer v. Perine

167 N.E. 213, 251 N.Y. 177, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 702
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 213 (Cramer v. Perine) 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
Cramer v. Perine, 167 N.E. 213, 251 N.Y. 177, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 702 (N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

In 1888 one William A. Umlauf was the owner of land in the city of Buffalo in a block bounded by Yale Place, Seneca Street, Princeton Place and Cazenovia Creek. He plotted these lands, and a map thereof was made in 1888 and filed in March, 1889, in the office of the county clerk of Erie County. Yale Place and Princeton Place are parallel streets, and all the lots, as plotted, front on one of these streets and extend to the middle line of the block, parallel to these streets. On February 3d, 1896, Umlauf conveyed to William Law all that tract or parcel of land situate in the City of Buffalo, County of Erie and State of New York * * * being subdivision lots numbers 86 and 87 of a tract of W. A. Umlauf according to a map and survey on file in the Erie County Clerk’s Office under Cover 330.” An examination of the map referred to in the deed shows that these lots fronted on Yale Place and extended to the middle of the block. Their northwest boundary was Cazenovia Creek. Thereafter, by deed dated March 27th, 1896, Umlauf conveyed to Peter Klas the lots fronting on Princeton Place which extend to Cazenovia Creek. Prior to 1904 William Law and Peter Klas respectively conveyed to John L. Dow the premises owned by each. Through these conveyances John L. Dow became the owner of all the lots between Yale Place and Princeton Place which lie along Cazenovia Creek.

Both the plaintiff and the defendants derive title to any lands which they may own from John L. Dow through mesne conveyances. By deed dated and recorded on January 22d, 1904, he conveyed to James J. Chown, the defendant’s predecessor in title, Subdivision lots numbers 86 and 87 of a tract of W. A. Umlauf according to a map and survey on file in the Erie County Clerk’s Office under cover 330.” The same description had been *181 used in the prior conveyances of the lots fronting on Yale Place and extending to Cazenovia Creek, in the deeds from TJmlauf to Law and from Law to John L. Dow. It appears, however, that during the period between 1888, when the map and survey referred to in the deed was made, and January, 1904, when John L. Dow conveyed the lots to James J. Chown, the line of Cazenovia Creek had gradually changed, and considerable land had been added by accretion to the lots fronting on Cazenovia Creek. These accretions, of course, were not within the limits of lots 86 and 87 as defined on the map. The deed to Chown expressly provided that the lots were conveyed together with all the right, title and interest that the party of the first part has in and to the Cazenovia Creek abutting on or adjoining the above described premises.”

By deed dated and filed February 18th, 1904, Dow conveyed to Isidor Weber, plaintiff's predecessor in title, the lots along Cazenovia Creek fronting on Princeton Place and extending to the middle line of the block: “ Beginning at a point in the westerly fine of Princeton Place at a distance of eight hundred forty feet south of its intersection with the southerly line of Seneca Street, running thence southerly along said Princeton Place to the point of intersection of said Westerly fine of Princeton Place and the waters of Cazenovia Creek, thence westerly and northwesterly down the stream of Cazenovia Creek and along the bank thereof to a point where a line intersecting the point of beginning at right angles would intersect said bank of Cazenovia Creek, thence easterly on a fine at right angles with Princeton Place to the point of beginning.”

Dow drew the description of the deed to plaintiff’s predecessor in title, like the description of the deed to defendant’s predecessor, from the deeds made by TJmlauf and the deeds from his grantees to Dow. On the map filed by TJmlauf in 1888, from which the description was *182 undoubtedly originally taken, the point on the bank of Cazenovia Creek where a line intersecting the point of beginning at right angles would intersect said bank of Cazenovia Creek ” is exactly at the middle line of the block between Yale Place and Princeton Place. The bank of the creek north of the middle line of the block was the boundary of the lots fronting on Yale Place, now owned by the defendant. The bank of the creek south of that line was the boundary of the lots fronting on Princeton Place, now owned by the plaintiff. In 1904 the accretions to the lots fronting on Cazenovia Creek had resulted in pushing the shore line of Cazenovia Creek a considerable distance to the west. Then the point on Cazenovia Creek where a line intersecting the point of beginning at right angles would intersect said bank of Cazenovia Creek lay north, not only of the middle fine of the block, but north of the whole block. The description of the lots conveyed to the plaintiff’s predecessor in title, as contained in that deed and as applied to the conditions existing at that time, would make the bank of Cazenovia Creek the boundary of the lots conveyed for its entire course through or alongside of the block between Princeton Place and Yale Place, if both were extended in a straight line. It would include land even outside of that block and it would completely exclude the grantee of the lots fronting on Yale Place from any access to the creek within that block though “ adjoining or abutting ” upon the lots previously conveyed to him.

The description in the deed made in February, 1904, by Dow, which was derived from the map made and filed many years before, does not fit conditions created by accretions during the years which had elapsed since the map was filed. The deed to defendant’s predecessor in title was made before the deed to plaintiff’s predecessor in title. The prior deed, as we have already pointed out, conveyed Dow’s right, title and interest in and to the Cazenovia Creek abutting on or adjoining ” the lots describbd in *183 the deed. The title of the grantee under that deed has passed to the defendant. The grantor, Dow, could not change the effect óf his conveyance by any subsequent grant to the plaintiff’s predecessor in title. The only title which the subsequent grantee could acquire from Dow in land abutting on the creek or in the creek itself, was the title remaining in Dow after he had parted with all his title “ in and to the Cazenovia Creek abutting on or adjoining ” the lots north of the middle line of the block and extending to Yale Place, as shown on the filed map.

The defendant, who owns the lots on Yale Place, construing these words in the deed as intended to convey the grantor’s title to the bank of the creek lying between Yale Place and the middle fine of the block, has occupied all the land between his lots and the creek within those lines. The plaintiff, who has acquired title to the lands fronting on Princeton Place, has brought this action in ejectment to recover possession of that part of the lands occupied by the defendant which is included within the language of the description of the land conveyed by Dow to her predecessor in title.

It has been said that in this state and in most of other jurisdictions where the common-law rule obtains, the rule has been established that as between adjoining owners on non-navigable streams and rivers, each owner takes title ad medium filium aquce,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ludington v. Marsden
181 A.D.2d 176 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1992)
Osgood-Lewis-Perkins, Inc. v. Green
135 N.W.2d 718 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1965)
Huguenot Yacht Club v. Lion
43 Misc. 2d 141 (New York Supreme Court, 1964)
In re City of New York
159 Misc. 741 (New York Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 213, 251 N.Y. 177, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-perine-ny-1929.