Hawes v. Clarke

159 A.D. 65

This text of 159 A.D. 65 (Hawes v. Clarke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawes v. Clarke, 159 A.D. 65 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This action was brought and tried and the judgment was rendered upon the theory that the filing of the papers, which by the judgment defendant is required to remove, and notations thereof by the registrar among the memorials on the original certificate of title on file with said registrar constitute a cloud on plaintiff’s title. The plaintiff also demanded judgment for damages for slander of title, but the court found that defendant was not actuated by malice and that plaintiff failed to prove any .damage.

The plaintiff owns the premises known as 241 West One Hundred and Fourth street on the southerly side between West End avenue and Broadway, commencing 15.3 feet west of Broadway and having a frontage of 40 feet and extending in depth 100.11 feet. On the 30th day of September, 1910, she brought an action to have her title registered pursuant to the provisions of article 12 of the Beal Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 50 [Laws of 1909, chap. 52], as amd., by Laws of 1910, chap. 621), but she failed to make the defendant a party to the action. It was certified in the official examiner’s certificate of title, annexed to and made a part of the complaint in that action, that plaintiff’s premises were subject to no liens other than the liens of two specified mortgages and to no easement, and that “an inspection of the walls, halls, roofs, yards and fire escapes show ” no easements “ except that the wall on the east is a party wall in which there is an easement in favor [67]*67of easterly premises to use said wall as a party wall,” and that there was no person not a party to the action interested in or claiming to have any right or interest in or to the premises. The certificate contained a diagram of the premises and a statement to the effect that the names and addresses of owners of adjoining parcels were shown thereon as far as reasonably obtainable by inquiry on the premises and by reference to the record, given below as shown in the diagram;” but that diagram does not show the name of any owner of adjacent premises. A preceding diagram of the premises in said certificate, certified to be <£an accurate diagram of the property proposed for registration,” shows certain names written thereon adjacent to the plaintiff’s premises with a memorandum to the effect that all owners so far as known resided on the premises. There was also annexed to the complaint a survey of the premises showing a party wall along the easterly side line of the premises, as stated in the certificate of title, for part of the distance, and showing on the southerly boundary for a distance of about two-thirds of the width of the premises a wall marked <c stone wall,” with the rear line of plaintiff’s premises passing approximately through the middle thereof, indicating that the wall rests in part on premises to the south of plaintiff’s lot. Appellant owns said premises adjoining plaintiff’s premises on the south, and he attempted to become a party to the registration action by having his attorneys serve a notice of appearance therein, demanding that a copy of the complaint and of all other papers be served on them, but the notice of appearance was returned by plaintiff’s attorney with a notice in writing that appellant was not a party to the action and was not entitled to appear therein. After negotiations between the attorneys by which appellant attempted, without success, to have his rights protected, on the 11th day of November, 1910, appellant served notice of motion for leave to intervene as a defendant in the action for the registration of plaintiff’s title. That motion was made on the summons, complaint, examiner’s certificate of title and on affidavits showing, among other things, that the defendant owned the premises directly adjoining the plaintiff’s in the rear or on the south of the width of twenty feet and known as 243 West One Hundred and Third [68]*68street; that the stone wall between plaintiff’s premises and those of the defendant was a retaining wall and was built and is maintained for the purpose of preventing the premises of the plaintiff from caving in or falling upon defendant’s premises; that any proper inspection of plaintiff’s premises would show that the wall was a retaining wall, and that from one foot to one foot and one inch stand on plaintiff’s premises and only seven or eight inches of it stand on defendant’s premises; that defendant has an easement in said wall as a retaining wall, and that the boundary line between plaintiff’s and defendant’s premises, and the status of the wall, and defendant’s right, interest and easement therein must necessarily be determined by the judgment in the action, and that appellant was, therefore, a person whose interest might be affected by such judgment. Plaintiff presented an affidavit in opposition to the motion, denying that the wall was a retaining wall and asserting, first, that the wall stood entirely on plaintiff’s premises; and, secondly, that if any portion of it stood on defendant’s premises, such portion “is an independent wall erected ” by defendant or his predecessor in title and that defendant had no interest or easement in that part of the wall standing on plaintiff’s premises. The motion was denied at Special Term on the 2d of December, 1910, and the order was resettled on the twentieth day of the same month. The appellant appealed from that order as resettled, and on February 3, 1911, this court reversed the order and granted the motion. (Hawes v. U. S. Trust Co., No. 1, 142 App. Div. 789.) Concurrently with or pending the motion at Special Term for leave to intervene, the defendant herein obtained an order staying application for final judgment in the title registration action, but that stay was subsequently vacated, and, pending the appeal to this court from the order denying defendant’s motion to intervene, plaintiff applied to the court, on notice to the parties to the registration action, but without notice to appellant, for a judgment registering her title in accordance with the allegations of her complaint and the certificate of the official examiner thereto annexed, and the motion was granted and judgment was entered on the 7th day of December, 1910. On the eighth day of the same month plaintiff’s title was registered in the book of “ Registration Certificates ” in the office [69]*69of the registrar, and on the ninth day of the same month a duplicate certificate of registration was issued by the registrar. After this court reversed the order denying appellant’s motion to be made a party to the registration action and granted the motion, his attorneys reserved the notice of appearance on plaintiff’s attorney in the registration action, but plaintiff’s attorney failed to serve the complaint as therein demanded or to take any steps to vacate the judgment, and it has not been formally vacated.

On the 6th day of February, 1911, appellant filed the order of reversal, or a certified copy thereof, with the registrar and requested that a notation be made on the certificate; but since the order of reversal did not show what its nature was, the chief clerk in the office of the registrar requested that certified copies of the motion papers on the motion to intervene be procured and filed in the office of the registrar, and this was done on that or the next day. The registrar thereupon made the following notation under the heading “ Memorials ” on plaintiff’s original certificate of title in the registration book in the office of said registrar:

6A. Certified Copy Order Reversing Order Dec. 2, 1910. Samuel J. Clark, Appellant. Feb. 6, 1911 Max S. G-rifenhagen.”

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Bluebook (online)
159 A.D. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawes-v-clarke-nyappdiv-1913.