Lawrence v. . Town of Hempstead

49 N.E. 868, 155 N.Y. 297, 9 E.H. Smith 297, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 871
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 49 N.E. 868 (Lawrence v. . Town of Hempstead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. . Town of Hempstead, 49 N.E. 868, 155 N.Y. 297, 9 E.H. Smith 297, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 871 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinions

Gray, J.

This action involves the title to a tract of land in the town of Hempstead, county of Queens, on Long Island;. the plaintiffs’ claim of ownership being resisted by the defendant upon the ground, substantially, that the property was a part of its common lands, of which it had never become divested. Ho question has been raised therein, except that which relates to the sufficiency of the proofs to establish the plaintiffs’ claim to the possession of the premises as against the defendant. Hone of the important facts are in dispute *300 and the determination of the controversy depends upon the correctness of the legal conclusion which is deducible therefrom.

The plaintiffs acquired the premises by purchase, at a sale in 1878, had in a partition suit between the heirs of Jacob Hicks; to whom they had been deeded in 1725. At the Special Term of the Supreme Court the decision was against the plaintiffs; but, at the General Term, that decision was reversed, upon both the law and the facts, and the plaintiffs were adjudged to be entitled to the relief sought.

The premises comprise some 1,500 acres of salt meadow, or marsh, land and beach at Bockaway ; the extreme westerly portion of the township of Hempstead, which is hounded by the waters of Hempstead bay to the eastward; by the ocean to the southward and to the northward by a line drawn from the nearest point of the waters of Hempstead bay to the waters of Jamaica bay By a survey made in 1802, the premises are shown to consist of salt meadow, marsh and beach; bounded on the south by the ocean, on the east by Hempstead bay, on the north, in part, by a channel opening into the bay, known as Crooked Creek, and on the -west, in part, by upland and, in part, by wliat is known as “Wells’ (“ Whelses ”) line,” that being a north and south line, drawn by a colonial surveyor. They form the easterly part of Bock-away Heck. Originally, the defendant received its territory by patent, in 1644, from William Kiefft, the Dutch governor of Hew Hetherlands, and was, subsequently, confirmed in the grant by ¡latent from the English governor, Thomas Dongan, in 1685. The ownership of the town lands was in the town, in its corporate capacity, and not in the patentees named in the grant, nor in the inhabitants of the town. (Denton v. Jackson, 2 John. Ch. 320.) It was its policy, from the earliest times, to divide its common lands among the patentees, or their associates, or successors, and such dispositions were made at regular town meetings. Its jurisdiction, in that respect, was -characterized in Denton v. Jackson, as “ steady, exclusive ■and unquestionable.” The mode of the exercise of that jurisdiction, in earlier times, was by a “ fencing order,” which is *301 defined to be an order “directing a certain locality to be fenced with gates, or panels of fence; meaning thereby divisions so as to determine the particular area which was to go to each individual.” The division to individuals was according to the number of gates or panels specified. That such a fencing order, when duly made at a town meeting, might have operated as a valid source of title, the appellant concedes. It was not until 1787 that, by enactment in that year, (Chap. 44, sec. 9), greater formalities were made requisite in the execution of conveyances of estates, other than at will. The informalities in the early allotments of the common lands of the town invest this case with obvious difficulties, in the attempt to discover where lies the title in dispute; but the learned justices, who wrote at the Special and General Terms, expressly concur in the view that “ it is now too late, after the lapse of 250 years, to criticise, on account of the absence of legal forms, transfers on which the titles of great communities are based.” That such a view is as correct as it is just, admits, in my opinion, of no reasonable difference in opinion and in the judicial investigation of titles, derivable from the informal procedure of communities, in their infancy, presumptions should be allowed to militate in favor of whomever the conclusion favors as the true owner; as it was conceded, in effect, by the learned trial justice. Where Mr. Justice Cullen, however, disagreed with the contention of the plaintiffs was in an inability to find that the fencing order, relied upon as an original basis of title, included more than the upland; or that the town had ever conveyed away marshes or beaches, or meadows, with the upland. He expressly finds, also, not only that there never was any grant of the premises to the plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest, but that the defendant has always been in possession, so far as possession was possible. At the General Term, it was reasoned, in the prevailing opinion, that the evidence of the town records showed allotments, or grants, of the meadow lands, as well as of the uplands, and, while the evidence failed to show a fencing of these marsh, or meadow, lands, that the allotment was the main thing and the *302 fencing was only intended to define the boundaries, where it was necessary and possible.

What the plaintiffs rely upon in proof of their chain of title are, first, a fencing order made in 1659 ; second, an allotment in 1678 ; third, a deed by the allottees to Captain Jacob Hicks in 1725 ; fourth, confirmatory action at subsequent town meetings scaá, fifth, a partition suit between the Hicks heirs; whereby such title as Hicks may have had in the premises became transferred to the plaintiffs.

The point to reach in our consideration is, whether the town’s title appears to have been extinguished; because if that does appear the presumptions are all with the plaintiffs. The fencing order of April 17th, 1659, was made at a town meeting and provided that 47 persons named were “ to fence and inclose Rockaway with the number of their gates.” In May following, there is a record, which refers to the former order for the inclosure of the town lands at Rockaway for pasturage of cattle and horses and provides penalties against persons not complying. In May, 1669, by another order, three persons were to view the common meadows at the south and “ to bring in the number of acres of good meadows ” and “ to lay the common meadows into particular allotments.” In the following month, it was ordered that “ they shall lay out the meadows to the uttermost bounds of Hempstead, bounds established etc.” In 1676, it was “ agreed by the major vote of the town that all the common meadow in the bounds of the town shall be laid out into allotments to every man according to his right; cow meadow excepted,” and three persons were “ chosen to lay out the common meadow and to lay out what upland is fit to be laid out.” Finally, in 1678, it was “ agreed by the major vote of the town,” among other things, that the layers out of the meadow shall require to lay out first at the easternmost common meadow on the south side of Rockaway,” and the lots drawn for meadow at Rockaway,” with the names of forty-one persons, were specified. The layers out ” of the common meadow, referred to here, had been chosen at a meeting in February, 1677. How Rockaway, as the fact was found *303

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E. 868, 155 N.Y. 297, 9 E.H. Smith 297, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-town-of-hempstead-ny-1898.