In re Opening Hamilton Street

144 A.D. 702, 129 N.Y.S. 317, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4226
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 5, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 144 A.D. 702 (In re Opening Hamilton Street) 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
In re Opening Hamilton Street, 144 A.D. 702, 129 N.Y.S. 317, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4226 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Carr, J.:

This is an appeal from an order of the Special Term determining the ownership of an award made to e ‘ unknown owners ” in a-proceeding conducted by the city of New York to open a public street in that part of the borough of Queens which was known formerly as Long Island City. The street in question is Hamilton street, and it was shown on the map of Long Island City as a proposed public street for many years prior to the consolidation of Long Island City with the city of New York. The proceedings to acquire the land necessary for public street purposes were begun by the city of New York in 1902. At that time one Mary B. Trimble was the owner of a large tract of land through which the proposed street was projected. Her ownership arose under a deed to her made in 1901. ■ In 1902 the city of New York became vested in fee for public uses of the land forming the bed of the street, but no award of damages was made until 1908. At the time of the vesting of title in the city, MaryB. Trimble was still the owner of the land.' In 1905 ■ Trimble conveyed the large tract of land by a deed, describing the tract by metes and bounds, to one Connor. The deed contained the usual covenants of warranty, including one .of seizin. After the description of the land by metes and bounds there was a clause in the deed as follows: “ Subject to any rights that Long Island City, now a part of the City of New York, or the" public may have in and to any streets or avenues included within the above metes and bounds, as laid out on the Official Map of Long Island City; also subject to any rights conveyed by the Astoria Homestead Company to the Steinway Railway Company by conveyance dated September 23rd, 1892, and recorded,” etc. Connor conveyed the same tract to one Holmes by deed dated May 15, 1906, containing a description by metes and bounds, together with the same “subject” clauses. In 1908 a substantial award was made to “ unknown owners ” for that portion of the tract which had vested in the city in 1902. Connor made and delivered to his grantee Holmes an assignment of [704]*704whatever rights he had in any award that should he made in the street opening proceedings. Thereafter Holmes conveyed the lands in question to one Hirschman and assigned to him whatever interest he acquired in such award from Holmes. Hirschman thereupon applied at. Special Term to have himself declared the true owner of the award in question. A reference was ordered to inquire into the facts, and Mary B. Trimble appeared and. contested Hirschman’s claim of right to the award. On the coming in of the referee’s report an order was made adjudging Hirschman to be entitled to the award, and from that order Trimble now appeals. Under the well-settled law, when the land in the street vested in the city, the award to be made therefor was a chose in action or the personal property of the then owner of the land, and when the award was made actually, it related back, to the time when the title was divested from the former owner. (King v. Mayor, etc., 102 N. Y. 171; Harris v. Kingston Realty Co., 116 App. Div. 704; Matter of Mayor [Trinity Ave.], Id. 252.) Generally, the right to such award when thereafter made would not pass under a subsequent conveyance of land from the person, so entitled to the award unless an intent to make an assignment .of the award is express or properly to be inferred. (Cases above cited.) The learned court at Special Term based a finding of an intent to assign the award on the following circumstances. It held that as title to the land in the street had passed from Mrs. Trimble to the city before she conveyed to Connor by metes and bounds, and that as her deed contained full covenants of warranty including one of seizin, there was an immediate breach of the covenant of seizin when she conveyed to Connor, so far as the land in the street was concerned,, and it must be deemed that she intended to substitute her right to the award in the place of the land as to which (there was an immediate breach of the covenant of seizin and so transfer it to her grantee in liquidation of the- damages arising from the breach. (See 69 Misc. Rep. 369.) It is contended that this result is justifiable under the authority of Magee v. City of Brooklyn (144 N. Y. 265); Matter of Thompson (89 Hun, 32; affd., 148 N. Y. 743); Shields v. Pittsburg (201 Penn. St. 328). Before considering the application of these • authorities, it is [705]*705necessary to consider first'whether there was a breach of the covenant of seizin in the deed of Trimble to Connor. The. settled rule of law is that covenants in a deed are commensurate with the grant and never enlarge the grant itself. 3n other words, they relate only to what is granted and do not cover what is excepted or omitted from the grant. (King v. Mayor, etc., 102 N. Y. 171; Warvelle Vendors, § 240; 8 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 66-68; 11 Cyc. 1059.) While in the deed from Trimble to Connor there is a description by metes and bounds of a large tract of land through which Hamilton street ran at the.time of the conveyance, yet the grant was made subject expressly “to any rights that Long Island City, now a part of the City of New York, or the public may have in and to any streets or avenues included within the above metes and bounds, as laid out on the Official Map of Long Island City.” Now at the time of this conveyance, the title to the land in Hamilton street was vested in the city of New York for public use as a street. The proceeding to acquire such title was one begun to open Hamilton street, as laid down on the official map of .Long Island City, which by the Greater New York charter had become the official map of the city of New York. This proceeding, was public and all the world was charged with notice of its pendency. The vesting of title in the city in 1902 was a public act of which notice was imputable and information easily obtainable. Ordinarily the “subject” clause quoted from the-deed of Trimble to Connor would except from the grant whatever public rights had been theretofore acquired by the city, and, therefore, as to such existing rights there was no breach of the covenant of sfeizin, for it did not extend beyond the grant itself. It is urged, however, that the “subject” clause above quoted cannot be given this effect. The ground of this argument is that this clause is practically a copy of similar clauses to be found in a number of deeds in the chain through which Trimble acquired title," and that, as in such deeds, it had no practical importance and was without practical effect, so in the deed from Trimble to Connor it must be deemed to be a mere conveyancing repetition made without intended application "to then existing conditions. At the time of these earlier deeds no [706]*706public interest had been acquired in*1 any streets shown on the official map of Long Island City, except such as might possibly arise from the mere laying dowh of the proposed street on the official map, and no public right or interest in the lands to be covered by the proposed streets'did in fact arise from- the mere laying out of the street on the official map, as such in itself was not an appropriation of the land to a public use. (Forster v. Scott, 136 N. Y. 577; Mott v. Eno, 181 id. 346; Matter of City of New York [Avenue D], 200 id. 536.) In any event, though such subject ” clauses in the earlier deeds were unnecessary under the circumstances then existing, they cannot be said to have been.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A.D. 702, 129 N.Y.S. 317, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-opening-hamilton-street-nyappdiv-1911.