Deering v. . Reilly

60 N.E. 447, 167 N.Y. 184, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1057
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 14, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 60 N.E. 447 (Deering v. . Reilly) 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
Deering v. . Reilly, 60 N.E. 447, 167 N.Y. 184, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1057 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Gray, J.

This is an action in ejectment, wherein the plaintiff, alleging briefly in his complaint that he is lawfully entitled to, and seized of, one undivided third interest in a piece of land in the city of Rew York, particularly therein described, between Manhattan street on the north and 127th street on the south, and formerly forming the easterly half of the Bloomingdale road, of which the defendants are in possession, demands a judgment establishing his title and his right *189 to the possession of the same, with damages for the withholding thereof. The defendants answered by a general denial and upon the trial, by motions at the opening and at the close of the plaintiff’s case, asked that the complaint be dismissed upon various grounds. The trial court granted the motion upon the plaintiff’s case and ordered that his exceptions should be heard, in the first instance, at the Apppellate Division; where they were sustained and a new trial was directed. The defendants have appealed to this court and they insist upon the inability of the plaintiff to recover, either upon his pleading, or upon his proofs. The questions raised have been, with more or less elaborateness, considered and well determined in the opinion delivered at the Appellate Division by Mr. Justice O’Brien and the utmost which may be demanded of us, in any further expression of opinion, is to review briefly the more important of the questions.

In the first place, it is urged that it was ground for a dismissal of the complaint that the plaintiff had not joined his cotenants as parties to the action and that his pleading does not set forth a proper cause of action in ejectment. On this head of their contention, they reason from a construction of section 1500 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is as follows Where two or more persons are entitled to the possession of real property, as joint tenants or tenants in common, one or more of them may maintain such an action, to recover his or their undivided shares in the property, in any ease where such an action might be maintained by all.” They say that under its provisions the plaintiff was required to allege, and to prove, that this was a case in which lie and all of his cotenants might join together in maintaining the action; that this the complaint did not allege sufficiently within its requirements and that the proofs not only fell short of making out a case for relief under the Code provision, but they show, affirmatively, that the plaintiff and liis predecessors in the title had only a paper title and never the possession. However appropriate the question, whether upon the proofs a prima facie case was made *190 out for the relief asked, the appropriateness of the question upon the plaintiff’s pleading is not evident. It conformed sufficiently to the Code requirements that the complaint shall contain a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, the judgment to which the plaintiff supposes himself entitled and the other data for the framework of the complaint. (Code Civ. Pro., sec. 481.) Section 1500 of the Code, which creates what difficulty there may be in this case, declares the substantive law upon the subject of a person’s right to recover the possession of an undivided share in real property, to which he is lawfully entitled. It does not purport to prescribe the form of the pleading in such an action, but to provide in what case one or more tenants holding jointly, or in common, may maintain the action; that is, what showing of title will entitle him, or them, to a judgment of possession. The historical discussion of this section in the opinion below clearly justifies the conclusion stated, that it was intended in its enactment to serve the purpose of reconciling an apparent conflict in the earlier decisions and that it was not designed, and it should not be construed, to impose upon the plaintiff in ejectment a burden in the enforcement of his right which did not rest upon him previously. (See reviser’s note to sec. 1500, enacted after Hasbrouck v. Bunce, 62 N. Y. 475.) It does not require that joint tenants, or tenants in common, must unite in the action and its purpose is fulfilled when proof is made that the tenant suing has a legal title, entitling him to the possession, and that those having title to the other undivided interests are, upon the face of the record, entitled to maintain a similar action. This seems to be especially true when those proceeded against, in the effort to recover the possession of lands, set up no adverse title »nd are, or appear from the record to be, intruders, or trespassers, upon the title. The rule, that a plaintiff in ejectment must recover upon the strength of his own title and not on the weakness of his adversary’s, has its proper application where title is asserted against title; hut not to a case where the defendants, making no claim of title, object that the plaintiff has not proved a perfect *191 title against those who might claim adversely. The plaintiff is not bound to anticipate all that might be urged by others holding by adverse claim of title. If upon his proofs it appears, f rima facie, that he has title to an undivided interest in premises, possession of which is withheld by the defendants, his right to maintain the action is sufficiently established upon the case.

The plaintiff’s proofs showed that, originally, the land was a part of a tract, or farm, owned by William Molenor. While in his ownership Bloomingdale road, as a result of proceedings taken by the common council of the city of Hew York, was continued and extended through his land. He conveyed a large part of his property to Jacob Schieffelin, Thomas Buckley and John B. Lawrence and they, by this and through other mesne conveyances, became possessed of Molenor’s lands on both sides of Bloomingdale road, by descriptions which would include what title the grantors had in the soil of Bloomingdale road. In 1867 Bloomingdale road was closed, by virtue of the provisions of chapter 697 of the laws of that year. In 1889, George H. Lawrence, as the sole surviving executor of John B. Lawrence, conveyed, by virtue of a power of sale in his testator’s will, all of the testator’s estate in the land within the Bloomingdale road, thus closed and abandoned as a highway ac this point, to the plaintiff; whose present action concerns the easterly half of it, to one undivided third part of which the conveyance thus gave him title. It was stipulated upon the trial that the city, by its proceedings for extending'Bloomingdale road, obtained only a right of way over the land taken ” and it was, therefore, cpffte competent for Molenor to convey, as he did, the fee in the soil of the road to Schieffelin and others. Even without this stipulation in the case, I do not think that the proceedings to continue and extend Bloomingdale road over Molenor’s lands could be said to have had any other effect than to create an easement over them for use by the public as a highway. The city acquired an easement only and not the fee, which it would acquire in the case of lands taken for the purpose of a *192 street, or of an avenue. (Van Amringe v. Barnett, 8 Bos. 357, 372; People v. Kerr, 27 N. Y. 188, 196; Matter of Lexington Avenue, 29 Hun, 303 ; affirmed, 92 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.E. 447, 167 N.Y. 184, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deering-v-reilly-ny-1901.