Sandiford v. Town of Hempstead

97 A.D. 163
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 A.D. 163 (Sandiford v. Town of Hempstead) 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
Sandiford v. Town of Hempstead, 97 A.D. 163 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

The following is the opinion of the referee :

Charles F. Brown, Beferee :

The plaintiff and the defendant Carman Frost claim to be the owners of what is practically all of Hempstead bay from the .Oyster bay line to a line about 7,000 feet east of the western boundary line of the town of Hempstead.

They also claim to own a tract of land of the same character known _ as Post Lead, which is located in Hempstead bay between the west boundary line of the town and the west boundary line of the first-mentioned tract.

The plaintiff’s interest in the premises is an undivided one-third which he acquired by a deed from the defendants Frost in 1894.

Carman Frost claims to be the owner of the remaining two-thirds of the premises in controversy.

The property in controversy was originally a part of the common lands of the town of Hempstead.

It is the plaintiff’s claim that the town’s title was divested by certain allotments of the property among the original proprietors of the town by proceedings which will be hereinafter referred to.

[168]*168The immediate foundation of the plaintiff’s title is a deed signed by fifty-nine persons to Captain Jacob Hicks dated on June 7,1725, which purports to convey all the “right, title, interest, part or share” of the grantors “belonging to a beach lying on ye south side of ye island in ye bounds of Hempstead aforesd att a place called Rockaway, bounded * * * west by Whelses (Wells’) Line, south by the sea, east by Broclcelface G-utt and north by ye-Great Creek, togather with all ye marshes and other priviledges thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining.”

In 1802 Morris Fosdick, at the-request of Stephen Hicks and Jacob Hicks, who had succeeded to the title conveyed by the deed aforesaid, made a survey and map of a tract of 1,504¿ acres of land on the west side of the town, which was bounded on the- west by Wells’ line, on the south by the sea, on the east by East Rock-away inlet and on the north by Great creek, which creek the witness Conklin identified as a creek now called Crooked creek, which runs from Brower’s bay westerly along Wells’ line.

In 1878 there, was a partition action between the heirs of Hicks of the property conveyed to Jacob Hicks by the deed of 1725, which action was prosecuted to judgment and the property sold' and conveyed by the referee to Alfred N. Lawrence. The' defendant Carman Frost, who had acquired by various deeds the interests of certain of the Hicks heirs in the property, which amounted to more than one-third of the whole, was a defendant in that action.

In the complaint the property sought to be partitioned was described as it was in the deed to Hicks in 1725 and then “ more particularly as follows.” Then followed the description of the Fosdick survey of 1802 giving the name of the inlet on the east as “Hog Island or East Rockaway Inlet and formerly (known) asBrockleface Gut.” The north boundary was given as Great creek and the southwesterly boundary as Brower’s bay and Crooked creek.

It was also alleged in the complaint that the parties owned no other land in common, and the referee reported that “ after a personal examination of. the premises, which is all salt meadow land,” an actual partition thereof could not be made.

The land was conveyed by the referee to Alfred N. Lawrence, the purchaser at the partition sale,, by the same description as that contained in the complaint-and judgment.

[169]*169Alfred N. Lawrence conveyed the property to N'ewbold Lawrence, who died owning the same.

In November, 1888, Newbold T. Lawrence and others, who had succeeded to the title, commenced an action against the town of Hempstead to quiet the title to the property and to restrain the town from exercising acts of ownership therein.

In the complaint in that action the property was described as it was in the partition action.

By appeal this latter action was considered and determined at the General Term of the second department and by the Court of Appeals, and is reported in Lawrence v. Town of Hempstead (83 Hun, 614; affd., 155 N. Y. 297.)

By the final judgment in that action the plaintiffs were adjudged to be the owners and entitled to the possession of the premises described in the complaint, and the town was restrained from trespassing thereon or attempting to take possession thereof, and the judgment contains the same description of the premises as was set forth in the complaint and judgment in the partition action.

The foundation for the decision in the case of Lawrence v. Town of Hempstead (supra) was that the title of the town had been extinguished by the allotments of upland meadows to the grantors of Jacob Hicks or to their predecessors in title, and that the allotments thus referred to evidenced the intention of the town to transfer its title not only to the upland, but to' the common meadow land as well, and that the latter term included the salt marshes and beaches.

The facts and proceedings referred to by the court at General Term and the Court of Appeals, and by which it was held that the town had parted with its title, were a fencing order of April 1Y, 1659, which provided that forty-seven persons named therein should fence Rockaway, and a resolution of the town meeting on December 25,16Y8, which directed the laying out of the common meadows on the south side of Rockaway to forty-one persons named therein, and findings by the trial court that Rockaway was one of the south necks of the town and included the land in question, and was a name applied to that part of the town between Hempstead bay and Jamaica bay, and that the property in question constituted the easterly part of Rockaway neck and corresponded substantially [170]*170with the property described in Fosdick’s survey, and was conveyed to Alfred N. Lawrence by the referee in the Hicks partition suit.

The referee’s deed to Alfred N. Lawrence was dated May 6,1878. The action of Lawrence v. Town of Hempstead (supra) was commenced in November, 1888, and final judgment was entered therein in March, 1898.

On November 21, 1887, Newbold T. Lawrence and others conveyed to the defendant Frost the property called Post Lead, and on July 15, 1889, the same persons executed and delivered to Frost a deed which purported to convey the premises heretofore referred to, which comprise all of the Hempstead bay'from the eastern boundary line of the town to a line 7,000 feet east of the western boundary.

On December 6, 1894, Frost conveyed to the plaintiff á onejhird interest in the premises' conveyed to him by the last two deeds.

This brief statement of the history of prior litigations is essential to understand the claim of the plaintiff in this action.

The main claim of the plaintiff upon the facts is that Brockleface Gut, which was the easterly boundary of the property conveyed to Gapt. Jacob Hicks in 1725) is not identical with East Rocbaway inlet as shown upon Fosdick’s survey, but was an inlet near the boundary line between Hempstead and Oyster bay, and that the property conveyed to Jacob Hicks was not only the 1,504J acres surveyed by Fosdiek, but included all the lands, salt marshes and beaches within Hempstead bay to the Oyster bay line,

This conclusion he seeks to establish by proof of the following facts:

1.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.D. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandiford-v-town-of-hempstead-nyappdiv-1904.