Morse v. Swanson

129 A.D. 835, 114 N.Y.S. 876, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 26

This text of 129 A.D. 835 (Morse v. Swanson) 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
Morse v. Swanson, 129 A.D. 835, 114 N.Y.S. 876, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 26 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Williams, J.:

The judgment should be reversed so far as appealed from and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellants to abide event.

The action was brought to determine the rights of the parties with respect to their properties upon and adjacent to Point Stockholm (so called), upon Chautauqua lake, in Chautauqua county. It is an équity action, and, by the judgment, affirmative relief was granted to the defendants against the plaintiff. The plaintiff has not appealed, but has acquiesced in the judgment so far as it is against him. Equitable relief was granted to plaintiff against defendants, and from the provisions affording such relief this appeal is taken.

In the year 1887 Soderholm and Peterson owned a tract of land, bounded upon two sides by the lake, and they plotted and subdivided it into lots, streets, avenues, parks and commons. They made a map of the property and filed it in the county clerk’s office, and the property was designated as “ Soderholm & Peter[837]*837son’s allotment, Point Stockholm, on Chautauqua Lake.” The lots were more or less of them sold to parties who erected cottages thereon and occupied the same during the summer months. In 1889 Peterson sold his one-half interest in the property to Soderholm. April 3, 1889, the plaintiff received a deed from Soderholm of lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, B, and C., upon the point, and June 3, 1901, he also received a deed for another lot known as the triangular piece.” The plaintiff also acquired title to a strip of land adjoining Point Stockholm, thirty-three feet wide. Six years after Point Stockholm had been laid out the defendants Swanson, Yalien and Hultquist acquired title to lands lying northwesterly of and adjacent to the point, which up to October, 1893, had been unused and uncultivated. The said defendants built cottages upon these lands and occupied them as summer resorts. The defendants Eapp and Berg-wall purchased lots on the point and constructed cottages thereon. All the defendants owned cottages on their lands west of the point except Abraliamson. His only cottage was on the point. November 7, 1902, the defendant Abraliamson deeded to defendants Swanson, Yalien, Bergwall, Hultquist and Eapp lot No. 8, on the point. In the fall of 1903 the plaintiff built a wire fence on the line between the thirty-three-foot strip and the triangular piece owned by him and the property westerly owned by the defendants down to low-water mark on the lake, so as to prevent the defendants from passing over the triangular piece, to and from the point. The defendants Swanson and Abraliamson removed the southerly portion of this fence so as to permit teams and foot passengers to pass between the point and the defendants’ premises to the west over the triangular piece.

The plaintiff by his deed of the “ triangular piece ” acquired title to low-water mark on the lake. At that time the water came up to the triangular piece. In July, 1903, when the water was low, Swanson and Yalien and the other defendants except Abraliamson made a till in front of their premises on the shore. They drove rows of piles and put on planking, and filled in with gravel and stone in order to extend their lawns. The line where the fence was built is not at right angles with the shore, but if extended would be for some distance parallel with the shore, include the bay north of the point and intersect the point itself. The fill was made by the defendants upon the theory that they could extend this line into the [838]*838lake to low-water mark, and all the land west of it could be used and occupied by them.

At the time the plaintiff purchased his premises on Point Stockholm, a natural watercourse extended from a swamp above down across the thirty-three-foot strip and the defendant Swanson’s land west of the point into the lake. It was a live one, always running. After plaintiff purchased his premises he drilled an artesian well on the thirty-three-foot strip, and the surplus water which flow's the year round 'runs off in the watercourse, and all the waste water from plaintiff’s house runs through a wooden culvert into this watercourse.

This statement of facts gives a general idea of the conditions surrounding the property of the parties.

First. The referee held that the defendants had no right to cross over the westerly line of the “ triangular piece ” between the point and their property to the west, on foot or with teams, and by the judgment they were restrained from so doing. The finding and judgment related also to the thirty-three-foot strip. That piece was no part of the point. We do not understand it to be claimed that the defendants had any easement in or right to enter upon or cross that piece. The triangular piece, however, was a part of the point and of the common, and by this deed the plaintiff acquired the title thereto, subject to the easement which attached to the other commons on the point. The defendants, were all owners of property on the point, and by their deeds acquired the easements common to all lot owners thereon. Among these was the right to use the commons, and as a part thereof the “ triangular piece,” for any and all proper purposes. To this extent the parties are agreed. The disagreement is as to what was a proper use of this part of the commons. By the language of the grants to the defendants they were given a right to use in common with all other owners the streets, avenues, parks and commons, but no right to use them for any other purpose than such as was usually allowed on streets, avenues, parks and commons. The grant is no more specific as to the use that might be made of the public parts of the point.

The referee, upon the request of the defendants, has found :

Seventh. “ That one of the uses to which the persons who platted and laid out Point Stockholm, devoted said commons and parks, [839]*839and for which they themselves used the same, was that of passing to and from lands adjoining Point Stockholm.”

Eighth. “ That such use has been continued by owners of lands upon Point Stockholm to the present time.”

Ninth. “ That the plaintiff in this action has used the parks and commons for the purpose of passing upon the thirty-three-foot strip, adjoining the Point; of passing on to the lands now owned by these defendants west of said premises; in passing to the lands adjoining known as Sheldon Hall, southeast of said premises.”

Tenth. “ That it has been customary for the parties who platted Point Stockholm, and for their grantees, to pass over the parks and commons for the purpose of visiting these defendants, and that many of the owners of lots upon Point Stockholm, have invited these defendants to visit their homes, from time to time, and it has been customary for these defendants to travel over the parks and commons for the purpose of doing so.”

Eleventh. “That the owners of lands upon Point Stockholm, have from time to time, as occasion demanded, used the parks and commons or portions thereof, for driving upon with various kinds of vehicles.”

It would seem, therefore, that the understanding of the parties was that the commons might be used by the owners of lots thereon for going on and off the point. This “triangular piece” was common ; was down next the water, and its westerly boundary was the division line between the point and the defendants’ adjoining property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A.D. 835, 114 N.Y.S. 876, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-swanson-nyappdiv-1909.