Doherty v. Egan Waste Co.

111 A. 499, 91 N.J. Eq. 400, 6 Stock. 400, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 21, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 111 A. 499 (Doherty v. Egan Waste Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doherty v. Egan Waste Co., 111 A. 499, 91 N.J. Eq. 400, 6 Stock. 400, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48 (N.J. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Griffin, V. C.

The bill in this canse is filed to compel specific performance of a contract for the sale of lands in Jersey City known as lots .35 and 37 in block 16 on Mangin’s map. of 1804, being also lots 43 and 45 in block 66 on the Baeot map of 1861.

The contract is dated January 10th, 1917; title was to pass May 1st, 1917. The defendant refused to take title. The bill was filed August 15th, 1917. The building was totally destroyed by fire December 5th, 1917. The defendant became tenant in possession of the premises in 1909, and continued in possession, carrying on its business, until ousted by the fire, and thereafter collected $2,000 insurance covering its interest under the contract.

Defendant’s objections are:

1. That the premises, as actually located, are one foot and twelve hundredths (112/100) feet east of the true line called for by the deed.

2. That, assuming the location to be correct, the building oil the lands on the westerly side line from a point beginning thirty-three and seventy hundredths feet from the street encroaches on the adjoining property to the west one and one-half inches at the beginning point,- and one inch in the rear.

As to the first point:

According to the Mangin map, the block is two hundred feet by four hundred, being two hundred on Washington and Greene streets, and four hundred on Morris. It contains thirty-two. lots, of the dimensions of twenty-five by one hundred feet each. Washington street is laid down eighty feet wide, and Morris and Greene streets each sixty feet. As actually laid out on the land, Greene street is sixty and eight hundredths feet in width at the corner of Morris street.

The length of the block, measured along Morris street, as built upon, is four hundred and one and forty-two hundredths feet, giving a surplus of one and forty-two hundredths feet, one foot of which is in the two lots next Greene street; twelve hundredths of a foot is contained in the premises in question in front, and twenty hundredths of a foot in the rear; and thirty [402]*402hundredths of a foot is included in the lots between Washington street and the westerly line of the premises in question.

All of these lots fronting on Morris street were, on the date of the contract, covered by buildings, each of which was in actual contact with the one next adjoining, all of which had been erected a long time, and none of which may be said to comply 'with the liares of the maps, excepting the two next adjoining the building on the cornea* of Washington and York streets. These two, with the one on the corner, should have a frontage of fifty feet, but the frontage is actually fifty and fifty-two hundredths feet, due to the fact, as the survey shows, that the corner house extends fifty-two hundredths of a foot into the street as laid out.

The remaining lots lying between Washington street and the* premises in question, in their order running easterly from Washington street, with their width by deed, and as actually built upon as shown by suawey, are as follows: Lot 59, Bacot map (beiaag rear part of lots 19, 21, 23, Maaagin map) by deed twenty-five feet, building twenty-five and twenty-one hundredths feet; lot 57, Bacot map (rear part of lots 19, 21, 23, Mangin map) by deed twenty-five feet, building twenty-four and ninety-one hundredths feet (deficiency less than an inch); lot 55, Bacot map (47, Mangin), by deed twenty-five feet, building twenty-five aaacl eighteen hundredths feet; lots 51 and 53, Bacot map (43 and 45, Mangin map) each twenty-five feet by deed, and each building is twenty-five feet; the next building covers parts of lots 47 and 49, Bacot, and 39 and 41, Mangin — by deed twenty-seven and forty-two hundredths feet, building twenty-seven and forty-two hundredths feet; remaining part of lot 47, Bacot, and 39, Mangin — by deed twenty-two and fifty-eight hundredths feet, building twenty-two and fifty-eight hundredths feet. Thus every lotowner between Washington street and the premises iaa questioai has at least the width called for by his deed, excepting the case of lot 57, where there is a deficiency of less than one inch, which was taken by his neighbors, whose buildings are wider than their lots described in their deeds. Turning to the lots east, between the premises in question and Greeaae street, every owner has all the land called for by deed, [403]*403and some have more. Thus, the entire block is built upon with each building in contact with its neighbor, and every owner fronting on Morris street has at least the quantity of land called for in his deed, excepting the. owner of'lot 57, above referred to.

In the conveyances of the various lots the beginning point, in the descriptions where metes and bounds are given as to lots west of the centre line of the block, is the southeast corner of Washington and Morris streets, and, as to lots east of the centre line, the southwest comer of Morris and Greene streets. In some instances, on both sides of.said centre line,1 the lots are merely described by lot and block numbers on Mangin’s map.

The centre line of the block, with or without the surplus, runs through the McGovern property. The easterly line of his property runs through the centre of a party wall standing partly on his premises and those of Sowukin, to the east, whose lands abut rife premises in question.

The description in the deed to McGovern (made in 1892) begins on the southerly side of Morris street one hundred seventy-five feet easterly of the southeasterly corner of Washington and Morris streets, being in line with the easterly line of lot 43 on the Mangin map. The first course is then described as running along the easterly line of lot 43 on Mangin’s map. After running several other courses, the fifth and sixth read as follows:

“Thence northerly and parallel with. Washington street to .and through the centre oí a party wail -sbamdlmg partly :on the .premises hereby conveyed and partly on 'the premises next adjoining, easterly sevenity-five feet to the southerly line of Morris street; fchen.ee westerly along the southerly line of Morris street .twenty-seven feet five inches to. ithe place of beginning.”

This description, when it refers to the centre of the party wall as being “one hundred seventy-five feet, plus twenty-seven feet five inches from the comer,” is erroneous'in that, as actually built upon, the centre line of the party wall, by reason of the surplus, is thirty hundredths of a «loot farther east.

But an important feature of the description is that this easterly line of lot 43 is made to coincide with the westerly side [404]*404wall of the’ building, and ties this easterly line twenty-seven feet five inches (27.42 feet) from the centre of the party wall.

If, therefore, the distance of one hundred seventy-five feet is accepted, the property intended to he conveyed is not correctly described; but if rejected as false, and the fixed monument, the party wall, is accepted as correct, then McGovern gets what he bargained for and the other owners will not he disturbed in their possession.

Turning to the Sowukin property, being the easterly part of lot 39, which abuts the premises in question on the west, the centre line of this same party wall mentioned in the McGovern deed is made the westerly boundary of his property. The beginning point in his deed is placed in the southerly line of Morris street one hundred seventy-five feet westerly from the southwesterly corner of Morris and Greene streets.

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Related

Vogel v. Rogers
108 A.2d 448 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1954)
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130 A. 595 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 499, 91 N.J. Eq. 400, 6 Stock. 400, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doherty-v-egan-waste-co-njch-1920.