Olofson v. Malpede

127 Misc. 813, 216 N.Y.S. 695, 1926 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1043
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 127 Misc. 813 (Olofson v. Malpede) 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
Olofson v. Malpede, 127 Misc. 813, 216 N.Y.S. 695, 1926 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1043 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

Plaintiff brings this action to enjoin defendants from interfering with his use of a right of way he claims to have acquired by prescription over property owned by defendant Mary Malpede and operated in connection with a hotel by her husband, Patsy Malpede. Defendant Joseph Malpede is a brother of Patsy, and so far as the proof shows, has little, if anything, to do with the property or the matters here involved.

The facts herein are singularly free from doubt, or even dispute. The properties of both plaintiff and defendants he on the northerly side of Main street in the village of Sinclairville.' Both properties (with others now intervening the two) were once owned by one Benjamin Harrison. Henry Sylvester acquired the land, now owned by defendant Mary Malpede, and for fifty years or so it has been, and now is, occupied by a hotel. The hotel does not cover the entire frontage. Easterly of the hotel building there is an open space of thirty and eight-tenths feet of hotel property leading back to the hotel barn. Next easterly of the hotel's thirty and eight-tenths feet, there is a strip of land, owned by the plaintiff, fronting five feet on Main street and running back one hundred and thirty-three feet (measured from the center of Main street, or about one hundred feet from the north line of Main street); next easterly lies the Snyder meat market lot with twenty feet frontage on Main street and the same depth as the last mentioned parcel; next easterly lies the Libby store lot with twenty-one feet frontage on Main street and the same depth as the last two parcels; [815]*815then next easterly comes land of plaintiff, occupied by an auto sales store, thirty-four feet frontage, and the same depth as the last three parcels mentioned.

The Snyder and Libby stores are not built the full depth of their respective lots; but plaintiff’s store is built quite or nearly to the back of his lot. The front of the building is used for a salesroom, the back end for a garage. Plaintiff has a right of way from his garage across the back ends of the Libby and Snyder lots out to the five-foot strip of which he owns the fee.

. For over fifty years plaintiff and his predecessors in title have ¡used as much of the hotel thirty and eight-tenths foot open space | as necessary, or convenient to supplement plaintiff’s five feet as a means of passage between Main street and the back end of plaintiff’s lot. The owners of the meat market (Snyder property) and the other store (now Libby) have done the same thing. This use has been open and notorious, continuoiis^jminter-ru&ted- and unquestroííeiLTIñfír recently when„defen.daiLts^_Qr_^omfi__o£ .them, started to build a fence along and close to the east line of the hotel property so as to confine plamtlfl' to ...the.--Use--oLhis .five-foot strip ■which would preclude the possibility of plaintiff and his customers getting into his garage with autos. One hundred and thirty-three feet northerly of Main street the hotel property extends easterly along back of the Snyder and Libby properties, and also as I recall back of the plaintiff’s lot. The defendants have also built a fence along their southerly line, parallel to Main street and one hundred and thirty-three feet therefrom back of the properties of Snyder, Libby and the plaintiff. This is not a matter of controversy.

Old deeds running from one to another of the plaintiff’s predecessors in title mention the right of way across the back of the Snyder and Libby properties and the five-foot strip “áo be used in connection with the hotel property for a driveway ” oFwords to that" effect? No ^recogniti on of such a right of way over the hotel property is found in any of the old deeds of the defendants’ predecessors in title, so far as I have discovered. But for fifty years no owner of the hotel property has ever questioned the right of the plaintiff and his predecessors in title to the freest use of the hotel driveway till now.

Onp or two more facts ought to be mentioned. Plaintiff and his predecessors" m~tltle'"have not always driven their vehicles along any well-defined, certain track. They have driven up and down this dfivewáy, thirty and eight-tenths feet of which is owned by defendant and five feet of which is owned by plaintiff, freely using any or all of it as convenience dictated, Defendants and their [816]*816customers, patrons and privies, have used plaintiff’s five feet in the same way. The whole thirty-five and eight-tenths foot strip is thoroughly trodden down like a cinder path, by over half a century of constant use.

About one year ago the defendants, or at least the owner, Mary Malpede, and her husband, Patsy, desired a cement driveway, nearly the full width of this thirty-five and eight-tenths feet, to connect the Main street pavement with the cement sidewalk in front of this driveway and asked the plaintiff to contribute one-third of the expense and asked Snyder, the meat market owner, to contribute one-third thereof. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3 corroborates plaintiff’s testimony to the effect that he helped with this paving proposition, nearly all of which is in front of the hotel property. This testimony is not disputed. I regard this circumstance as very helpful to plaintiff’s contention in this case. Standing alone it is not a matter of great importance; but it indicates what defendants themselves thought about plaintiff’s rights, before the parties got to quarreling about something else. After fifty years of the freest use of the driveway by plaintiff and his predecessors in title, defendants ask plaintiff to contribute equitably to the improvement of the driveway, or the approach thereto for their mutual convenience and. benefit, and plaintiff complied, without hesitation. Defendants can scarcely be heard to say they did not at that time understand the plaintiff has some rights and interest in the driveway, for nearly all of the improvement is in front of the part of the driveway owned by defendants, and very little, if any, of it is in front of the five-foot strip owned by plaintiff.

In deciding that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded in the complaint, I am not overlooking one or two points that favor the defendants. The property of defendants, for the whole fifty years, has been used as a hotel. The public used this driveway constantly and as a matter of course as open spaces about public buildings are always used by permission of the owners; and it is more difficult to establish that such usé of such property is made under claim of right rather than by license. After all, the trucking of drain tile, shingles, etc., by a former owner of plaintiff’s lot, and the kind of traffic that has been conducted through this passage must, in fifty years, have called attention of the owners of the hotel to the fact that somebody besides customers of the hotel was using this driveway.

I am aware, too, that the law is well settled that a right of way by prescription cannot be acquired to wander generally and at random over the property of another. Such right can only be ^acquired by use of a definite and well-defined route. One of the [817]*817earliest and clearest expressions of this rule is found in Holmes v. Seely (19 Wend. 507). Later typical cases, on this point, are Bushey v. Santiff (86 Hun, 384) and Nellis v. Countryman (63 Misc. 564; revd., 153 App. Div. 500). But it would seem that the whole passageway in question is a well-defined ” route as that term ¡is used in these authorities.

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Bluebook (online)
127 Misc. 813, 216 N.Y.S. 695, 1926 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olofson-v-malpede-nysupct-1926.