Volz v. Steiner

73 N.Y.S. 1006

This text of 73 N.Y.S. 1006 (Volz v. Steiner) 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
Volz v. Steiner, 73 N.Y.S. 1006 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, J.

This action was brought for the specific performance of a contract to convey real property, and by the pleadings the single question as to whether the plaintiff, at the time the contract^ was to be completed, had a marketable title to the premises Nos. 233 and 235 East Ninety-Fifth street, in the city of New York, which, by the contract, the plaintiff had agreed to convey to the defendant, is presented. The contract involved an exchange of real property. The defendant agreed to convey to the plaintiff certain property on the corner of Eighty-Eighth street and Lexington avenue, subject to certain mortgages, and the plaintiff to convey to the defendant two lots or parcels of land with the buildings and improvements thereon on the northerly side of Ninety-Fifth street, 100 feet west of Second avenue, and a piece of property on the southerly side of Seventy-Seventh street on the corner of Avenue A, subject to certain mortgages; the plaintiff to pay to the defendant, in addition to said conveyances, the sum of $6,000 in cash. The contract was to be performed on the 30th of August, 1900, and on that day the parties met. The plaintiff tendered to the defendant conveyances of the three pieces of property which, by the contract, he was to convey, and the amount to be paid in cash. The defendant refused to accept these deeds, on the ground that the title to the Ninety-Fifth street property was not marketable; counsel for the defendant stating at the time of the refusal to accept that “we raise no question whatever as to the other property, outside of the Ninety-Fifth street property.” The answer of the defendant denies the allegation that the plaintiff tendered the title to the premises that he was bound by the contract to convey, in that the plaintiff failed to execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the defendant the proper deed “containing a general warranty, and the usual full covenants for the conveying and assuring to the said defendant the fee simple of the premises Nos. 233 and 235 East Ninety-Fifth street, in the city of New York”; that the premises Nos. 233 and 235 East Ninety-Fifth street, mentioned in the said agreement Exhibit A had and have thereon a substantial building or buildings, which formed a material part of the consideration of said agreement, and the inducement to making the said agreement; that since the making of said agreement the defendant has discovered that the said premises Nos. 233 and 235 East Ninety-Fifth street are incumbered by the existence of an encroachment of the easterly wall of the building No. 235 East Ninety-Fifth street upon the premises adjoining on the westerly side, and belonging to a person other than the plaintiff, to the extent of about 100 feet inches in depth by 2j4 inches in [1008]*1008width, without right or title to or interest in the land upon which such encroachment stands; and that there are numerous other defects and encroachments of various kinds which will appear upon the surveys of the said premises; and that the existence of said encroachment constitutes an incumbrance upon the said title, and materially affects the market value of the premises, and constitutes such an incumbrance thereon that the defendant will not acquire a marketable title under the deed tendered by the plaintiff by reason of such encroachment.

The issue thus presented by the pleadings was limited entirely to an encroachment of the building erected upon the Ninety-Fifth street property of 2^ inches. By the contract the plaintiff agreed to convey to the defendant all those two certain lots, pieces, or parcels of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, and bounded and described as follows:

“Beginning at a point on the northerly side of Ninety-Fifth street, distant one hundred (100) feet westerly from the corner formed by the intersection of the northerly side of Ninety-Fifth street with the westerly side of Second avenue; thence running northerly, and parallel with Second avenue, one hundred (100) feet eight and a half (8%) inches to the center line of the block; thence westerly along said center line, and parallel with Ninety-Fifth street, fifty (Bo) feet; thence southerly, and again parallel with Second avenue, and part of the distance through a party wall, one hundred (100) feet eight and a half (8%) inches to the northerly side of Ninety-Fifth street; and thence easterly along the northerly side of Ninety-Fifth street fifty (50) feet, to the point or place -of beginning,—be the said several dimensions more or less, said premises being known as Nos. 233 and 235 Bast Ninety-Fifth street.”

It is not disputed but that the plaintiff had a good title to the land included within this description, the defendant’s claim being that the easterly wall of the building No. 235 East Ninety-Fifth street encroached upon the land to the east '2% inches. The deed tendered by the plaintiff to the defendant conveyed the premises according to the description contained in the contract, but did not purport to convey the fee of the 2^ inches upon which the easterly wall of the building encroached. Upon the record the evidence sustained a finding that such an encroachment existed, and that 2% inches of the easterly wall of the building which the plaintiff in his contract was to ^convey to the defendant was erected upon land to-which the plaintiff had no title, and which the plaintiff did not purport and was not able to convey to the defendant. VVe will assume that this encroachment was a defect in the title which would justify the defendant in refusing to accept the conveyance, and that upon the tender of a deed for the 50 feet of land the defendant was not bound to take title where a building that was erected upon the property to be conveyed, which was a permanent structure, and an important part of the consideration, for the contract, encroached upon the adjoining property, to which the vendor had no title. In determining what is necessary to cure such a defect in the title, it is quite essential to bear in mind the distinction between a case where there is an encroachment of an adjoining building upon the property to be conveyed, thus preventing the vendor from conveying [1009]*1009and giving the possession of all the property that he was bound to convey, and a case where the objection is that, although the vendee obtains all of the land that he was to obtain, .a portion of the building is erected upon the land of another, which may subject the vendee to litigation which would compel him to remove a portion of the building which he has purchased. In this latter case it is not a failure of title of the land contracted to be conveyed, but a failure to convey the legal right to maintain the building as it exists upon the property, by reason of the fact that a portion of that building is upon land to which the vendor has no title, and which the owner could be compelled to remove. Where the title to a portion of the land fails, there, of course, the vendee has a right to reject the title. Where, however, the objection is that a portion of the building is erected upon land the title to which the vendee is not entitled to under the contract, if at the time of the closing there was a valid agreement with the owner of the adjoining land which was encroached upon by the erection of the building to be conveyed by which the vendee would be entitled to maintain the building as it then existed, it would seem to be quite clear that the vendee would not be justified in refusing to accept title, as by the conveyance he would receive all that he was entitled to under the contract, for he would obtain all the land that was to be conveyed, and the building upon the land, with the right to maintain such building as it then existed.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y.S. 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/volz-v-steiner-nyappdiv-1902.