Leerburger v. Watson

75 Misc. 3, 134 N.Y.S. 818
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 Misc. 3 (Leerburger v. Watson) 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
Leerburger v. Watson, 75 Misc. 3, 134 N.Y.S. 818 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Gerard, -T.

Both plaintiff and defendant ask for the specific performance of a contract for the purchase and sale of ISTos. 50 and 52 Franklin street, in this city. Plaintiff, the vendee, alleges that there are certain alleged deficiencies in or objections to the title of the property tendered him, as follows: That a retaining wall in the rear encroaches upon the premises; that cornices, - sills-, lintels, ledge, and casings of the buildings in question project over the public street; that platforms, ■ iron steps, trap door • and freight elevator encroach upon the sidewalk, and that the vaults under the sidewalk are unlawful, and that their use may at any time- be forbidden by the city. The plaintiff asks that a deduction be made from the contract price by reason of these alleged deficiencies .or objections, and that upon payment of the •balance to defendant defendant be compelled to deliver a deed „of the premises. Defendant claims the title, accords with the contract, and that he is entitled to specific performance according to its terms. I am met at the outset of this case by the objection raised by the defendant to the effect.that the alleged cause of action set forth by plaintiff is not maintainable at- all, and defendant cites Levy v. Hill, 50 App. Div. 294, decided in the Appellate Division of this department, as authority for that proposition. In that case plaintiff, the vendee in the contract of sale, brought a similar action to the one at bar, asking -a deduction from the purchase price because the- front stoop of the building, extended into the public street a distance of fifteen feet. The court, Hr. Justice Ingraham writing the- opinion, held the action not maintainable. In Sokolski v. Buttenwieser, 96 App. Div. 22, Hr. Justice Patterson said: “ The theory upon which the -action proceeds is that specific performance of • a contract for the sale of real estate may be directed by the court in cases in which an allowance may be made by way of. deduction from the purchase price for incumbrances or other charges upon the property: There is no doubt of the general rule upon this subject, and the English courts have carried the doctrine so far as to compel specific performance of a contract where the price is fixed but where it is required to make expenditures for repairs, and have allowed the cost of the repairs in reduction of the purchase price. But the [5]*5doctrine of the English cases has never been adopted by the courts of this State. - Abatement from the purchase price has been allowed for deficiency in title as to the quantity or quality of the property sold, but none of the •cases in this State have gone to the extent of making an allowance in diminution of the purchase price named in an executory contract for the purchase and sale of land, where such an allowance would be contrary to the terms of the contract and to the express stipulations of the contracting parties and where it would in effect be making a new contract between them.” The parties to Levy v. Hill were in court a second time (70 App. Div. 95), and Mr. Justice Hatch, referring to the previous decision of the court, wrote as follows: The first action was brought by the plaintiff for the specific performance of the contract, and judgment was asked that a just deduction be made from the purchase money on account of * * * the incumbrance and encroachments hereinabove mentioned and, after making such deduction and upon payment of the residue of the purchase money according to ilie terms of the agreement, that the defendant specifically perform the same,. The court held that such action could not be maintained; that it was not in fact an action for specific performance of the contract • in' accordance with its terms, but was an equitable action by which it was sought to have the depreciation in the value of the property fixed by reason of the claimed defects in the title, and when, such sum was arrived at to deduct it from the purchase price and compel a conveyance upon payment of the residue; that such an action could not be maintained, as the court was powerless to grant any such relief; and upon that ground alone a judgment was affirmed which dismissed the complaint.” Plaintiff alleges in his brief that these decisions of the Appellate Division are “ discredited cases,” but I am not aware of any case in which the Appellate Division of this department has reached any other conclusion, and,'therefore, I am constrained to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint. There remains the question as to whether defendant is entitled to a judgment for specific performance, that is, does he tender plaintiff a title which is marketable ? In Broadbelt v. Loew, [6]*615 App. Div. 343; affd. on opinion below in 165 N. Y. 642, the court held that the title to property on which there wer'e projecting bay windows and stoops extending beyond the building line was marketable; that the question as to these projections could only arise between the owner and the municipal authorities, and the objections to the marketability of a title based on the existence of such projections were technical only and not substantial. These projections, etc., have existed in ■ the buildings in question for a very long time. But it is claimed by plaintiff that all the prior decisions culminating in Broadbelt v. Locw have been overruled by the case of Ackerman v. True, 175 N. Y. 353, •where it was distihctly held that an adjoining owner could compel the removal of projections extending beyond the building line on an adjoining house. It must- first be noted that Ackerman v. True and other cases where the city compelled the removal of projections did not involve the question of the marketability of the title. Indeed, in the opinion in the Ackerman v. True case the case of Wormser v. Brown, 149 N. Y. 163, is referred to with approval in so far as it states the principle that the adjoining owner must show some special change. In that case the bay window which the courts refused to order taken down extended >ix feet over the building line, and in the True ease the Court of Appeals said that such extension was not “ a practical interference with the use of the streets,” although they, also put their decision on the ground that plaintiff in the Wormser case had on his property an erection extending an equal distance into the street. In the case at bar the roof cornice extends two feet six inches, the sills four inches, the ledge one foot four inches, the lintels seven inches, the window casing two inches; the vault light on the sidewalk is seventeen feet eight and three-eighths inches long, six feet two inches wide and projects from two to nine inches only above the sidewalk; there is a second vault light platform one and one-half inches above the sidewalk; a steel coping about one and one-half inches above the sidewalk, between the light vault and the freight elevator, and a sort of elevated platform next the building, common in the lower part of the city, with a [7]*7step about a foot high; this platform extends about .five feet out on the sidewalk from the building line. In-the cases of McMillan v. Klaw & Erlanger Amst. Co., 107 App. Div. 407; Williams v. Silverman Amst. Co., 111 id. 679, and City of Mew York v. Rice, 198 N. Y. 130, these invasions of the public streets were of a serious nature and the question of marketability was not involved. In the Ackerman case the defendant had built the wall of his house three and one-half feet beyond the building line. There can be no question that no ordinances or acts of acquiescence on the part of the city can deprive an adjoining owner of his rights where such rights are substantially or specially affected.

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274 A.D. 442 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1948)
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264 A.D. 880 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1942)
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Leerburger v. Watson
142 N.Y.S. 1127 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
75 Misc. 3, 134 N.Y.S. 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leerburger-v-watson-nysupct-1911.