Myers v. Gemmel

10 Barb. 537
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 10 Barb. 537 (Myers v. Gemmel) 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
Myers v. Gemmel, 10 Barb. 537 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

On and-before 1st Feb. 1849, Mr. Gemmel was seised in fee of the corner house and lot on the east side of [539]*539Broadway, and north side of Reade-street in this city, known as No. 290 Broadway, and also of the houses and lots adjoining to these, known as No. 40 Reade-street. The Broadway lot was . 34 feet wide on the front on Broadway, and of the same width in the rear, and 63 feet deep on Reade-street, and on the opposite or north side. The house on that lot was five stories high, and was fifty-eight feet in height, and covered the whole lot except an area of 13 by 23 feet; this area or open space beginning on one side at the distance of fifty feet from Broadway, and extending to the Reade-street lot. and on the other side beginning 11 feet from Reade-street, and extending to the north side of the lot. The Reade-street property consisted of two lots 44 feet front, and 34 feet deep, on which were erected two three story houses, each 22 feet deep from Reade-street and 28 feet high at "the eaves of the roof, and 35 feet at the peak. Thus the Reade-street lots being 12 feet deeper than the houses on them, had yards 12 feet in depth. One De Forrest then owned or occupied the lot to the north of these, but had not built to the rear of his lot, so that Mr. Gemmel’s three houses had light __ from De Forrest’s yard, and from Gemmel’s area and yards. _The Broadway house had and still has the advantage of light from Broadway, (one of the broadest streetsin _that_pai±_of_the ..cityj and along its~wEoIedepth_qn_Reade=strefii4_and as if to secure light to the rear. jwindows wer.e^lacedjn_e.ach story on that part which faced__t]iajixea. There were not, however, win- /, dows in the part of the rear wall which adjoined the Reade-y streitlot, although that wall rose from 23 to 30 feet above thei/f Reade-street houses. There was also a wooden fence eight feet ‘highj'entlreTy separating the Broadw'ay lot from the Reade-street lots: and on the area there were privies erected commencing 2 or 3 feet south of De Forrest’s lot, and extending about 7 feet along or near the boundary between the Broadway lot and the Read-street lots and rising to the height of 20 feet and communicating with the Broadway house, partly by means of a piazza 3 feet wide over part of the area. There was no communication between .the Broadway lots and the Reade-street lots. On the 19th February, 1849, Gemmel leased to Durell.for 7 [540]*540years from 1st May, 1849, “ the house and lot known as Ho. 290 Broadway; in the city of Hew-York, with the appurtenances,” at the yearly rent of $3500 payable quarterly. The lease was under seal, and the landlord entered into no covenants except to keep the roof in repair. In September, 1849, the lease was assigned by Durell to Myers the present plaintiff. Since that, De Forrest has built on the whole rear of his lot, so as to cut off the light that came over his open yard through a space 13 feet wide. In June last, Gemmel tore down his houses on Beadestreet, and began the erection of other houses which are intended to cover the whole of the Beade-street lots, and to be five stories high, and to rise ten. feet above the Broadway house. This action was commenced to prevent his erecting such buildings, and an injunction order was granted to that effect. A motion was made at special term, on the coming in of the answer, to dissolve the injunction ; that motion was denied, and the defend ant has appealed from the order then made.

The counsel for the defendant, with that fairness and boldness for which he is distinguished, admitted that he could not sustain the appeal if the decisions made in England for the last fifty years, as to the right to light,, are to control this case, and the counsel for the plaintiff admitted, with equal fairness, that he did not rely on any covenant, express or implied, on the part of the landlord, and accordingly that the landlord was not liable for any injury resulting from the erection of De Forrest. There was no express covenant applicable to the case, and since the revised statutes have declared that no covenant shall be implied in any conveyance of real estate, and that the term “ real estate” is eo-extensive in meaning with, “lands, tenements and hereditaments,” (1 R. S. 738, § 140; p. 750, § 10 ;) it is at least probable that no covenant could be implied. The ground assumed by theplaintiff is, that a part of the thing actually de•mised, was the right in the Broadway lot to derive light and air from the Beade-street lot; in other words, that by the act of the common owner of the lots, this right had been made part of the Broadway house and lot, and so would pass in any lease or conveyance of that lot.

[541]*541Only such parts of the common law as, with the act of the colony in force on the 19th April, 1775, formed part of the law of the colony on that day, was adopted by us—and only such parts of the common law were brought by the colonists with them as suited their condition, In the application of this restricted rule, a mortgage has been considered with us as being only a security for money, and as leaving the legal title in the mortgagor, as to all persons except the mortgagee, while in England the mortgage was considered as passing the whole legal title to the mortgagee. In England it was waste” for a tenant to cut down timber; with us, on the contrary, good husbandry required that on a lease of lands, mostly unimproved, the tenant should be permitted to cut down large portions of the timber. So while the population was scattered, and houses were not crowded together, there could not for many years be an occasion for applying the law of ancient lights as now understood in England. It appears by the act of 19 Car. 2, ch. 3, passed immediately after the great fire in London of 1666, that there were streets or lanes in that great city not more than fourteen feet in width. (See Keeble’s Laws.) In such streets the houses must have derived their only valuable light from their sides or rear, and the necessity of the case may have justified a presumption as a matter of fact from a'long undisturbed enjoyment, that the lights for the sides or rears of the houses had been granted to those houses by the owners of the adjoining lots. The custom that may have thus. arisen, when once established, would be applied also to the houses on the wider streets. Where houses were thus crowded, and so little space left even in ■ the public streets for air and light, it could hardly be supposed that one would leave his land unoccupied and permit his neighbor to receive the benefit of this circumstance, if he were not bound to do so. There was, therefore, no violence to the usages of such places to presume a grant of the right to the ancient lights in such cases. The usage, too, was not uniform'; for in London, by custom, a man could build to any height on Ms ancient foundations. 'i (Vin. Abr. Stopping Lights, C. 1.)

With "us there was no room-for any such presumption. In [542]*542the early settlement of the colonies land must have been too abundant for any such question to arise. Light and air came, as the blessings of heaven, in abundance for all; so that nó one could think of claiming a restriction upon his neighbor’s lands in order to enjoy them.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Barb. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-gemmel-nysupct-1851.