Lawrence v. Norton
This text of 116 A.D. 896 (Lawrence v. Norton) 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.
Opinion
The action is brought to partition two parcels of land on Rockaway Beach in the city of New York, owned in fee by the plaintiffs, Malcolm R. Lawrence, Frank J. Heaney and Silas K. Everett, and the defendants Adah P. Vernarn and'John R. Murray as tenants in common. The first nine paragraphs of the complaint contain the usual allegations of a cause of action for the partition of real property and then alleges that the appellant claims some interest in the premises, the precise extent and nature of which is unknown to the plaintiffs but which is understood by them to be that the correct boundary line of the land on the south is not as alleged in the complaint but is farther west and north, and that the appellant had asserted his claim by an attempted occupancy of some portion of the premises, the erection of two small houses thereon and the tearing down of the boundary fences erected on that portion of the premises ; that such claim constitutes a cloud oh plaintiffs’ title and that it was impossible to determine the basis of division between the cotenants until the court should ascertain what part of the premises (if any) belonged to thé appellant.
The appellant Norton demurred to the complaint upon four grounds, summarized by his counsel as follows: That with the cause of action in partition there was joined (1) an action of ejectment as against the appellant and his tenants; (2) three actions to deter[898]*898mine different and distinct boundary lines on the east, south and west of the property sought to be partitioned, said causes of action affecting different groups of defendants who had no interest in any of the land sought to be partitioned ; (3) an action to remove a cloud on title and to determine the. validity, scope and effect of the two deeds under which the appellant was alleged to claim title to the whole or a portion of the premises described in the complaint.
The issues of law have been tried, and an interlocutory judgment overruling the demurrer rendered, from which this appeal is taken. I think that the demurrer was properly overruled by the learned trial justice. Under the construction of the Code provisions applicable to actions of partition,
The interlocutory judgment should be affirmed.'
Hirsohberg, P. J., Woodward, Jenhs and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs.
See Code Civ. Proc: § 1532 et seq[Rep,
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
116 A.D. 896, 102 N.Y.S. 481, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-norton-nyappdiv-1907.