Douglas v. . Coonley

51 N.E. 283, 156 N.Y. 521, 10 E.H. Smith 521, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 724
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 283 (Douglas v. . Coonley) 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
Douglas v. . Coonley, 51 N.E. 283, 156 N.Y. 521, 10 E.H. Smith 521, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 724 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

By his will Henry B. Smith conferred upon executors named therein the power to sell and convey his real estate. It consisted in part of a three-story building that had three stores on the ground floor. The executors conveyed the middle store to Margaret A. Cantwell, and the store next adjoining it on the west to this defendant Coonley and one John Hughes, and Hughes’ title has since been acquired *524 by the defendant Sophronia C. Smith. Between the said middle and west stores was a wall that the conveyance made a party wall, and from the street to the upper rooms of the building, immediately adjoining this party wall on the west side, there was a stairway that was used by the occupants of both buildings, it being the only mode of access between the upper and lower floors of either building. After Coonley and Hughes had become the owners of the west store they undertook to confirm the alleged right of Margaret A. Cantwell to use this stairway in common with themselves as a means of ingress and egress to and from the two floors above her store, and to that end executed a deed of conveyance, by which, as the complaint recites, was granted, sold and conveyed to the said Margaret A. Cantwell, her heirs and assigns, the right of way to pass and repass up and down the passageway or stairway between the store owned by Margaret A. Cantwell and of the parties of the first part hereto at all times, in common with the parties of the first part hereto, for the purpose of going and returning to and from the rooms in the upper part of Said stores. The party of the second part to pay one-half of the expense of keeping the stairway in repair.” Subsequently these plaintiffs succeeded to the title of Margaret A. Cantwell in and to the middle store, and thereafter and on the 11th day •of January, 1893, the entire building was destroyed by fire. The parties at once reconstructed the buildings on the same foundation as before, and united in the construction between the two stores of a party wall similar to the one formerly existing, except as to the doorway leading from the head of the stairway to the second floor of the plaintiffs’ building. The plaintiffs put in a frame for such doorway when the wall Was being constructed, but afterwards defendants tore the frame out and built that portion of the wall up solid, thus preventing the plaintiffs from obtaining access to their premises by means of the stairway. The defendants, though frequently requested, refused to permit the plaintiffs to enjoy the stairway in common with them.

It is conceded that prior to the destruction of the building *525 by fire, the plaintiffs had a legal right to use as they did this stairway and the doorway in the party wall as well, in common with the defendants. But it is contended that the effect of the destruction of the building by fire was to destroy this easement.

The diligence of counsel has not succeeded in bringing to light a similar case in this country, nor have we been more fortunate. The Appellate Division regarded the case as controlled by Heartt v. Kruger (121 N. Y. 386). That case is certainly authority for the proposition that these plaintiffs had no right to insist upon a reconstruction of the party wall or of the stairway. The buildings having been destroyed without fault on the part of the defendants, it was their right thereafter to make such use of the land as should seem to them most conducive to their interests; they could not by their own act affect the plaintiffs’ easement, but an outside force beyond the defendants’ control having destroyed the buildings and the major part of the party wall, it was within their power thereafter to so use the land that the plaintiffs’ easements should not be revived. Had they done so, a situation would have: been presented within the doctrine of Heartt v. Kruger (supra). But this they did not do. Instead, they united with the plaintiffs in constructing a party wall and rebuilt the stairway in precisely the same place as before, and thus within a comparatively short period of time the buildings, so far at least as the stairway and party wall are concerned, were exactly the same as if the fire had never taken place. And the question is, did this conduct of the parties operate to revive the easement that was suspended by the destruction of the property ? If such be the effect of this action, the result is certainly equitable and in accordance with good conscience. The plaintiffs’ predecessor in title in purchasing the middle store, acquired the right to use the stairway and the doorway through the party wall as a necessary incident to her enjoyment of the second and third stories of her building. Apparently, for the purpose of further assuring her right to use the stairway and the doorway as well, a grant of such right, presumably- *526 "upon a good and sufficient consideration, was made to her by these defendants. The grant was not intended to be a temporary matter, or one purely for her personal convenience, for it ran to her, her heirs and assigns.

Why should she or her assigns be deprived of it now, inasmuch as the situation of the property is precisely .the same as it was then ? hi o good reason has been suggested by counsel for relieving the defendants from the- easement which they Undertook to confirm, if not create. The law afforded them an opportunity for the destruction of the suspended easement by an entirely different method of construction, and the reason of the law is that in case of the destruction of an easement by 'the act of God, then a party ought to be at liberty to make the best possible use of his property and should not be burdened with the necessity of a reconstruction along the same lines. Presumably these defendants found that a reconstruction of the building upon the old plan was the best possible use to which they could put the land, and now that such reconstruction is accomplished they insist that the other parties shall not enjoy the easement. The plaintiffs need not have united with the defendants in the construction of the party wall, but did so with the expectation undoubtedly of enjoying the right supposed to be secured to" them of access to the upper stories of the building. It certainly seems but .just under all the circumstances that these expectations should be realized, and, hence, it becomes the duty of a court of equity to work out that result provided it can be done within established equitable principles.

Mr. Washburn, in his work on the Law of Easements and Servitudes, says at page 568 (686,3d ed.): “ It may be observed as a well-settled rule of the civil law, which would doubtless be regarded as a part of the common law, that if a house, a wall, a water spout, or anything of that kind with which or by which a servitude exists or is enjoyed, is destroyed, and the same is afterwards, within the period of prescription, reconstructed or restored, whatever may have been the servitudes •connected therewith, they are, by such restoration, revived.”

*527 Courts of equity have frequently borrowed from the civil law certain of its rules and advantageously engrafted them upon our system of jurisprudence, and indeed the father of equity jurisprudence in this state, Chancellor Kent, made special use of it in the party wall case of Campbell v. Mesier (4 Johns.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 283, 156 N.Y. 521, 10 E.H. Smith 521, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-coonley-ny-1898.