Lane v. Jacobs

166 A.D. 182, 152 N.Y.S. 605, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7399
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 20, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 166 A.D. 182 (Lane v. Jacobs) 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
Lane v. Jacobs, 166 A.D. 182, 152 N.Y.S. 605, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7399 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Merrell, J.:

This is an action in equity involving the location and establishment of the division line between adjoining residential properties of the parties on Arnold park in the city of Bochester. The plaintiff avers that defendant is about to erect a division fence separating the lands of the parties, and in so doing will encroach upon plaintiff’s lot, and seeks injunctive relief to restrain the defendant.

A careful examination of the record leads me to the conclusion that the differences between these neighbors involve property rights of little or no substantial value, and that this controversy, like many another of its sort arising over boundary disputes, might well have been avoided by the exercise of a small measure of charity and the application of the Golden Bule. One marvels that in these days of advanced civilization, men will suffer a brief earthly tenure to be riven by acrimonious litigation arising from circumstances of such trifling substance as in this case. But human nature seems prone to jealously guard what it conceives to be its legal rights, and this court is required to equitably adjust the differences of the parties to this litigation. Indeed, the somewhat aggressive attitude of the defendant in seeking to place the ornamental ” posts at the point where he contends his south line reaches the street, and which act on his part could have no other object than to establish the division line to his own liking, and in some manner thus to foreclose plaintiff from thereafter disputing its location, furnishes some excuse to plaintiff for seeking relief in the courts.

Arnold park was laid out nearly forty years ago as a residential tract lying southerly from East avenue in the city of Bochester. An avenue was opened leading southerly from said [184]*184avenue with grass plots running in the center and driveways on either side. Between the driveways and the sidewalk generous grass plots were left, thus making the project a park in fact as well as in name. For a long period the park was maintained as a private enterprise, gates being maintained at its junction with East avenue, which, while usually opened and permitting free entrance upon the park, were occasionally closed as if to warn the public that its use of the avenue of the park was by sufferance of the owners rather than a public right. However, some years prior to the commencement of this action, the privacy was relaxed and Arnold park was dedicated to the city and became a public street, maintained and controlled as were the other public thoroughfares of the municipality. As originally laid out the portion of the tract lying westerly of Arnold Park avenue was divided into twelve or thirteen lots, each, with the exception of lot 1, lying adjacent to East avenue, being seventy-five feet wide on Arnold Park avenue and one hundred and fifty feet deep, inclusive of an alleyway in the rear. The early deeds all seem to describe the several lots as of seventy-five feet in width, front and rear, and, with the exception of the first few lots and plaintiff’s lot in the rear, seem to have maintained substantially their original dimensions to the present time. Many years since the several lots were acquired and residences erected thereon. The only attempt to separate or define the lot boundaries seems to have been confined to the rear of the lots, where board fences were erected for the purpose of preventing dogs or chickens from running across the lots, and said fences seem to have extended from the rear fence easterly to the rear of the houses, and from thence to the street the lawns ran together without dividing mark.

The plaintiff is the owner of lot No. 12, and the defendant lot No. 11, lying adjacent to plaintiff on the north. The title deeds of these lots describe them as seventy-five feet wide, front and rear, although some question seems to have arisen when plaintiff’s predecessor in title received his deed, and the lot was described as about seventy-five feet wide. As a matter of fact, in some manner not clearly explained, plaintiff’s lot in the rear seems to have, many years since, been somewhat nar[185]*185rowed, and is actually a little over seventy-three feet wide. Soon after the tract was opened a barn was erected on the rear of lot No. 11, now owned by defendant, and which was apparently intended to be placed along the division line between lots 11 and 12. The south side of the bam for about twenty-five feet of its length seems to have been accepted by the adjoining owners as representing the true line, although in fact its location narrowed the lot now owned by plaintiff by nearly two feet. From the southeast corner of the bam the line was continued easterly by a high board fence a distance of thirty feet or more to a point opposite the rear of the house on lot 12, and to further prevent the rear of the lot becoming a runway for dogs, a short piece of fence was extended southerly to the house. Some years later this barn was moved from lot 11 to the southwest corner of lot 12, and a new barn was erected on lot 11, occupying the same position substantially as the original barn erected thereon. Some years prior to the commencement of this action the defendant tore down the second barn, utilizing the timbers in rebuilding his house, and a fence was built to take the place of the bam which was removed.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the division fence in the rear does not mark the true line between the lots of the parties. Defendant claims, and it seems to us is sustained in such contention, that by the erection of the barns on the assumed line between the parties and their predecessors in title and the location of the fence in the rear, the division line became practically located and through a long period of years that the fence has occupied its present position it became by acquiescence the true line between the parties. The defendant further claims that the division line along plaintiff’s house and extending easterly to the street should be defined by a projection of the line so fixed by the fence. However, the evidence shows that in some manner the fence, as it stood at the time of the commencement of the action, was not entirely straight, but at a distance from the rear line corresponding substantially with the length of the barns as they heretofore stood upon the fine, there is an angle of something more than one-half a foot in the fence line. The learned trial court decided that the division [186]*186line between the parties, not only where the fence has existed for a long period of years, hut thence easterly to the margin of the street, should be defined by a straight line starting at the point where the fence commences on the rear line of the lots and extending thence easterly through the extreme east end of the fence as it existed at the time of the commencement of the action, and thence upon the same course to the margin of the street. It seems to us that the facts disclosed by the evidence in this case do.not warrant such a determination. We are of the opinion that the parties are bound by the location of the fence as defining the division line so far as said fence exists. But by every principle of practical location the division line should not deviate from the fence, which should follow whatever course it takes. The effect of the decision of the learned trial court would he to establish an entirely new line between the parties, and a parcel of land, small though it may be, which for forty years has been in the possession of the defendant and his predecessors in title, would be given to the plaintiff.

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Lane v. Jacobs
152 N.Y.S. 1122 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
166 A.D. 182, 152 N.Y.S. 605, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-jacobs-nyappdiv-1915.