Pearsall v. Westcott

51 N.Y.S. 663
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 N.Y.S. 663 (Pearsall v. Westcott) 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
Pearsall v. Westcott, 51 N.Y.S. 663 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The court below found that the plaintiff was the owner of the premises -described in the complaint, and hence that his north line extended to the center of the 8-inch brick wall between his lot and that of the defendants; also, that said wall was a party wall, used as such for over 30 years; and that the plaintiff had a right to use it as such; but he directed a judgment en-’ joining and restraining the defendants “from entering upon or interfering with the south half thereof.” After a careful consideration of the evidence, we are of the opinion that it does not sustain the finding of the learned trial judge that the plaintiff’s north line extended to the center of the wall in question. The undisputed testimony of the witnesses Bockes and Marvin shows that the south wall of the defendants’ building stood in 1839 identically where it did at the time of the trial. This building was erected by the defendants’ ancestor, Judge Warren, and the evidence shows that he built this wall as a portion of his house. The laying of the brick in Flemish bond to the south side of the wall, the brick headers extending through it, the location of the chimneys and chimney caps, the battlements on the north and south walls, leave no room for doubt in this regard, in the absence of any conflicting testimony. And it is also apparent that, when Judge Warren erected the building, there was no structure.on the north line of the adjoining lot now owned by the plaintiff. The testimony of the witness Darrow alone might not be sufficient to establish that fact, but the statements of the witnesses Rattelle and Westcott, who [665]*665are not contradicted, show that the joints on the south face of the wall were all struck with a trowel. This could not have been done had there been a building south of the wall at the time Judge Warren erected the house. The recitals in the deed introduced by the plaintiff, if competent evidence as against the defendants, do not conilict with this testimony. Such recitals show, at the most, that in 1837 there was a building on the lot now owned by the plaintiff, but not where it was located on the lot, or that, it extended to the premises of the' defendants. If otherwise, the fact being undisputed that the wall in question was struck with a trowel on the south side, thus showing that, when erected, no building was standing there, it follows that Judge Warren must have built the wall some time between 1833, when he purchased the property, and prior to 1837, when, from the recitals, it appears that a store building was erected on the lot now owned by the plaintiff.

We think, therefore, that the testimony disclosed the fact that Judge Warren erected this wall in question as a part of his building at a time wrhen there was no erection on the lot adjoining on the south. Hence, at the time when the plaintiff purchased his lot, in 1863, Judge Warren had occupied with his building the disputed four inches for 24 years. The rule is well settled that “when there has been a practical location of a dividing line between the lands of adjoining owners, and a long acquiescence therein, the line so established will not be disturbed.” Avery v. Woolen Co., 82 N. Y. 582. Therefore, whether the plaintiff’s paper title covered the disputed four inches of the wall in question or not, Judge Warren had acquired title thereto by possession for a period of over 20 years prior to 1863. There is no evidence in the case that that possession had ever been questioned or disturbed. The plaintiff did not prove that the timbers of his house had been placed in the wall in question before the expiration of 20 years from the time of the erection of the building. But, had he produced evidence to that effect, it would not have proved that Judge Warren ceased to be in the undisputed possession of the four inches of land in question on which he had erected his house, but would have shown or tended to show a right of the plaintiff’s grantors acquired, by license or grant, to support their timbers in Judge Warren’s south wall, which, if continued for a long enough period, would have become a right by prescription. So, the wall in question, having been erected by Judge Warren as a part of his house, and occupied by him for over 20 years before it is shown that any use thereof was made by the plaintiff or his grantor for the support of the timbers of his house, the subsequent use of the said wall by the plaintiff since 1863 did not deprive Judge Warren, his descendants or grantees, of the possession thereof. Such use might be sufficient to prove a right on the part of the plaintiff by prescription to an easement in the wall; but, subject to such easement, it left the possession of the defendants, and those through and from whom they derived title of the disputed four inches, undisturbed. It follows that the defendants and their grantors and ancestors had remained in undisputed possession of the whole wall, subject, perhaps, to an easement acquired therein by the plaintiff, for [666]*666a period of about 60 years at the time of the trial of the action, and their title thereto cannot now be questioned.

Nor did the plaintiff show any paper title to this strip of land. He claimed to own lot No. 51 on the Walton map, 60 feet wide and 150 feet deep, and also a portion of the adjoining lot No. 52 on said map, 20 feet wide and of the same depth, which is bounded on the south by said lot No. 51, and on the north by the premises of the defendants. The only testimony given to locate this lot was that of the surveyor, Mott. This witness said: “I made various tests and measurements for general occupation, and found that the line between the Ellsworth property which is the property lying on the south side of the Pearsall property, and it seemed to be correct.” Assuming that the Ellsworth line was the correct south line of the plaintiff’s lot, he measured from it 80 feet north, and it embraced about 4, inches of the wall in question. There was no proof that the line between the Ellsworth property and that of the plaintiff was the correct south line of the plaintiff’s premises. In the absence of evidence that the monument used by the surveyor in making his measurements was to be relied upon, his testimony was of no value. Again, the witness testified: “It struck about four inches. I am not positive to half an inch, but about four inches. * * I don’t know as I attempted to locate the exact line between the two.” The question in the case was in regard to four inches of land. In such a case, a survey and measurement, to be of any value, should be made with the utmost care. The exact line between the parties, which the witness did not attempt to locate, was the very thing he was called upon to determine. It is quite evident that on such testimony the court was not authorized to find that any part of the building of the defendants, which had stood for 60 years in the possession of the defendants or that of their ancestors, was upon the lot of the plaintiff. We conclude that the finding of the trial court that the plaintiff owned the land on which the south half of the wall in question was located was not supported by the evidence.

The finding of the trial judge that the 8-inch wall between the premises of the plaintiff and the defendants was a party wall, and his legal conclusions based on such finding, remain to be considered. Although the wall in question was entirely upon the premises of the defendants, it might, under certain circumstances, be a party wall. 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 3; Jones, Easem. § 632; 2 Washb. Real Prop. (5th Ed.) p. 386. Ordinarily, a party wall between two adjacent proprietors is placed, one-half on the lands which each own in severalty.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.Y.S. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearsall-v-westcott-nyappdiv-1898.