Nostrand v. . Knight

25 N.E. 949, 123 N.Y. 614, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 96, 78 Sickels 614, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1770
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 949 (Nostrand v. . Knight) 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
Nostrand v. . Knight, 25 N.E. 949, 123 N.Y. 614, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 96, 78 Sickels 614, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1770 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

This action was brought By the plaintiff to compel the specific performance by the defendants of a contract to sell and convey to one A. S. Murray, certain real estate in the county of Orange in this state. The plaintiff was the assignee of the contract, and the property to be sold was described therein as follows: “All that certain grist-mill and water-power known as the C. B. Knight grist-mill property, including a tract of land at Bound Pond, together with all rights and privileges to the waters of Bound pond that the late C. B. Knight possessed in his lifetime, or belonging to said property, subject, however, to the existing leases of the present tenants now on said premises.” This contract was negotiated and executed on behalf of the defendants in 1887, by Phillips & Wells, their authorized agents.

The controversy is over the question as to the identity of the property intended to be sold under the description of the “C. B. Knight grist-mill property; ” the defendants claiming that it covered, in addition to certain rights of flowage and the land and water-rights at Bound pond, the fee of less than one acre of ground covering a small part of the pond at *618 its outlet and the buildings thereon; and the plaintiff that it embraced about eight acres of land covered by the pond and mill buildings, and some upland adjoining in addition to the land, water-rights and easement of flowage pertaining to the property at Bound pond and elsewhere. While it will not be exactly accurate, yet it will be sufficiently so for the-purposes of this description to refer to their respective claims; one as embracing a one-acre parcel, and the other as covering eight acres. It will also be unnecessary hereafter to refer, particularly, to the property located at Bound pond, as no disjiute exists as to the character or extent of that narcel as described in the contract.

Upon the trial at Special Term, the court rendered judgment in favor of defendants, holding that the phrase “ the C. B. Knight grist-mill property,” covered, in addition to certain, rights of flowage, the acre of land alone. Upon appeal, this judgment was reversed upon the facts by the General Term, and the “defendants appealed to this court upon a stipulation.

This appeal presents but a single cpiestion, which is whether, upon the facts, the General Term was authorized to reverse the judgment of the trial court as being contrary to the weight of evidence. The question is one purely -of fact and is to be determined by a consideration of the evidence in the light of the rules which govern appellate tribunals in reviewing such questions. The General Term had jurisdiction to review the conclusion of the trial court, both upon the facts and the law, and we cannot reverse its determination, unless, upon examination, we conclude that there was no evidence to support it, or that there was such a preponderance of evidence in favor of the conclusions reached ».by the trial court as would have constituted error of law' for it to have found otherwise than it did. The evidence does not show to us any such preponderance, but, on the contrary, we are convinced that the decided weight of evidence is with the plaintiff. If we refer to the contract, we find that a clear intention is expressed to sell and convey the “ O. B. Knight grist-mill property,” with the *619 lands connected therewith and tenant-houses erected thereon, for the purposes of a flouring-mill. Mo ambiguity arises over the location of the property, for there is but one property at Monroe, Orange county, which fills the description, and the only difficulty arises when an attempt is made to define its boundaries. In the absence of clear and definite language in the contract upon this point, extraneous evidence becomes necessary to determine the question. Certain inferences may, obviously, be drawn from the language of the contract, bearing strongly upon the question involved in the case. Among them is the fact that a grist-mill and all such property connected with it as was necessary to carry on the business of a flouring-mill was intended to be sold. This would naturally include, not only the land upon which the mill buildings were situated, and the necessary yards and structures connected therewith, but also the mill-pond, race-way, tail-race, water-rights and other indispensable appurtenances of such a mill. If the- land upon which any of these appurtenances were located belonged to the owner of the mill property, it would be inferred, under such a contract, that the title thereof was intended to be transferred upon a sale without reservations. If the appurtenances owned by the vendors consisted of easements alone, such as the right of entry upon and flowage over the lands of the others, an inference would probably not be permissible, that the title of such lands was also intended to be conveyed. In such a contract, mere would be no presumption that the vendors intended to convey any other title than that actually possessed by them. The contention of the defendants, however, falls far short of a disposition to convey so much even of the mill property as they actually owned, for they seek to withdraw from the opération of the deed tendered oy them, the title to the lands under the larger portion of a pond covering four or five acres, which belonged to them, and was essentially necessary to the operation of a mill in that location. The deed tendered by the defendants in fulfillment of their contract included only an insignificant portion of this land, and it is difficult to see why- *620 any was included if the claim that a water-power only was to be sold is to be supported. The concession that the title to any such lands was included in the contract, naturally involves the conclusion that they were all intended to be embraced therein so far as the defendants’ title extended.

We have also been unable to' see how the language of the ■contract can be given its natural effect and meaning if the defendants’ contention be sustained. That instrument In •express terms, reserves the rights of the tenants on the property in existing leases, from the operation of the conveyance provided to be given, evidently implying that otherwise the title of the property covered by such tenant-houses would be transferred by a conveyance of the property described in the ■contract. As we understand the evidence, the tenant-houses ■are all situated on lapd outside of the one-acre parcel. If this be so the clause referred to will, under settled rules of construction, be deprived of any meaning or effect, if defendants’ •construction shall prevail.

A reference to the history ofthis mill property as disclosed by the proof, seems to us to remove all doubt as to the identity of the property intended to be conveyed. That shows this property was originally owned by one Daniel 0. Knight as a part of his homestead farm, and was first separated therefrom in 1862, when it was devised to his son, Chauncey B. Knight, under the following description : “ the following described premises being part of his homestead farm and premises,” certain lands containing eight acres described by metes and bounds, and including the grist-mill and sawmill, an.d also certain premises and rights of flowage at the outlet of Round pond, and certain rights of flowing lands in connection with the mill-pond embraced in such description.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 949, 123 N.Y. 614, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 96, 78 Sickels 614, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nostrand-v-knight-ny-1890.