Scallon v. Manhattan Railway Co.

78 N.E. 284, 185 N.Y. 359, 23 Bedell 359, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 905
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 284 (Scallon v. Manhattan Railway Co.) 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
Scallon v. Manhattan Railway Co., 78 N.E. 284, 185 N.Y. 359, 23 Bedell 359, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 905 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The appeal in this action was argued at the same time with that in the Hindley case against the same defendants. (Hindley v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 185 N. Y. 335.) As the facts relating to the cause of action are substantially alike in both cases, our decision in that case must control this, unless the disability of the plaintiffs for a time on account of their infancy, a feature which exists in this case only, requires a different conclusion.

The entry by the defendants was in 1879, and this action was commenced in 1902. The trial court found that the plaintiffs derived title from their mother,- Mary A. Scallon, who purchased the abutting property at a foreclosure sale in 1879. Mrs. Scallon died intestate in 1888, seized in fee of said property, leaving the plaintiffs, one aged eleven and the other nine, as her only heirs at law. - The elder daughter *362 became of age on the 10th of January, 1898, and the younger on the 5th of December, 1900.

The question not common to both cases is whether the supervening disability of the plaintiffs operated to defeat the defendants’ claim to title by prescription.

The Appellate Division did not consider this question and Mr. Justice Houghton, one of the concurring judges, in stating the reason, made some observations so pertinent to the questions involved in both cases that we quote them in full, as follows: “ But for this former decision (referring to the Hindley case as decided by the Appellate Division), however, I should be of the opinion that the defendant could and had obtained prescriptive rights against abutting owners, and that its occupation of the streets became hostile before the decision of the courts in 1882, adjudging that the rights of abutting owners had been invaded, and that the purchase or recognition of the rights of one abutting owner on the route, did not destroy defendants’ prescriptive rights against other abutters whose claims were not conceded. Although the defendant began its occupancy under grant from the state to the street only, yet from its manner of occupation, and from its resistance to payment for invasion of the individual rights of abutting owners, it must be deemed, I think, to have occupied under claim of right to use all that was necessary to the erection, maintenance and operation of its railroad. From the very nature of the structure, and from the necessary manner of operation, the light, air and access of abutting owners was appropriated. That the defendant believed it had the right to these under its grant from the State, or that it insisted that abutting owners had no redress for their-invasion, did not change its rights or the character of its occupation. That occupation was open, notorious and exclusive, either under claim of title or in hostility to the owner’s rights, and contained all the elements, it seems to me, necessary for the ripening of prescriptive title. While the right of way is continuous, and in a broad sense must be treated as a whole, yet the invasion of individual rights is single; and I see no *363 reason why such single right cannot be obtained by adverse possession, notwithstanding the rights of other abutters similarly situated may be recognized. The question in the present case as to whether or not the Statute of Limitations was suspended by the death of the owner and the descent of the real property to her infant heirs, would be important if defendant could obtain title by prescription, but under the decision as rende red'it becomes immaterial.”

Returning to the question as to the effect of supervening disability, it is urged in behalf of the plaintiffs that the presumption of a grant, upon which title by prescription is founded, cannot be indulged against an infant and that the running of the Statute of Limitations is suspended during the period of infancy. (Code Civ. Pro. § 375.)

Adverse possession and prescription are closely related. The one is regulated by statute and the other by common law, which has adopted twenty years as the prescriptive period from analogy to the Statute of Limitations. (Code Civ. Pro. §§ 369-371; Lewis v. N. Y. & Harlem R. R. Co., 162 N. Y. 202, 223.) Adverse possession is the open and hostile possession of land under claim of title to the exclusion of the true owner, which, if continued for twenty years, ripens into an actual title. (Baker v. Oakwood, 123 N. Y. 16.) Prescription rests upon the presumption of a grant of .incorporeal rights that has become lost and after the lapse of twenty years the presumption ripens into a title also. It is measured by user and the adverse use must commence in the same way, continue for the same period and be of the same character as the adverse possession required to give title to real estate. (Lewis Case, supra, p. 224.) The close connection between the two methods of acquiring property makes it reasonable and natural to extend the analogy to the subject of disability. There is no reason for affording greater protection to incorporeal rights than to the land to which those rights are appurtenant.

The effect of infancy upon statutes of limitation is not uniform but depends upon circumstances. If infancy exists *364 when the cause of action first accrues, the time for commencing the action is extended for a certain period after the infant becomes of age. If, on the other hand, the statute has already begun to run against the ancestor, it is not interrupted by his death and the supervening disability of his .infant heirs. An adverse possession commencing in the lifetime of the ancestor will continue to run against the heir, although he is an infant when his right accrues. This rule is 'well established by authorities of the highest standing. (Fleming v. Griswold, 3 Hill, 85; Becher v. Van Valkenburgh, 29 Barb. 319, 324; Bradstreet v. Clarke, 12 Wend. 602, 619; Demarest v. Wynkoop, 3 J. Ch. 129, 138; Jackson v. Wheat, 18 Johns. 40, 41; Jackson v. Johnson, 5 Cow. 14, 93; Hogan v. Kurtz, 94 U. S. 773, 779; McDonald v. Hovey, 110 U. S. 619; Stowel v. Zouch, Plowd. 353a; Doe v. Jones, 4 T. R. 300; Doe v. Jesson, 6 East, 80 ; Tyler’s Ejectment and Adverse Possession, 929, 930; 19 Am. & Eng. Ency. [2nd ed.] 222; Buswell’s Limitations and Adverse Possession, 175; Wood on Limitations, § 6; Angell on Limitations, § 196.)

If this rule applies to the case before us, the intervening infancy of the plaintiffs would not extend the period of limitation, which had run for about eight years at the time of the death of their mother, who was not shown to have been under any disability in her lifetime.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 284, 185 N.Y. 359, 23 Bedell 359, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scallon-v-manhattan-railway-co-ny-1906.