Goldbacher v. Eggers

38 Misc. 36, 76 N.Y.S. 881
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 38 Misc. 36 (Goldbacher v. Eggers) 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
Goldbacher v. Eggers, 38 Misc. 36, 76 N.Y.S. 881 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

Clarke, J.

' This is a suit to compel the removal' of a wall alleged to encroach upon plaintiff’s premises and to recover dam"ages. The only point at issue is whether defendant’s westerly wall stands upon plaintiff’s lot, No. 3114 Third avenue. The [37]*37plaintiff claims that defendant’s wall encroaches over her easterly line on a wedge-shaped strip ten inches wide on the street or north front; three inches wide in the rear and running back thirty-three feet and four inches. The defendant denies any encroachment. It is conceded that the plaintiff’s easterly boundary and the defendant’s westerly boundary are the same line. The plaintiff takes title under a deed describing her lot as “ Beginning at a point on the Southerly side of Third Avenue distant seventy-five (75) feet southwesterly along the line of said Third Avenue from a point' where, the westerly line of the Port Morris Branch of the Hew York and Harlem Eailroad crosses the Southerly line of said Avenue.” The defendant takes title under a deed describing his lot in the same language as beginning at a point fifty feet from the point where the westerly line of the railroad crosses the southerly line of Third avenue and thence southwesterly along said avenue twenty-five feet, that is to the point which is described as the point of beginning in the plaintiff’s deed and seventy-five feet from the point where the westerly line of the railroad crosses the southerly line of Third avenue. In 1887, the premises were part of a larger tract which was sold under partition and both plaintiff’s and defendant’s remote grantors obtained their deeds from the referee in that partition. The original tract as described in the judgment of partition takes the same starting point, as described in the plaintiff’s and defendant’s deeds and the premises were advertised and sold according to that description. In Elliott v. Lewis, 10 Hun, 486, it is held: “ The survey must commence at the place designated for its commencement in the deed, unless, perhaps, it clearly appears that to adopt it would destroy the grant.” The point of beginning is clearly defined in the deeds and if it is ascertainable by proof the location of the premises must be determined by commencing at such point. Both sides called city surveyors as witnesses. The testimony of the defendant’s surveyor, who determined the distance from the old angle of Third avenue does not materially help, because he testified that he made no measurements east of the defendant’s lot, that is toward the railroad. The other surveyor for the defendant testified that he measured the distance from the westerly line of the railroad and found it to be seventy-five feet to the wall in question. The railroad at its intersection with Third avenue runs through a cut, bound by a retaining wall. The wit[38]*38ness testified: “ We took the) westerly side of that wall as a starting point; the wall was uncovered and dug out * * * and from the actual location of the stones on that wall, the location of the line of Port Morris wall with the southerly line of Third avenue, was made on the ground, and the measurement of 50 feet taken from there westerly along Third avenue for the determination of the beginning of Mr. Egger’s lot.” The city surveyor, who testified for the plaintiff, obtained his starting point in a different way. He first found the middle points between the rails of the single track in the cut, and connecting these points established a line midway between the rails, then by taking several measurements east and west from this middle line of the track he verified its position as the middle line of the forty-foot right of way. Having thus determined the middle line of the right of way, several points distant twenty feet westerly from that line at right angles thereto were established, and being connected the westerly line of the right of way was obtained. Where this westerly line intersected the southerly side of Third avenue was taken as o the point of crossing described in the deeds. This starting point was compared in itsl location with the same or corresponding point as shown upon the final tax map, the damage, and benefit maps, and the original map of the acquisition of the forty feet right of way of the railroad, and its position verified by measurements from monuments) on Third, Brook, and St. Ann avenues. From this point seventy-five feet were measured along the southerly side of Third avenue, and the point of beginning described in the plaintiff’s deed ascertained, and her easterly boundary line established. If there were any evidence that the map or theoretical line of the railroad was different from the line of the railroad as actually opened and used at the time of the delivery of the deeds, the latter would control. Burke v. Henderson, 54 App. Div. 157. In Smith v. Stacey, 68 App. Div. 521, the court says: “ The rule seems to be well established that the parties will be assumed to have acquired. title with the visible street boundaries in mind rather than those laid out on a map.” But there is no- evidence in this case of any difference between the physical and theoretical boundary at the time the deeds were delivered, and it does not appear that there was a retaining wall at that time. The parties could have determined whether they took the wall or the theo[39]*39retieal line of the railroad as it appeared upon the maps, and whether they took the one line or the other is a question of fact. Barrows v. Webster, 144 N. Y. 422. The deeds make no mention of any wall. Eeither party took measurements from the top of 'the wall, which is on a level with the street, and which the plaintiff located somewhat inside the theoretical line to allow for the taper on the other side. .There is no evidence that the parties intended the measurement to be taken from the bottom of a retaining wall, to locate which it was necessary to excavate. To learn the intention of the parties we may refer to the map in the partition suit which is the source of both parties’ title. It is conceded that the premises in question are the same as shown on the map, and that the description of the original plot and deeds of the separate lots were drawn in accordance with that map. Under these circumstances the line of the railroad described in the deeds is not a retaining wall now standing upon the premises, but the boundary line of the railroad property as shown on the map. The plaintiff with precision, determined this westerly line, and by actual measurements therefrom established the true boundary line between the plaintiff and defendant’s property. I therefore find that defendant’s wall encroaches upon plaintiff’s lot as claimed. In equity the obligation to remove may be placed directly upon the party who caused the wall to be erected. Where the defendant is a willful trespasser the plaintiff as a matter of strict right is entitled to a mandatory injunction directing the defendant to remove his wall. Lyle v. Little, 28 App. Div. 181; Baron v. Korn, 51 Hun, 401, 127 N. Y. 224. In such case damages are not given for permanent injury to the property, and the plaintiff recovers only his damages up to the entry of the judgment, and at the same time secures an injunction which prevents the future trespass. Pappenheim v. Metropolitan E. R. R. Co., 128 N. Y. 436, 445. In Stowers v. Gilbert, 156 N. Y. 600, the court said: Damages * * * are not to be awarded upon the assumption of permanent injury, as the judgment does not and cannot, operate as a purchase of the right to have the wall remain as at present constructed.” But where the trespass was not willful, another rule may apply. In the recent case of Crocker v. Manhattan Life Ins. Co., 61 App. Div. 226, it is said: In Stowers v. Gilbert (156 N. Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Misc. 36, 76 N.Y.S. 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldbacher-v-eggers-nysupct-1902.