Merges v. Ringler

34 A.D. 415
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 34 A.D. 415 (Merges v. Ringler) 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
Merges v. Ringler, 34 A.D. 415 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinions

Ingraham, J.:

A purchaser át a sale made under a judicial decree is entitled to all property and title which the referee undertook to sell and which he rightfully supposed he was to receive; but “ a purchaser upon [417]*417such a sale will not be relieved on account of defects in the property or the title thereto, of which he had notice, and in reference to which he made his bid, and the court will not permit him to abandon his contract without seeing that the object of the purchase is defeated and that he would be injured by the enforcement of the contract. If every minute and critical objection to a judicial sale- is suffered to prevail, it will be attended with much inconvenience and embarrassment. A purchaser claiming to be discharged from his contract should, therefore, make out a fair and plain case for relief; and it is not every defect in the subject sold or variation from the description that will avail him. He will not be suffered to speculate at such sales, and, if he happens to make a bad bargain, to repudiate it and abandon his purchase on some nice but immaterial objection. If he gets substantially what he bargains for he must complete the purchase and take his deed; and, in some cases, the court will compel him to take a compensation for any deficiency. The court will weigh the object and inducement of the purchaser, and, looking.to the merits and substantial justice of each particular case, if the sale be fair, relieve or not from the purchase, according as the character of the transaction and' circumstances may appear to. require.” (Riggs v. Pursell, 66 N. Y. 198.) This rule was not at all questioned on the subsequent appeal to the Court of Appeals in the same case, reported in 74 New York, 370; and we are to examine the objections taken by the purchaser to the title and ascertain whether within this rule they áre substantial, and whether the appellant has made it appear that on completing the purchase he will not obtain all the property which the referee undertook to sell or he rightfully supposed he was to receive.

The objections of the purchaser may be divided into three classes: First, encroachment upon adjoining premises by the buildings erected upon the premises sold; second, encroachment upon the premises sold by buildings on adjoining premises; -and, third, encroachments of buildings on the premises sold upon the street abutting in front of such premises. The premises described in the advertisement of sale consisted of three separate parcels of land, fronting upon Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth streets, in the city of Hew York, west of First avenue. The most northerly piece of [418]*418property abuts upon the northerly side of Forty-fifth street, with.a frontage of 159 feet, upon the street, and running back 100 feet and 5 inches to the center line of the block between Forty-fifth and Forty-sixth streets. The piece of property between Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth streets consists of a piece of ground, with frontage of 150 feet upon each of the streets, running from street to stvéet; and the parcel of land situated on the south side of Forty-fourth street consists of a plot of land 125 feet upon the street, and 100 feet and 5 inches in depth. Upon these various parcels of land are erected buildings which had been used as a brewery and stables, and also a building that had been leased. The purchaser claimed, and introduced evidence of surveyors tending to show, that certain. buildings upon the premises in question encroached upon the adjacent premises; that certain buildings upon adjacent premises encroached upon the property sold ; that certain of the" buildings fronting on the street' encroached upon the street, and,- in consequence of such encroachments, asks to be relieved of his purchase.

The first question to be determined is, whether- or not such. encroachments were a substantial injury to the property. It is quite apparent that an encroachment might be so insignificant that no injury could result. The property was sold by metes and bounds, and it is not claimed but that the purchaser will obtain a good title to all of the property included within the boundaries specified in the advertisement of sale. But he claims that, because of such encroachments, he will not receive a good title to the buildings on the property purchased. It appeared from the affidavit of the surveyor, presented by the purchaser, that the building on the property on the west of the plot on the north side of Forty-fifth street encroaches one-half inch upon the plot purchased the whole length of the wall, a distance about sixty-three feet: There is also a claim that, upon the westerly line of the plot fronting upon the northerly side of Forty-fourth street, the building of the owner adjoining on the west encroaches one-half inch upon the plot purchased for a distance of about twenty-five feet, the encroachment of one-half, an inch continuing nine and one-half feet, and then gradually wearing down to nothing at a point on the northerly side of Forty-fourth street. The existence of these encroachments is quite doubtful, even to the extent claimed by the purchaser. Other surveys show that the encroachment [419]*419is much less, some showing that it does not exist at all, while other surveyors testify that it is one-half inch in front, but correct in the. rear. Considering the size of the land and. the uncertainty of making any measurement of this distance within a half inch, this encroachment, if it existed, must, I think, be considered to be so small as-not to be a substantial objection to the' purchase. The bounds of the property, as described in the advertisement of sale, were to commence on the northerly side of Forty-fifth street, distant 141 feet westerly upon the northwest corner of Forty-fifth street and First avenue. A variation of a half inch in that distance would be so small that it is quite clear it would have no appreciable effect upon the value of the property, and the same may be said about the encroachment upon the plot on the south side of Forty-fourth street. There seems to be some dispute among the surveyors as to whether or not this building encroaches upon the premises sold; but the encroachment, if it exists, is so small, and evidently is not of substance, considering the size of the land; and there was no evidence that these encroachments, if they. existed, did actually impair to any extent the value of the property.

Great stress is laid, however, upon the encroachment of buildings on the property purchased upon adjacent property and upon the street. In considering these encroachments, and in determining whether or not they are substantial injuries to the property sold, we must bear in mind the character of the buildings, the purposes to which they were put, and the possibility of the purchaser being interfered with in the possession of these buildings as they existed at the time of the purchase. In determining questions of this character, each case must be determined upon the facts presented. No hard and fast rule can be laid down that one inch or two inches of encroachment, irrespective of the nature of the building, and the effect of such encroachment upon the value of the property, will be sufficient to justify the court in relieving a purchaser of his purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
34 A.D. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merges-v-ringler-nyappdiv-1898.