Town of Oyster Bay v. Jacob

109 A.D. 613, 96 N.Y.S. 620
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 109 A.D. 613 (Town of Oyster Bay v. Jacob) 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
Town of Oyster Bay v. Jacob, 109 A.D. 613, 96 N.Y.S. 620 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

The defendant appeals from a final order-of forcible entry and detainer, entered upon a verdict of a jury in summary proceedings authorized by title 2 of chapter 17 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and instituted in the County Court of Nassau county. The petitioner alleged (1) that it was in constructive possession of the premises as owner in fee simple; (2) that .on March 30,1904,, it was in actual and peaceable possession.thereof. “The statute was not intended to confer rights. The main object still is to preserve the public peace and prevent parties from asserting their rights-by force or violence, though by gradual additions the remedy has bec'ome in effect a private as well as a public one.” (Wood v. Phillips, 43 N, Y. 152, 157.) If the ’ petitioner could establish that it W98 [615]*615peaceably in actual possession of the premises, and then the defendant made a forcible entry and detainer, it could secure this remedy which restores the possession that had been wrested from it by force. Though the defendant could show a better title or a superior right of possession, it would not avail him in this proceeding, for he could not first take the law into his own hands to gain possession, and then invoke the law to. keep it. (Iron Mountain & Melena Railroad v. Johnson, 119 U. S. 608, 611; Cain v. Flood, 14 N. Y. Supp. 776; affd. on opinion below, 138 N. Y. 639 ; Felly v. Sheehy, 60 How. Pr. 439.) ,

First. Did the evidence warrant a finding that the petitioner was peaceably in actual possession on March 30, 1904 ? Actual possession means “ a subjection to the will and dominion of the claimant.” It “ exists when a thing is in one’s immediate occupancy,” and it is evidenced by circumstances which vary according to the locality and character of the property. (And. L. Diet. 790) “ Generally, any overt acts indicating dominion and a purpose to occupy and not to abandon the premises will satisfy the requirements as to possession.” (13 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 748.) It is possession “ required by the nature and situation of the property.” (Allaire v. Fetoham, 55 N. J. Eq. 168.) It intends that the land is “in the immediate control or power of the party.” (Omaha & Florence L. & T. Co. v. Marker, 33 Neb. 775; 51 N. W. Rep. 139.) The land in question is a neck of sand, 300 feet wide and 1,200 feet long, in the township of Oyster Bay, known as East Beach, that joins a peninsula called East Island with the north mainland of Long Island. The father of the defendant is the owner of East Island, and he contends that he owns East Beach also. The petitioner sent four custodians to East Beach in April, 1903, who went there about two a. m. About four p. m. the defendant landed a party of twenty men on the beach and cast the custodians from it. They returned two or three days thereafter, and there they remained for almost eleven months. They lived in a tent and then in a house which they set up, and, as one: of them testifies, “ without any interruption, peaceably and quietly.” The defendant admitted that' he knew these men were there as keepers in possession for nearly a year. This sandy beach was unimproved and uninhabited. Neither its location nor its physical condition nor its adaptability to any present use would have moved [616]*616any occupant to improve it or to disturb much of its natural condition. Presumably it had no agricultural value, no immediate rental value if improved, and it afforded no other usufruct, although the sand itself could be sold. There is no period prescribed by the statute as prerequisite to an actual occupation. (Cain v. Flood, supra.) Even though the defendant first obtained a' scrambling possession, he"had immediately abandoned it, and, knowing full well the character of the occupancy, had suffered the petitioner to remain on the land unmolested by force or undisturbed by law for almost a year. I think that the jury was warranted in finding an actual possession on,March 30, 1904. (Authorities supra, and Edwards v. Cary, 60 Mo. 572.) I lay stress upon the fact that the custodians put up a house on the land and abode therein. ■ This at least was full actual occupation of a part of the premises. Their principal based its right of ownership upon the Andros patent, which he contended embraced all of the premises. Actual possession of a part under bona fide claim and color of title to the whole is possession of the whole, or so much as is not in adverse possession of others. (Olinger v. Shepherd, 12 Gratt. [Va.] 462; Vanhorne v. Tilley, 1 T. B. Mon. [Ky.] 51.) The patent was important to define the extent or boundaries of the. claim and possession. (Clements v. Fays, 76 Ala. 280, 284.)

Was there evidence to warrant the finding that the petitioner was peaceably in possession ? One of the custodians testifies that after his entry, a few days subsequent to April 30, 1904, or, more clearly, after his return, he and his associates lived there for almost a year without interruption peaceably and quietly. In Stanley v. Sohwalby (147 U. S. 508, 514) the court seems to define- (or at least to approve of- the definition) peaceable possession as one that was continuous and not interrupted by adverse suit.” In Allaire v. Ketoham (supra) it is said that the test is whether the defendant setting up a claim of title has interfered with complainant’s possession by an act which is suable at law, and suit upon which will or. may involve the title of the defendant.” There is no proof that the. eleven months intervening the return of the custodians and March 30,1904, the defendant made any sign or up to that day had entered any adverse suit to recover the premises, though he knew, full well that the petitioner was asserting possession through its [617]*617custodians. Though he may have understood “that a right of property merely, not joined with the possession will not justify ” him in “ committing an assault and battery upon the person in possession, for the purpose of regaining possession,” although the possession ivas “ wrongfully withheld ” (Bliss v. Johnson, 73 N. Y. 529, 533), yet he surely knew that the courts were open to him.

So far as the right to the remedy was concerned, all that the plaintiff was obliged to show was peaceable and actual possession at the time of the defendant’s forcible entry, and the manner in which it secured possession in the beginning is not available to the defendant as a justification of his own unlawful act. Cain v. Flood, supra.)

Second. Was the evidence sufficient to establish a forcible entry and detainer % Though entry and detainer may be distinct acts (Code Civ. Proc. § 2233; People v. Fields, 1 Bans. 222) — indeed, the first one was an offense at common law and the other was punishable by statute only (Gunn. Fore. Ent. & Det.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.D. 613, 96 N.Y.S. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-oyster-bay-v-jacob-nyappdiv-1905.