Lacustrine Fertilizer Co. v. Guano

26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 47
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 47 (Lacustrine Fertilizer Co. v. Guano) 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
Lacustrine Fertilizer Co. v. Guano, 26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 47 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Talcott, P. J.:

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment sustaining the separate demurrers of The Lake Guano, etc., Company and Silas M. Stilwell to the complaint of the plaintiff, which demurrers were upon the sole ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The complaint is for the conversion of certain quantities or piles of “marl” situated and located upon certain lands in the county of Seneca, to which the defendants, The Lake Guano, etc., Company have acquired the title by means of certain conveyances thereof from the heirs at law of one Royal U. Torrey. The said' Royal U. Torrey was the owner of the land in which the said piles of- “ marl ” are located. In the year 1856, the State of New York, for the purpose of making a new cut for the Canandaigua outlet, had entered upon the said lands of Torrey and excavated across them a channel for the said new cut, and in the course of such excavation had thrown up on either bank of the said new cut certain piles of “ marl,” which were dug out of the soil of Torrey’s said land along the course of the said excavation.

And the complaint avers that the said piles of “marl” had, after their excavation and before the 6th day of January, 1865, [50]*50been lying upon the land of Torrey, in conspicuous heaps or piles, and the marl was, in its nature and color, clearly distinguishable from the surface soil on which it rested, and was well known to have certain fertilizing properties which gave it a value additional to and distinct from the general soil’ and, in consequence of those properties, had been extensively used by farmers, and dealt in and transported as an article of commerce. That on the 6th of January. 1865, the said Royal U. Torrey, conveyed the land upon which those piles of marl were so located to one Henry C. Spalding, by deed, containing a conditional exception or reservation, in the following words, viz. : “And also excepting the beds and deposits of marl lying on both banks of the now cut for the Canandaigua river, which passes through said lands, and it is an express stipulation and agreement between the parties hereto that said marl may remain on said land for the period of ten years from the date of this indenture, and that the party of the first part (meaning the said Torrey) may at any lime, within the said ten years, remove apart or the whole of the said marl."

After the conveyance to Spalding, and on the 23d day of July, 1866, the said Torrey, by an instrument in writing under his hand and seal, made an absolute conveyance of the said marl to Henry A. Barnum, “his heirs and assigns, executors and administrators,” which marl was in and by the said instrument described as follows : “ All that certain bed or beds of marl in the town of Tyre, Seneca county, and State of New York, on Groat Lot 25, which wras excavated by the State of New York about the year 1856, for the purpose of changing the channel of the Canandaigua outlet or river from its, natural course or channel, near the Erie canal aqueduct, over the Seneca river.”

The said conveyance was made to have and to hold to the .said Henry A. Barnum, his heirs and assigns, executors and .administrators forever.” The said instrument also contained an express covenant on the part of the said Torrey for himself, his heirs, assigns, executors and administrators, to warrant and defend, to the said Henry A. Barnum his heirs, assigns, executors and administrators forever, the sale of the said marl made to said Barnum, “against all and every persons whomsoever.”

The complaint alleges notice to Stilwell of Barnum’s title to the [51]*51marl, and that Barnum took possession of said piles of marl and removed a portion thereof, and from time to time thereafter negotiated for the sale of divers portions of said marl, and remained in possession of said marl until after the conveyances thereof to the defendants, the Stilwells, hereinafter mentioned.

That the said Royal U. Torrey, about January, 1869, again Became the owner in fee of all the aforesaid land and realty which had been conveyed to the said Spalding, and so held the same until his death in December, 1869.

That the defendants Stilwell, well knowing the existence of the title of Barnum, and learning the value of the said marl, secretly obtained from the heirs and devisees of said Royal U. Torrey, after his death, conveyances of the land on which the said piles of marl were located, and took possession of said piles of marl and excluded the said Barnum therefrom and from possession thereof, or access thereto, and subsequently organized the corporation known as the “ Lake Guano and Shell Fertilizer Company,” and thereupon conveyed the said tract of land to the said corporation, which now holds possession of the piles of marl located thereon, and “wrongfully detains the same from the plaintiff.”

That the plaintiff, The Lacustrine Company,' before the commencement of the suit, by virtue of conveyances from Barnum and his assignees, for a valuable consideration, acquired the title to all the said piles of marl, and thereupon became and now is the owner of the said marl and entitled to the immediate possession thereof. That since the organization of the said Lake Guano and Shell Company the plaintiff has demanded possession of the said piles of marl, and previous to the organization of said company demanded the same from said Stilwells, “ but all of the .said defendants have refused and still refuse to allow the plaintiff the possession thereof or access thereto,” and that by reason of the unlawful seizure and detention the plaintiff has been and is unable to take possession of its said property, and transport and market the same — and has been unable to market the same to the damage of the plaintiff of $20,000. That the said piles of marl contain about 100,000 tons, each ton being worth five dollars. And the complaint demands judgment against the defendants for the possession of the marl, or the value thereof, in [52]*52case a delivery cannot be had, with $20,000 damages for the detention thereof.

All the foregoing facts are alleged in the complaint, and it seems to set forth, with some superfluous matter, a good cause of action, which was formerly known as replevin in the deiinet.

The marl in question was a part of the realty, and except for the reservation contained in the deed to Spalding, would have passed to him by the conveyance from Torrey.

The piles of marl, which.are the subject of the action, with their alleged condition, situation and qualities, together with the manner in which they were dealt with and concerning by Torrey and his grantees, show that they wore treated by them as personal property, and were, considered to be severed from the realty, and as between the parties to those contracts and their heirs the marl was to be treated as personal property severed from the real estate, and passing by any conveyance sufficient to pass an interest in personal property. As, in many cases timber, trees, and even buildings, as between the parties to such contracts, are to be treated as severed from the realty, and to become personalty pro hac vice.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacustrine-fertilizer-co-v-guano-nysupct-1879.