Mount v. Hambley

33 A.D. 103, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1920
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 A.D. 103 (Mount v. Hambley) 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
Mount v. Hambley, 33 A.D. 103, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1920 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

McLennan, J.:

One Thomas M. Reade was, at the time of his death, the owner and in j>ossession of a certain tract of land situate in the village of Clayton, Jefferson county, N. Y. Prior'to November 2, 1865, said Reade died, leaving a last will and testament, by which, among other things, he appointed Rachel Reade and J osepli W. Reade his executors, and gave them full power and authority to sell and convey the premises now owned by plaintiff and defendants. A portion of such premises was occupied by a brick store known as Reade’s store.

By deed dated November 2,1865, said executors conveyed a portion of said premises to one John M. Cline, which is the conveyance under which the plaintiff acquired all the right, title and interest which he has in and to the premises in question. The premises conveyed to said John M. Cline were described as follows, viz.: “ All that tract or parcel of lands lying and being on J ames street, in the village of Clayton, Jefferson county, New York, and being parts of village lots number 17 and 18, as surveyed by Clark W. Candee, and lying alongside and adjoining land contracted to Edward Ryan, being thirty feet on James street, and extending back the same width sixty feet, the lot being thirty by sixty feet, and being all the land lying between the said Ryan lot and said Reade’s brick store. Save and excepting therefrom fifteen feet by fifteen feet' on the northeasterly corner of said lot, reserved as a way to Reade’s cellar.”

Thereafter, and on the 17th day of February, 1869, by a good and sufficient deed, the said executors conveyed to one Alonzo Kring the other portion of the premises, and under that conveyance the defendants acquired all the right, title and interest which they have in the premises in question. The description in the deed to Kring was as follows:

All that piece or parcel of land situate in the village of Clayton, county of Jefferson, State of New York, bounded as follows: On the southwest by James street; on the northwest by Water street; on the northeast by a' way twelve feet wide, reserved for that purpose; and on the southeast by premises contracted to James W. and Samuel R. Thomson by Thomas M. Reade, March 23rd, 1869. Together with a plot of ground, fifteen feet by fifteen feet, adjoin[106]*106ing the northeast corner of these premises, and reserved from the northerly corner of the lot contracted to said Thomson for a cellar-way for the use of the store on the premises hereby conveyed. Together with a right of way,” etc.

The fifteen feet square last mentioned,, it.is conceded,, is the-same fifteen feet square' mentioned in the-deed under which plaintiff claims.

At the time the two deeds in question were.made by the executors of Thomas M. Reade as aforesaid, the plot of ground fifteen feet square referred to in each deed was used for a cellarway-leading to. Reade’s store, and continued to be so used, to some extent at least, ■ down to the time of the trial. The premises were-covered by a shed or low building, and were also used by the defendants and .their grantors for a storage rodm, coal room and closet, and were not used for any purpose by the plaintiff or his grantors under claim of title. Before the commencement of this action the defendants claimed the exclusive right of possession of said plot of- ground, and declared their intention of erecting thereon a substantial two-story building, to be used for any purpose which they might choose..

. The plaintiff contends that the defendants have no right to use or ■occupy the plot of land in question for any other purpose than as a . cellarway to their store (formerly Reade’s store), and that, they have no right to erect any building or structure thereon which will interfere with plaintiff’s light or air, and he seeks an injunction so restricting the defendants in the use of said premises. ' Whether or not the plaintiff is entitled -to the relief demanded depends upon whether the words of, limitation contained in his deed, viz., “ Save and excepting therefrom fifteen feet by fifteen feet on the northeasterly corner of said lot, reserved . as a way to Reade’s cellar,” constitute an exception dr a reservation. If an “ exception,” then the plaintiff took no title to the plot of ground in- question and acquired no. right or interest.therein. If a “reservation,” the plaintiff, by the grant in question, acquired the fee to the land, and all the right and interest of his grantor in and to the-same, .subject only to-“a way to Reade’s cellar.” The fact' -that one or the other, of the words “ exception.” or “ reservation ” may have been used in' the conveyance is not conclusive, but all the Words of the grant must be- considered, and if their meaning is uncertain or ambiguous, then all [107]*107the circumstances surrounding the transaction, in order that it may be ascertained whether the grantor parted with the title, but retained to himself some right or interest in the thing granted, in which case there would be a “ reservation,” or whether the grantor retained to himself a part of the premises described as granted, which would constitute an exception.” “ Reservation ” and exception,” as applied to grants of land, were clearly defined in the case of Craig v. Wells (11 N. Y. 315) per Seldeet, J.: “ Reservation is always of something taken back out of that which is clearly granted, while an exception is of some part of the estate not granted at all. * * * ■ A reservation is never of any part of the estate itself, but of something issuing out of it, as for instance, rent, or some right to be exercised in relation to the estate, as to cut timber upon it. An exception, on the other hand, must be a portion of the thing granted or described as granted, and can.be of nothing else.”

This definition was approved in the case of Blackman v. Striker (142 N. Y. 555).

The case of Craig v. Wells (supra) cites with approval the following definition by Shepard : “ A reservation is a clause in a deed whereby the grantor doth reserve some new thing to himself, out of that which he granted before.. This doth differ from an exception, which is ever part of the thing granted, and of a thing in esse at the time : but this is of a thing newly created, or reserved out of a thing demised, that was not in esse before. (Shep. Touch. 80.)”

The test is whether or not the thing was granted or conveyed at all, although embraced in the general description. If not, then clearly it is an exception; but if the thing be granted, and some right or interest therein is reserved, then it is a reservation. The words in the plaintiff’s grant are “ Save and excepting therefrom a piece of land fifteen feet by fifteen feet; ” if there was nothing more it would concededly have been an exception, and no title to or interest in that plot of ground would have "passed, but there follows these; words : “ Reserved as a way to Reade’s cellar,” and, as before said, it is.claimed that these words, taken in connection with the exception, constitute a reservation, and that the.plaintiff’s grantor acquired the fee to the plot of ground, subject only to an easement of a way to Reade’s cellar. It will be remembered that the grantor was the owner of Reade’s store at the time plaintiff’s original deed was [108]*108made, and that, the words of limitation in the deed were for his benefit, and it appears that he afterwards conveyed the premises known as Reade’s store, and the plot of ground in question, to the defendants’ grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.D. 103, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-v-hambley-nyappdiv-1898.