Miller v. . Long Island Railroad Co.

71 N.Y. 380, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 514
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 71 N.Y. 380 (Miller v. . Long Island Railroad Co.) 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
Miller v. . Long Island Railroad Co., 71 N.Y. 380, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 514 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was brought to recover damages caused to certain lands upon Long Islafid by a fire set by a passing engine upon defendant’s road. The fire swept over a large tract of land mostly uninclosed and unimproved, lying contiguous to the railroad. The land consisted of fifty-four different parcels claimed to have belonged to as many different owners, the plaintiffs, and others who, prior to the *383 commencement of the action, assigned their claims to the plaintiffs. It is not contested here but that the defendant is responsible for the damage done by the lire. But during the progress of the trial, the defendant’s counsel took many exceptions to the rulings of the referee on questions of evidence, and he also excepted to the findings of the referee upon questions of ownership and possession of the lands, and the amount of damage done. And upon the argument before us, he called our attention to many exceptions which he claims to have been well taken.

The damages claimed and allowed by the referee were mostly to freehold interests, and hence, to uphold the recovery the plaintiffs must have shown such titles in the several parcels of land as to entitle them to damages, not merely to the possession, but to the freeholds. The plaintiffs could prove their titles, either by conveyances showing paper title, or by such possession as would be presumptive evidence of title. When reliance is placed solely upon paper title, the land not having been occupied, improved or inclosed, the proof must be of a chain of title from the original patentee or donee. A deed from a person not in possession, or not shown to be the owner, establishes no title. (Gardner v. Mart, 1 N. Y., 528.) The possession, unaccompanied with paper title, requisite to furnish the presumption of ownership sufficient to maintain this action must be actual; nothing less will answer. When lands are mioccupicd, unimproved and uninclosed, it is quite difficult to make out such possession. It can be done by showing that the lot was kept as a wood-lot of suitable size for an improved farm, and that the owner of the farm habitually for some years cut thereon his firewood, saw-logs and fencing and building timber. (Machin v. Geortner, 14 Wend., 239.) But it is believed that there is no authority, and certainly our attention has been called to none, for holding that occasional entries, at long intervals of time, upon such a lot not painel of an improved farm, or connected with one, furnish evidence of the requisite possession.

It was objected before the referee, and the claim is made *384 hero, that the plaintiffs did not show title to much of the land damaged, by either of the methods above indicated. I believe this claim to be well founded. There was no attempt on the trial, in the case of any parcel of land, to prove a chain of title, and as to more than half of the parcels, there was no attempt to prove any paper title whatever. In the case of nearly all the deeds introduced, there was no proof that the grantors ever owned or possessed the lands conveyed. Hence it is clear that there was failure to show paper title to the lands damaged. A deed not sufficient to convey a valid title is sufficient to lay the foundation of an adverse possession. And under such a deed, the grantee may have a constructive possession which will enable him to maintain ejectment or trespass against a stranger to the true title. If one takes a deed of a farm, partly improved and partly uninclosed woodland, and he enters into possession of the improved land and occupies it, he will be deemed in possession of the woodland, if of suitable size, to be kept for the balance of the farm, so that he could maintain trespass or ejectment, and ultimately perfect a title by adverse possession. (Jackson v. Woodruff, 1 Cowen, 236; Munro v. Merchant, 28 N. Y., 9; Thompson v. Burhans, 61 id., 52.) But here the parcels being nearly all uninclosed, unimproved woodland, there was, as to most of them, no proof whatever that they were parcels of unproved farms, or that they were used habitually in connection with improved lands for firewood and timber. Hence the plaintiffs to uphold their judgment must rely wholly upon their claim of possession. As to most of the parcels there was an entire failure to show possession within any rule that has ever been laid down in such cases. As to some of the parcels, there was no proof of any act of possession. As to others there was simple proof of cutting timber upon one or more occasions, and as to many of those the alleged owners did not even hold deeds. It cannot be the law that one can enter upon uninclosed woodland, and claim to own it, and cut wood thereon once or a number of times, and thus establish a footing that will enable him to *385 maintain an action of trespass against any other person subsequently doing the same acts upon the same lauds. Neither is it the law that one can take a deed of such land from one not shown to own it, and then enter and take wood from the land once or a number of times, and thus acquire a sufficient possession to maintain the action.

During- the progress of the trial, the plaintiffs and their assignors testified that they owned the lands. This kind of evidence was objected to on the part of the defendant as incompetent, and the referee simply received it -to locate the lands. Of course, such parol evidence proved nothing on the question of title. The same witnesses were allowed, against objection that it was incompetent, to testify generally, that they were in possession of the lands. I am inclined to think that in the case of uninclosed, unoccupied woodland, it is incompetent to ask a witness whether he ivas in possession of the land. The peculiar facts should be shown which in law in such case constitute possession. But if the witness should, ■ to such a question, answer that he was in possession, it would prove nothing, if the facts also testified to showed that he was not in possession.

I will not take the time to specify all the cases in which plaintiffs failed to show title in themselves or their assignors to the lands claimed to have been damaged by the fire. It would make this opinion too' long, and would serve no good purpose to do so. But I will call attention to a few cases which are typical of many others. As to the parcel claimed by plaintiff Miller: He did not attempt to prove any paper title. He testified that he had owned the parcel consisting of 180 acres for twelve or fifteen years before the fire. He was then asked this question: “What acts had you exercised over that property during that time ?” He answered: “ Cut wood on parts of it and fencing stuff and corclwood.” This was all the evidence as to acts of possession. There was no proof that this was part of any improved farm, and there was nothing to show how many times these acts were repeated. As to the parcel claimed by plaintiff Homan:. *386 He claimed seven acres. There was no proof of any acts of possession. There was a deed to him put in evidence from John Eoc and wife, dated in 1845, but there was no evidence that the grantors ever owned or possessed the land. As to the parcel claimed by plaintiff Mills: He claimed that 255 acres of his laud were burned over.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.Y. 380, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-long-island-railroad-co-ny-1877.