Immaculate Conception Church v. Sheffer

34 N.Y.S. 724, 88 Hun 335, 95 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 335, 68 N.Y. St. Rep. 542
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 N.Y.S. 724 (Immaculate Conception Church v. Sheffer) 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
Immaculate Conception Church v. Sheffer, 34 N.Y.S. 724, 88 Hun 335, 95 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 335, 68 N.Y. St. Rep. 542 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

HARDIN, P. J.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleges ownership of certain lands, therein particularly described, situate in the city of Ithaca, -in block 107, and that on the 26th of April, 1892, the defendant wrongfully entered upon the plaintiff's land described, “tearing down the gates and taking down the fence standing upon said land of the plaintiff, and removing the same, and injuring said premises, and thereby said defendant has deprived the plaintiff of the use and occupation of said land above described, and prevented it from enjoying the same as it otherwise would have done, to the plaintiff’s damage of one hundred dollars.” The answer contains several denials, and denies that the plaintiff is entitled “to a strip of land twelve feet wide, taken off from the north side of lot 182, the said strip of land being a portion of the premises described in this complaint in this action.” The answer of the defendant also alleges “that he is entitled to use as a lane or alleyway, and for alley purposes, the lane, twelve feet wide, off from the north side of lot 182, block 107, on Plain street, in said city of Ithaca, said alleyway being a part and parcel of the land described in the complaint in this action.” The answer also alleges “that the said alley was reserved for a right of way and alley purposes by Anson Braman, the former owner of said premises, for the use of lots 181 and 182, and also for the use of himself and his assigns.” And the defendant alleges that he is the owner of lot 181, “and has the right to use said alley or right of way off from the north side of lot 182.” The [725]*725evidence reveals that both parties claim title to their respective lands through Anson Braman, who, in 1847, purchased lots 182, 183, and 184, situated at the corner of Plain and Buffalo streets, in the said city. January 1, 1849, Anson Braman conveyed to Theron Seymour the corner lot, of 66 feet on Buffalo street, by 198 feet on Plain street, which is known in the evidence as the Wilgus or Doxstader lot. In the conveyance so made there was a reservation, for the use of the balance of Braman’s lots, of a right of way 12 feet wide across the north end of the land conveyed. The conveyance, after describing the premises as parts of lots Nos. 182, 183, and 184, contained the following language: “Reserving, however, to the said parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns, for the use of the balance of said lots, a right of way of an alley twelve feet wide on the north end of the premises hereby conveyed.” Subsequent to the execution of that ¿deed, and on May 8, 1850, Braman purchased of Williams lot 181, which was 60 feet wide on Plain street, and immediately joining his former ownership on the north. Subsequently, and on the 3d of September, 1868, Braman conveyed to Addison M. O’Daniel the west half of lot 186, being 66 feet by 132 feet, and in that conveyance were the following words: “Together with the right of way over the lane taken off from the north side of lot 182, being a part of the same premises conveyed to said Anson Braman by deed from J. B. Williams.” The principal controversy at the trial was over the length of the lane mentioned in the language just quoted; the contention of the plaintiff being that the language vested the right to the grantee of a use of a right of way a distance of 66 feet from Plain street, whereas the contention of the defendant is that the lane was to be extended 132 feet from Plain street, so as to accommodate the entire length of the premises conveyed. The defendant has succeeded to all the right, title, and interest embraced in the deed last mentioned, inasmuch as O’Daniel conveyed to Mead, and Mead conveyed to Mary O’Daniel, and she conveyed to the defendant. Subsequently, and in January, 1869, Anson Braman, having published his last will and testament, died, and the devisee under his will conveyed the remaining portions owned by him to one Phillip Lynch, who conveyed to the plaintiff. Abundant evidence was given on the trial to indicate that at the time of the execution of the deed to ■O’Daniel, and for some time prior thereto, the lane which commenced at Plain street, and continued a distance of 132 feet east -over the north side of lot 182, had been used its entire length, and that a traveled way appeared, as the result of considerable use. Prior to the execution of that conveyance, Braman had carried on a nursery business on lots 181, 182, 183, and 184, for a number of .years; and he resided on the east half of lots 183 and 184, and his barn was on lot 182, and faced the lane. There were also several buildings located along and adjacent to the lane, and Braman had been accustomed to use his barn and nursery grounds by passing -over the lane from Plain street, that being the convenient means of ingress to his premises from Plain street; and there had been in use a portion of the time a gate at the east end of the barn, at a [726]*726point 132 feet east of Plain street. There was some evidence tending to show a use of the lane along the north side of lot 182 since about the year 1853, and its frequent use by Braman. It is made quite apparent by the evidence that when the defendant purchased the west half of lot 181 he had become familiar with the lane and its use prior thereto, and he had walked over the lane from Plain street, a distance of 132 feet, for a period of some 20 years that he had been acquainted with it, and that prior to his purchase he had walked over it, and that he saw that it was open from Plain street to the east end of the lot which he acquired, to wit, for a distance of 132 feet. In April, 1892, the defendant commenced building a barn on the back end of his lot, and using the lane for the purposes of carrying the building material through to the site chosen for the location of the barn. Before he had completed his building, and while he was still working upon it, the plaintiff, through its officers and agents, took means to close the lane, by placing a gate across it, and locking the gate, so as to exclude the defendant from the use of the lane. After the gate had remained closed for some two or three days the defendant opened it, and resumed the use of the lane for the convenience of his building. During the trial the plaintiff conceded “that no part of the fence on the south side of the O’Daniel lot was taken down by the defendant, except so much thereof as was in front of, and necessary to make convenient access to, the barn.” The will of Braman, which bears date the 21st of June, 1866, devised to his wife that portion of the lands then owned by him, and, after a minute description of them, occur the words, viz. “including a right of way from the above-described premises to said Plain street * * * .” After his will was probated his widow and heirs at law joined in an instrument executed on the 26th of April, 1876, conveying to Phillip F. Lynch the lands described in the complaint, and at the close of the description occur these words, “Together with the use of a right of way over the above-described premises, to Plain street.” Lynch, bn the 16th of December, 1878, conveyed to the plaintiff the premises described in the complaint; and that conveyance, after the words of description, contains the following words: “Together with the use of a right of way from the above-described premises to Plain street, in the said village of Ithaca; being the same premises owned and occupied by Anson Braman, now deceased, in his lifetime, and described in the will of said Braman.”

From the language found in the conveyances just alluded to, it is apparent that it was the intention that the right of way should be for the convenience of the properties, to wit, the property owned by the defendant and the property owned by the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 N.Y.S. 724, 88 Hun 335, 95 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 335, 68 N.Y. St. Rep. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/immaculate-conception-church-v-sheffer-nysupct-1895.