Pell v. Pell

65 A.D. 388, 73 N.Y.S. 81
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 A.D. 388 (Pell v. Pell) 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
Pell v. Pell, 65 A.D. 388, 73 N.Y.S. 81 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The appellant refused to complete his purchase by paying the balance of the purchase price and accepting the referee’s deed on account of certain alleged defects in the title to a part of the premises which was formerly part of the easterly half of the old Greenwich or Fitzroy road. The entire premises thus purchased by appellant have a frontage of twenty-four and nine-tenths feet on the westerly side of Eighth avenue and extend the same width in depth westerly one hundred feet, the southerly line being twenty-four and nine-tenths feet northerly of the northerly line of Thirty-fourth street. The westerly line of the lot is in what was formerly the westerly half of said road and to the extent of the width of the lot the boundary lines embrace the entire easterly half of the road.

The specific objection to the title is that the parties to the partition suit did not own the fee to this part of the easterly half of the road. It is conceded that otherwise their title is good. It is also conceded that one Jacobus Yan Orden owned the premises upon either side of the road at the points in controversy, and owned the fee to that part of the road now in question, holding said premises as separate parcels divided by the road, and that upon his death, by a will duly admitted to probate in the county of Mew York on the 12th day of Movember, 1782, he devised the same to his daughter, Magdalena Warner.

The sufficiency of the record title depends upon the construction of a deed from Magdalena Warner and her husband to John Watts dated May 3, 1791, in liber 55 of Conveyances at page 356 in the office of the register of the county of Mew York. It appears without controversy that whatever title passed to W atts by this conveyance was vested in the parties to the partition suit and will be conveyed by the referee’s deed, but it is contended by appellant that the deed to Watts did not convey the fee to the easterly half of the road. The conveyance to Watts embraced two tracts separatéd by this road, the one to the west consisting of fifteen acres and that to the east consisting of nineteen acres three rods and thirty-six perches. The deed describes the westerly tract as:

All that certain messuage or dwelling house and barn and tract or parcel of land, situate and lying in the outward of the City of Mew York, and is bounded as follows, to wit: the easterly end of the [390]*390said tract is bounded on Greenwich Road, between the land belonging to Lewis Scott, and land in the occupation of Mrs. Ann McAdam, and is in breadth on the said road 7 chains and 60 links on a course south, 30 degrees and 30 minutes west; and then runs north, 61 degrees west, along the land of the said Lewis Scott 17 chains, 14 links, being the length of the southerly side of said tract or parcel of land; thence across said tract by a line parallel to the easterly line thereof north, 30 degrees 30 minutes east, 7 chains and 60 links to the land in the occupation of Mrs. McAdam; then along her land south, 61 degrees east, 19 chains and 74 links to Greenwich Road aforesaid and doth contain 15 acres of land; ” and it describes the easterly tract as :
“ Also all that certain other lot, piece or parcel of land beginning on the east side of Greenwich Road at the northwest corner of the land of Lewis Scott directly opposite to the southeast corner of the land above conveyed and runs thence south, 60 degrees east, 12 chains and 75 links to land of Isaac Schultz; then along his land north, 29 degrees east, 15 chains and 40 links; and thence north, 59 degrees west, 13 chains and 15 links to the Greenwich Road aforesaid; then along the said road south, 17 degrees west, 2 chains; south, 30 degrees and 30 minutes west, 12 chains and 90 links; south, 21 degrees and 30 minutes west, 82 links to the place of beginning. Containing 19 acres, 3 roods and 36 perches more or less, and is known in a division of the estate of Jacobus Van Orden, deceased, by Lot Humber 2, and is bounded to the eastward by lot number 1, now belonging to Isaac Schultz, to the westward by Greenwich Road, to the northward by land of Isaac Varían, and to the southward by land of Lewis Scott, as the same was surveyed and laid out in the year 1786 by Casimer Goerck, Surveyor.”

It is manifest that by the first description the fee to the center of the road was conveyed with the westerly tract. It will also be observed that at least that part of the estate of Van Orden lying easterly of this highway was subdivided into lots, but the record does not contain the subdivision map or the survey upon which the same was made. After a description by metes and bounds, the easterly tract is designated as lot Ho. 2, bounded easterly by lot Ho. 1 and westerly by this road. The rule is well settled that where the owner of the fee to the center of the highway subdivides [391]*391his land into lots and conveys the same by reference to the lots such conveyance carries the fee to the center of the highway.

It might, we think, be fairly inferred that, in subdividing and conveying this estate under these circumstances, the fee to the center of the highway would pass unless excluded by the language of the deed. It is urged, however, that the words beginning on the east side of Greenwich Hoad ” in this conveyance necessarily exclude the fee to the highway If there were no other words qualifying or limiting this phrase, we might be obliged to sustain the appellant’s contention, for it has been authoritively adjudicated by the Court of Appeals on descriptions quite similar in regard to the starting point and to the returning boundai'y, that the fee does not pass. (Kings County Fire Insurance Company v. Stevens, 87 N. Y. 290 ; Blackman v. Riley, 138 id. 318.)

In the case at bar, however, the words in the deed, beginning on the east side of Greenwich Boad,” are followed by another clause which must be given force and effect in, locating the point of commencement of this description. While the point of beginning is stated to be on the east side of Greenwich road, it is expressly stated that such point is “ at the northwest corner of the land of Lewis Scott directly opposite to the southeast corner of the land above conveyed.” This reference to “ the land above conveyed ” is to the westerly tract, the southeast corner ” of which was, as has been seen, in the center of the highway. It becomes important, therefore, to locate the northwest corner of the land of Lewis Scott. It appears that Scott obtained title to two tracts of adjoining land, one upon either side of this road, by sheriff’s deed dated the 30th day of July, 1790, and recorded in the office of the Secretary of State on the 18th day of November, the same year, in liber 23 of Deeds, at page 67. The description in that deed, so far as material, reads as follows:

All those two certain pieces or parcels of land situate, lying and being in the outer of the City of New York, being separate the one from the other by the road leading to the Great Kills (being the road in question), that is to say, one of the said tracts lying on the westerly side and the other on the easterly side of said road; the said tract lying on the westerly side of said road beginning on the northeast corner of that part of the land of Captain Thomas Clark which is on the same side of the said road; and running thence [392]*392along the said road north,” etc., by courses and distances returning to the place of beginning;

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A.D. 388, 73 N.Y.S. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pell-v-pell-nyappdiv-1901.