Hill v. Bernheimer

78 Misc. 472, 140 N.Y.S. 35
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 78 Misc. 472 (Hill v. Bernheimer) 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
Hill v. Bernheimer, 78 Misc. 472, 140 N.Y.S. 35 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Page, J.

Prior to the year 1907 Charles Kronfeld was the owner of a plot of ground having a frontage of - fifty feet on Decatur avenue, in the city of Hew York, and running through the block with a frontage of fifty feet on Webster avenue. The depth of the plot from street to street was 190 feet. At this time the property was unimproved. On February 1, 1907, he made a mortgage to one Benjamin Abert to secure the payment of $4,000, which was a lien upon the entire property. On June 11, 1907, he conveyed the property, subject to the mortgage, to the Cosmos Realty Company. Plans had already been filed for the building of four apartment houses,- and the Cosmos Realty Company began their construction. On -September 5, 1907, a mortgage upon the entire plot was made to one James Gr. Wentz to secure the payment of $24,000, and the prior $4,000 mortgage to Benjamin Abert was, by agreement, subordinated to it. On July 21, 1908, Vincent Avallone, at a foreclosure sale of the $4,000 mortgage, became the owner of the property, subject to the $24,000 mortgage, and completed the construction of the four houses already commenced by his predecessor. Two of the houses fronted on Webster avenue. These were built on the middle line of the plot, with a party wall between them and an alley-way four feet in width on each side. The other two fronted on Decatur avenue, and instead of being placed together they were built upon the line of the property on either side and had an eight-foot alley running between them, which led to a rear courtyard. This rear courtyard joined with the courtyard of the Webster avenue houses, and all of the plot not covered by the four buildings was paved with concrete, making one continuous way through the eight-foot alley from Decatur avenue into the court and from the court around [475]*475either side of the Webster avenue houses. The front of the property on Webster avenue was a perpendicular cliff thirty or forty feet above street level, and a flight of steep, stone steps ran down to the street. These made a very difficult and inconvenient means of access and egress, for which reason they were seldom used. The real entrance to the Webster avenue houses was from Decatur avenue through the alley between the two houses on that street. This was evidently the intention of the builder, and the testimony shows that the premises were used in that way almost exclusively. The sewer, water and gas connections of the Webster avenue houses were also made with the Decatur avenue mains through this alley-way, as there were no mains at that time on Webster avenue.

This was the state of the premises in 1908, when, on October twenty-ninth of that year, in consideration of payment of part of the $24,000 mortgage, one of the Webster avenue houses was released from the lien of that mortgage. Thereafter the mortgage was a lien only upon the northern house on Webster avenue and the two Decatur avenue houses. Vincent Avallone, the owner of the premises, then placed a new mortgage upon the two Decatur avenue houses on November 30, 1908, to secure the payment of $14,000 to Abraham Bernheimer, the defendants’ testator. The next day, December 1, 1908, the two Decatur avenue plots were released from the lien of the prior $24,000 mortgage, after which the lien of that mortgage only covered the one northern plot and house on Webster avenue.

On Hay 4, 1911, the defendants became the owners of the Decatur avenue houses and lots by foreclosure of the mortgage of November 30, 1908, and on August 10, 1911, the plaintiff became the owner of the northern Webster .avenue house and lot by foreclosure of the Wentz mortgage of September 5, 1907. The defendants started the erection of a fence on the line between their property and the Webster avenue property, and, it is claimed, threatened to cut off the water, gas and sewer pipes running over their land to that of the plaintiff. This action is for 'an injunction restraining them from so doing on the ground that the plaintiff [476]*476has an easement of access over defendants’ premises to Decatur avenue through the alley-way between the houses, and for the use of the pipe connections with the Decatur avenue mains.

The facts of the case are practically undisputed. The question to be determined is, when, if ever, the plaintiff’s easement was acquired.

On November 30, 1908, Vincent Avallone was the owner of the entire plot by one title, subject only to the Wentz mortgage of $24,000, which also covered the entire property. Up to that time there was no severance of the lots now owned by the plaintiff and defendants. They were held by one title, and there could be no easement in favor of one portion over another, for it is a well settled principle of the law of servitudes that the owner of an entire tract, or of adjoining pieces of land, may distribute and redistribute the burdens of its various portions at will and no easement can arise until a severance of title occurs. If the plaintiff has the easements which it claims over the land of the defendants, they must have been acquired subsequently to November 30, 1908.

The first severance occurred on November 30, 1908, when Avallone mortgaged the lots now owned by the defendants to Bernheimer to secure the payment of $14,000. In the deed to Bernheimer there was no express reservation of any easement in favor of the Webster avenue lots. It remains, therefore, to be determined whether the easements .claimed were impliedly reserved to the grantor by reason of the condition of the premises at that time.

There is an early rule of the common law which has been followed in this state that where the owner of land sells and conveys a portion of it his grantee takes all those apparent and visible easements which were used by the owner for the benefit of the part conveyed. It is assumed that the parties contracted with reference to the physical condition of the property at the time of the sale, and construing the grant, as we must, most strongly against the grantor, he is precluded from denying to his grantee any rights in his adjacent land which may have been within the contempla[477]*477tion of the purchaser. Curtiss v. Ayrault, 47 N. Y. 73; Paine v. Chandler, 134 id. 385.

The same rule has not, however, been applied where the servient portion has been conveyed. In that case, unless there be an express reservation in the deed, no easements will survive to the grantor over the portion granted except easements of strict necessity. An early case (Burr v. Mills, 21 Wend. 290) held that where an owner of land conveyed a portion of his premises, which at the time of the conveyance was flowed by a mill dam on the grantor’s land, and made no express reservation of the right to continue to flood the land, he had lost the right and could not set up an implied reservation. Cowen, J., writing for the court, says: “A man makes a lane across one farm to another, which he is accustomed to use as a way; he then conveys the former, without reserving a right of way; it is clearly gone.”

There are a few dicta which fail to make this distinction, the most notable of which is contained in the case of Lampman v. Milks, 21 N. Y. 505, in which Judge Selden in a learned discourse on the law of easements seems to infer that the same rules would apply to both easements by implied' grant and easements by implied reservation, but there is no case which directly applies the same rules to both, and the law has been settled by a long line of decisions in the highest court of this state. It is ably stated by Vann, J., in Wells v. Garbutt, 132 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Misc. 472, 140 N.Y.S. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-bernheimer-nysupct-1912.