Holden v. Crolly

153 A.D. 254, 138 N.Y.S. 23, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9250
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 A.D. 254 (Holden v. Crolly) 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
Holden v. Crolly, 153 A.D. 254, 138 N.Y.S. 23, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9250 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Carr, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, entered at Special Term in Westchester county in an action brought under section 1638 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to determine a claim to real property situate in the village of Pleasantville in said county. The defendant Theresa Crolly, who is the only appellant, and the plaintiff have derived whatever rights they may possess mutually in the land in question from an ultimate common source of title. In February, 1868, Ira Wheeler acquired, by deed, title to a tract of land fronting upon-a highway, known formerly as Railroad avenue but now as Bedford road. The west boundary of this tract was the “east side of the New York and Harlem Railroad,” or “ the Rail Road fence,” and the east boundary was at one time the land of Henry Hobby, and later that of Mary Stephens. In 1888 Ira Wheeler conveyed a portion of this tract to the defendant Theresa Crolly by deed with a description as follows: “Beginning at a point on the southerly side of the road leading from Pleasantville to Sing Sing and now .known as Rail Road Avenue, one hundred and twenty-two (122) feet easterly from the easterly line of the New York and Harlem Railroad, thence running easterly along said Road or Avenue, fifty-five (55) feet, thence southerly at right angles with’ said road or avenue one hundred & fifty (150) feet, thence westerly parallel with said road or avenue fifty-five feet, thence northerly at right angles with said road or avenue one hundred [256]*256and fifty feet to the place of beginning. Together with a right of way thirty feet wide extending from Railroad Avenue southerly to a new street called Clinton Street and the easterly line of such right' of way is to he the westerly line of the lot hereby conveyed such right of way to be a free open and unobstructed right of way to the party of the second part and tó any and all persons for the purposes of ingress and egress and passing to and fro from said Railroad Avenue to the said new street known as Clinton Street or to or from any intermediate point on such right of way. ” This deed was recorded in April, 1888, and was the first conveyance out of Wheeler of any portion of the original tract. It was found by the trial court on the request of the defendant Crolly that, on the execution and delivery of the foregoing deed, the said defendant entered into possession of the land described therein and continued in possession for more than twenty years prior to the beginning of this action. This finding is based upon indisputable evidence, Mrs. Crolly having built a department store on the land in 1888 and having occupied it ever since the construction of the building. In July, 1890, Wheeler conveyed another portion of his original tract to Jennie I. Lane, who in turn conveyed to her husband, Winfield Lane. The deed to Mrs. Lane contained a description, as follows: “Beginning at a point on the southerly side of the road léading, from Pleasant-ville to Sing Sing and known as Railroad Avenue, adjoining the land of Theresa Crolly; thence running easterly along said road fifty eight feet to the land of Mary Stephens; thence southerly along the land of said Stephens one hundred and ninety two feet to the land of Geo. H. Wheeler; thence westerly along said Wheeler land seventy five feet to a right of way; thence northerly along said right of way twenty eight feet to the land of Theresa Crolly; thence easterly along said Crollys land fifty five feet; thence northerly along said Crollys land one hundred and fifty feet to the place of beginning, all distances above mentioned to he more or less.” Mr. Lane is not a party to this action, hut was examined as a witness at the trial and made no claim in hostility to the plaintiff. The description in the deed of Wheeler to Mrs. Lane necessarily implied a reference, as ah integral consideration, to the deed from Wheeler to Mrs. [257]*257Crolly, for the westerly line of the Lane lot was necessarily the easterly line of the Crolly lot. While the deed to Lane called for a lot fronting on the highway fifty-eight feet, yet, as the deed declared, “ all distances above mentioned to be more or less,” it is clear that all the land of Wheeler fronting on the highway east of the easterly line of Crolly’s lot was conveyed to Lane by that part of the description which carried the Lane lot from the easterly Crolly line easterly “ to the land of Mary Stephens,” whether the actual distance along the highway was more or less than fifty-eight feet, and the learned trial court has so found at the request of the defendant Crolly. After the deed to Lane Wheeler died, and his successors in interest conveyed the remainder of this original tract located west of the thirty-foot right of way, and the plaintiff' in this action has acquired title to a portion of said remainder by a deed which fixed her easterly boundary on the west line of “Wheeler Avenue.” It is conceded that “ Wheeler Avenue ” referred to in plaintiff’s deed is the thirty-foot right of way referred to in the deed of Wheeler to Crolly, where it was declared that “ the easterly line of such right of way is to be the westerly line ” of the Crolly lot. In the deed from Wheeler to Crolly, as before stated, the westerly line of the Crolly lot was located “ one hundred and twenty two (122) feet easterly from the easterly line of the New York and Harlem Railroad.” Ordinarily this would seem a sufficiently definite location easily determinable by the location of the easterly line of the railroad. However, it is the essence of the plaintiff’s contention in this controversy that the words “easterly line of the New York and Harlem Railroad,” as used in the deed from Wheeler to Crolly, were intended mutually to mean a point in the center of a stone wall which ran along the crest of a bank near and parallel to the railroad tracks, which wall Wheeler, the grantor, had understood to be on the “easterly line” of the railroad in question, when he used said language in his deed to Crolly.

In 1845 the land now in question formed a part of a farm owned by one Henry Hobby. In that year Hobby made a deed to the railroad company of a strip of land through Ms farm 70 feet wide and 2,587 feet long, runmng through the farm “as [258]*258now laid out and located through the said farm as part of the route for the extension of the New York and Harlem Railroad between White Plains and Somers, in the Oounty Westchester bounded northerly by land of Henry Romer southerly by land of John Poster easterly by a line running parallel with the centre line of said Railroad as now staked out through said farm and distant easterly therefrom thirty feet and westerly by a line running parallel with said centre line & distant westerly therefrom forty feet.” This deed likewise contained a covenant that the grantors, their heirs and assigns, should “ at all times make and forever maintain good and sufficient fences on both sides of the strip or piece of land hereinbefore described. ” At what time Hobby, in pursuance of said covenant, made fences on the sides of the strip conveyed to the railroad company does not appear,, but that some fence was made on the easterly line, presumably by him, between 1845 and 1853, is evident from the fact that in the latter year Hobby made a deed to one Mabee of a part of his farm fronting on the highway and east of and adjoining the railroad land, and by said deed described the property they conveyed as bounded “to” and ‘‘along the Railroad fence.” In fact the description in this deed expressly made “ the Railroad fence ” the westerly boundary of the land thereby conveyed, for the description therein identifies the “Railroad fence” and the east line of the land of the railroad as being coincident.

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Related

Mandel v. Ohsiek
2 Misc. 2d 586 (New York Supreme Court, 1956)
County of Sullivan v. Downie
102 Misc. 348 (New York Supreme Court, 1918)
Holden v. Crolly
138 N.Y.S. 1121 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
153 A.D. 254, 138 N.Y.S. 23, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holden-v-crolly-nyappdiv-1912.