O'Beirne v. Gildersleeve

116 A.D. 902, 102 N.Y.S. 391, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 63
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 25, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 A.D. 902 (O'Beirne v. Gildersleeve) 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
O'Beirne v. Gildersleeve, 116 A.D. 902, 102 N.Y.S. 391, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 63 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The plain tiffs bring this action to recover damages for several trespasses and injury to premises owned by them and in their possession at Bayville, Nassau county, and the complaint asks for an injunction perpetually restraining the defendants from entering upon the premises of the plaintiffs; that the plaintiffs be declared the owners, of the fee of the westerly half of a private road or lane adjacent to their premises; that said lane or road be declared a private lane or road, and that the defendants and each of them be forbidden and enjoined from inviting or extending permission to strangers and other persons not having rights. under deeds, to use said private lane or road; that the defendant Sarah Gildersleeve be directed and required to level, harden and grade said private road, and for such other or further relief as to the court may seem just. On the ■trial the complaint was dismissed, the plaintiffs appealing to this court.

There is no controversy, so far as this record shows, in reference to the facts material to the issues. Hiram Hegeman, father of the defendant Sarah Gildersleeve, originally owned a tract of land situated on both sides of a road or lane known as Hegeman avenue, including the roadway, in Bayville, town of Oyster Bay, Nassau county. Hegeman avenue extended northerly from Bayville avenue, the principal thoroughfare o.f the place, to the high-water mark of Long Island Sound, and at the time of the bringing of this action the defendant Sarah Gildersleeve was the owner of the fee of the premises on the easterly side of Hegeman avenue, holding under a devise from her deceased father. In September and October, 1900, by two separate deeds, the defendant Sarah Gilder-sleeve conveyed to the-plaintiffs two parcels on the westerly side of Hegeman avenue, and by mesne conveyances, the plaintiffs purchased two other plots on the same side of the way, making a tract-of about four acres. The deeds of the defendant Sarah Gilder-sleeve conveyed the fee of the .westerly half of the said Hegeman avenue to the center thereof, and it is not disputed that the plaintiffs are the owners of the fee of the roadway in front of their entire premises, the deeds - all having been made with reference to this roadway. The deed of October 12, 1900, conveying premises to the plaintiffs provides as follows: “ Said Hegeman Avenue as now laid OUt from the main highway through Bayville to the Sound, to [904]*904be forever kept open and unobstructed as a street, way or thoroughfare, for the use and benefit of all parties' thereto, their heirs and assigns.” “ And the' said party of the first part (Sarah Gilder sleeve)' stipulates and agrees to level, grade and harden the said Hegéman Avenue from Bayville Avenue on the south to the shore of Long Island Sound on the north on or before the 1st day of April, 1901.”.

' There is no evidence in this cáse .that. liegeman avenue was a' public highway it appears' to have' been merely a roadway on paper at the tiipe the deeds were given, grown up to weeds and briers, and the covenant of the defendant Sarah Gildersleeve “to level, grade.and harden, the said Liegeman avenue from Bayville Avenue On the south to- the shore of Long Island Sound,” was a covenant to put the said roadway in proper .condition for .the use of. the parties to the agreement, not for the benefit of the public. The parties mutually agreed, the plaintiffs in ,so far as their own premises were concerned, the defendant Sarah Gildersleeve as to all the others, that “ said Heg'eman' Avenue as now laid out from the main highway through Bayville to the Sound, to be forever kept open and unobstructed as a street, way or. thoroughfare, for the use and benefit of all parties hereto,” etc. That is, the Owners of the fee to this way agreed mutually tóx keep the same open “ as a street, way or thoroughfare,” limited to the “ use and benefit of all parties hereto.” As against all the rest' of tile world this street or way might be closed at any time, and as, it might be closed as against all the rest of the World, so any one of the parties to the agreement had a right to .exclude this street or way from the use of any One not a party to the agreement, or not serving some' purpose of such parties. . It was a private way, in which each owner of a fee had an easement in the street, way or thoroughfare between Bayville avenue aiid Long Island Sound; that is, each owner of a fee had a right to an .“ open and unobstructed ” street,, way or thoroughfare, but this was not a covenant on the part either of the grantor or the grantee that the “ street, way or thoroughfare ” should be absolutely unobstructed, in the sense that it' -should not contain a tree or shrub or hitching post or horse-block or any of the things which might be necessary for the full “ use and benefit of all parties hereto.” Indeed, this •.view of the agreement is [905]*905shown by the fact that one of the defendants did set out shade trees in front of the plaintiff’s premises at about the time the grant was made. The fair and rational construction of this covenant, in view of the purposes which the parties had in mind in reaching the agreement, which was that the plaintiffs desired the premises as a summer home, was that the way should be kept open to its full width, subject to such uses on the part of the owners of the fee as should not' interfere with the rights of others similarly situated to an open and unobstructed right of way in passing from their premises to Bayville avenue or Long Island Sound. ¡No one on the easterly side of Hegeman avenue had any right or interest in the use made of the westerly side of said avenue, so long as it did not interfere with an “ open and unobstructed ” passage to the points above mentioned, and the plaintiffs would have no right to interfere with any use of the easterly side of the avenue which did not sensibly affect their free and unobstructed passage along said avenue in reaching either of said points.

It appears from the evidence that the defendant Sarah Gilder-sleeve failed to perform her agreement in reference to leveling, grading and hardening the way between the points mentioned, and that the plaintiffs in 1903, after several requests that the defendant act, took it upon themselves to put the way in repair in front of their own premises at an expense of $130, extending the improvement only to the premises of which they were the'owners of the fee. They prepared a driveway some twelve or fifteen feet wide, sowed grass seed along the side of such roadway, set out a privet hedge between a line of shade trees set out by one of the defendants and the roadway thus prepared, leaving an open and unobstructed driveway from twelve to fifteen feet wide upon their own premises, independently of the open way on the easterly half of the way. These improvements were known to the defendants, the defendant Hegeman writing a letter to the plaintiffs and claiming that the hedge, which stood two or three feet outside of the line of maple trees which Hegeman had himself set. out, was an obstruction, in violation of the covenant in the deed, although he was not a party to the transaction and did not own any property along the way. He was warned not to interfere with the improvements made by the plaintiffs upon their own premises.

[906]*906• "Thus matters remained' until June 20j .19-04, when the defendants appear to have been seized with an uncontrollable desire to perform' their covenant- to level, grade, and harden said Hegeman avenue.

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Related

Berlin v. Yachnin
128 Misc. 24 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1926)
O'Beirne v. Gildersleeve
110 N.Y.S. 1139 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
116 A.D. 902, 102 N.Y.S. 391, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obeirne-v-gildersleeve-nyappdiv-1907.