Terwilliger v. Steenburg

33 A.D.3d 1111, 823 N.Y.S.2d 239
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 19, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 A.D.3d 1111 (Terwilliger v. Steenburg) 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
Terwilliger v. Steenburg, 33 A.D.3d 1111, 823 N.Y.S.2d 239 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

Crew III, J.

Appeals (1) from an order of the Supreme Court (Bradley, J.), entered April 21, 2005 in Ulster County, which granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, and (2) from the judgment entered thereon.

Plaintiffs and defendants Jerry Van Steenburg and Mary Van Steenburg (hereinafter collectively referred to as defendants) are the owners of neighboring parcels of real property located in the Town of Rochester, Ulster County. The parties’ respective properties may be traced to a common grantor, Barney Rothberg. In 1982, Rothberg subdivided his land into several parcels as depicted on a map prepared by Bruce LaMonda. Rothberg thereafter conveyed title to one of those lots directly to plaintiffs by a deed dated and recorded on October 26, 1982.1 The conveyance from Rothberg to plaintiffs included a number of rights-of-way including, insofar as is relevant to the instant appeal, a right-of-way known as Braziel Heights Road. Defendants, in turn, acquired their property through a series of conveyances beginning in August 1990.2

During the summer of 2002, a dispute between the parties arose as to the southern terminus of the Braziel Heights Road right-of-way. Plaintiffs essentially took the view that their deed from Rothberg conveyed a right-of-way that extended along the entire eastern border of their property and terminated at the southernmost boundary of defendants’ land, i.e., the southern border of the 3.72-acre parcel. Defendants, on the other hand, maintained that plaintiffs’ right-of-way terminated at the [1113]*1113northern end of the 3.72-acre parcel and, to that end, erected a wire fence and gate in that general vicinity, thereby blocking plaintiffs’ access to the southern portion of Braziel Heights Road.

Plaintiffs thereafter commenced this action to quiet title to the disputed right-of-way. Defendants answered and asserted various counterclaims alleging, among other things, that plaintiffs improperly extended the right-of-way beyond the original terms of their deed and overburdened the right-of-way. Plaintiffs then moved for summary judgment seeking, among other things, to enjoin defendants from obstructing or otherwise interfering with plaintiffs’ use of Braziel Heights Road. Supreme Court granted plaintiffs’ motion, decreeing that plaintiffs had a valid and enforceable right-of-way over defendants’ lands as depicted on plaintiffs’ survey map and enjoined defendants from obstructing plaintiffs’ free passage across the entirety of the subject right-of-way. Defendants now appeal from Supreme Court’s order and the judgment entered thereon.

Preliminarily, we reject defendants’ assertion that the LaMonda subdivision map is controlling as to the southern terminus of the disputed right-of-way. As Supreme Court correctly observed, defendants’ 3.72-acre parcel was not part of the proposed subdivision in the first instance and, hence, the fact that the subdivision map does not show what is now known as Braziel Heights Road as extending to the southern border of the 3.72-acre parcel is of no moment. Moreover, “[t]he extent and nature of an easement must be determined by the language contained in the grant, aided where necessary by any circumstances tending to manifest the intent of the parties” (Hopper v Friery, 260 AD2d 964, 966 [1999]; see Higgins v Douglas, 304 AD2d 1051, 1054 [2003]). To the extent that the instrument granting the easement and any map attached thereto differ as to the location of the easement, the description contained in the instrument should govern (see 49 NY Jur 2d, Easements § 94). It is only when “the instrument granting the easement does not directly specify its location, but refers to a map showing the location, [that] the map will control” (49 NY Jur 2d, Easements § 94). Such is not the case here. The extent of plaintiffs’ easement clearly is described and set forth in the deed from Rothberg to plaintiffs and, as such, the LaMonda subdivision map plays no role in ascertaining or determining the nature and extent of plaintiffs’ easement.

We do, however, agree with defendants that the record as a whole contains numerous questions of fact, including whether defendants’ southern parcel indeed is burdened by the subject [1114]*1114easement, whether such easement, if initially granted by Rothberg, subsequently was extinguished, whether defendants had actual or constructive notice of the easement and, finally, whether plaintiffs overburdened the easement. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment should have been denied.

As noted previously, the disputed right-of-way is set forth in plaintiffs’ deed from Rothberg and, pursuant to the terms thereof, extends the entire eastern border of plaintiffs’ parcel (852 feet) and terminates at the southern end of defendants’ 3.72- acre parcel. No corresponding description, however, appears in the deeds contained in the record on appeal from Rothberg to, ultimately, defendants with regard to defendants’ 3.72- acre parcel. In this regard, the Court of Appeals has made clear that “[t]he recording statutes in a grantor-grantee indexing system charge a purchaser with notice of matters only in the record of the purchased land’s chain of title back to the original grantor” (Witter v Taggart, 78 NY2d 234, 238 [1991]; see Puchalski v Wedemeyer, 185 AD2d 563, 564-565 [1992]). Hence, a purchaser ordinarily is not required to search outside his or her chain of title even where, as here, the parcels in question have been deeded out from a common grantor (see Witter v Taggart, supra at 238-239; Farrell v Sitaras, 22 AD3d 518, 519-520 [2005]; Puchalski v Wedemeyer, supra at 565). As “a deed conveyed by a common grantor to a dominant landowner does not form part of the chain of title to the servient land retained by the common grantor” (Witter v Taggart, supra at 239), it necessarily follows that the owner of the servient estate will be bound by the subject encumbrance only if it is recorded in his or her chain of title (see Russell v Perrone, 301 AD2d 835, 836, [2003], amended 1 AD3d 789 [2003]).3 Although we share the concern expressed in the dissent that this rule is contrary to the purpose of the recording act in that it essentially permits a common grantor to convey more title than he or she has retained, we are constrained by the detailed analysis in Witter v Taggart (supra), which we find to be controlling.

Here, as noted previously, the record does not contain a complete set of deeds for defendants’ parcels, nor does it contain either a full abstract of title or an affidavit attesting to the results of a title search of defendants’ parcels. Accordingly, we [1115]*1115cannot definitively determine whether Rothberg granted plaintiffs an easement over defendants’ 3.72-acre parcel or, if so, whether such easement subsequently was extinguished.

Moreover, while it is true that “[w]hen a purchaser has knowledge of any fact sufficient to put him on inquiry as to the existence of some right or title in conflict with that which he is about to purchase, he is presumed either to have made the inquiry and ascertained the extent of such prior right, or to have been guilty of a degree of negligence fatal to his plea of ignorance” (Kingsland v Fuller, 157 NY 507, 511 [1899]; see Russell v Perrone, supra

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 A.D.3d 1111, 823 N.Y.S.2d 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terwilliger-v-steenburg-nyappdiv-2006.