Rose v. . Hawley

36 N.E. 335, 141 N.Y. 366, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 441, 96 Sickels 366, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1138
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 36 N.E. 335 (Rose v. . Hawley) 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
Rose v. . Hawley, 36 N.E. 335, 141 N.Y. 366, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 441, 96 Sickels 366, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1138 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The questions presented by this appeal arise in an action by the plaintiff to recover the possession of real property, based upon allegations of the breach of conditions *372 subsequent in a deed. On the 30th of December, 1848, the plaintiff conveyed to the municipal corporation then known as the town of Yonkers, a parcel of land described as containing eighty-four-liundredths of an acre. All the interest, rights and obligations conferred by this deed have since become vested in the city of Y onlcers, one of the defendants in this action. The deed, after a description of the land intended to be conveyed by metes and bounds, contained the following provision : This conveyance is upon this -express condition, that the strip of land forming part of the premises above described, and being twelve feet and six inches in width, and extending all along said Academy street, ■ shall forever hereafter be and remain a part of said Academy street, and shall never be used for any other purpose whatsoever. And also that all the residue of said land hereby conveyed shall forever hereafter be and remain public and open as a public liiglrway, and that no house, building or other erection whatsoever, except a public monument, shall ever be built or erected or permitted upon the said land or upon any part thereof.”

The complaint alleges in terms quite broad' and general that there has been a breach of this condition, and particularly that the defendant Hawley has been permitted by the city to erect a building on a part of the premises, and that it still continues to permit him to maintain the building and hold the land upon which it was erected and claim it as his own contrary to the conditions expressed in the grant.

At the trial the plaintiff attempted to show by proof that a building erected by the defendant Hawley or his grantors many years ago encroaches upon the land described in the deed. This building is north of the land conveyed and is something over sixty feet in length. It is claimed that the southerly- wall stands upon a portion of the soil included within the bounds of the deed to the town to the extent of sixteen inches at one end of the building and two inches at the other end. The evidence on this point is quite complicated, obscure and conflicting, but it is conceded that unless there is some insurmountable legal obstacle in the way of the *373 plaintiff’s recovery in any event, that he was entitled to have the fact as to the existence and extent of the alleged encroachment determined by the jury. The other proof, in regard to the breach of the condition, shows the existence of an area south of the building above mentioned, under the surface of the ground, extending south from the building four feet, about eight feet deep. The southerly wall of this area is sixty-four feet in length, eight feet in height and about sixteen inches thick. All the surface inclosed in this area is within the bounds of the land conveyed by the deed. There is a stone stairway in the area leading below from the street, and over all the space is a sidewalk containing gratings and a door to the stairway which, when closed, constitutes no obstruction to persons passing upon the walk. This feature of the case simply shows a practice quite common in cities of using the space under the walk as a cellar or area for the storage of goods which, in no material respect, interferes with the use of the surface above as a public highway in the manner in which sidewalks are generally used. This was the situation with respect to the breach of the condition when this litigation began. The persistency of the litigants, and the varying results of the contest from time to time, have added to the case some new complications which require some notice in order to obtain a clearer view of the questions presented now by the record.

In the year 1886 the plaintiff first brought his action to recover the land granted as above described, and in that year he obtained a judgment in his favor upon a trial by the court without a jury. This judgment was reversed by the General Term upon the law and the facts and a new trial granted. (Rose v. Hawley, 45 Hun, 592.)

From this result the plaintiff appealed to this court, stipulating, as required by section 191 of the Code, that if the order was affirmed judgment absolute should be rendered against him. The case was heard by the Second Division of this court, which affirmed the order appealed from and directed judgment absolute against the plaintiff. *374 (Rose v. Hawley, 118 N. Y. 502.) This judgment was duly entered upon the remittitur in the court below. One of the reasons given in the opinion of the Second Division for the affirmance of the order was that no notice had been given to the city of the erection claimed as a breach of the conditions in the deed. The plaintiff began this action in the year 1890, and the complaint differs from that in the former action only in this respect. It contains allegations as to the commencement of the first action, the service of the complaint upon the. city and the defendant Hawley, charging a breach of the conditions and stating the facts constituting the same, which were substantially identical with the facts contained in the record and already mentioned; that the city appeared and defended the action, and thus had notice of all the facts. The defendants, in addition to the defenses interposed in the first suit, have pleaded the former judgment as a bar. Before serving the answer, however, they demurred upon the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and upon the further ground that upon its face the. existence of the former judgment appeared which constituted a bar to this. The demurrer was sustained at the General and Special Terms, but overruled in this court. We then held that, for the purpose of the question then before us, nothing could be known in regard to the former judgment except what was stated in the complaint, and that enough did not appear to sustain the demurrer. (Rose v. Hawley, 133 N. Y. 315.) In the answer the defendants have set forth fully all the facts-in regard to the former action, and allege that the final judgment was upon the merits and determined the question of encroachment and breach of the conditions. The trial of the issues was had before a jury and the plaintiff had a verdict,, but the judgment was again reversed at the General Term, upon the facts, and a new trial granted. (Rose v. Hawley, 69 Hun, 614.) Upon the new trial the same facts appeared, and upon the defendants’ motion the court dismissed the complaint upon the merits, to which ruling the plaintiff excepted. The judgment entered in favor of the defendants upon this decis *375 ion has been affirmed in the court below, and the record containing all the proceedings is now before us for review. The former adjudication was not upon the ■ merits in the sense which the rule requires in order to render the judgment a bar in another action. The plaintiff failed, so far as this question was involved, because notice of the alleged encroachment could not be imputed to the city.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E. 335, 141 N.Y. 366, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 441, 96 Sickels 366, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-hawley-ny-1894.