Weiant v. Rockland Lake Trap Rock Co.

61 A.D. 383, 70 N.Y.S. 713
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 A.D. 383 (Weiant v. Rockland Lake Trap Rock Co.) 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
Weiant v. Rockland Lake Trap Rock Co., 61 A.D. 383, 70 N.Y.S. 713 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J. :

The plaintiff sues to enjoin the defendants from blasting out and removing stone from land- which she claims to own at Hook Mountain, near Rockland lake, and to compel the removal therefrom of several hundred feet of iron water pipe which they have laid thereon. The defendants deny the plaintiff’s ownership of the land, and allege that the defendants Foss and Conklin are the owners and the defendant company the lessee thereof and of other property between the plaintiff’s premises and the river. The controversy between the parties grows out of the difficulty of defining the location of the dividing line between their respective properties, the plaintiff alleging that the line runs along the east bluff, of the steep part of the mountain, so as to include the entire top of the bluff, while the defendants claim that it runs farther , to the westward and along the flat top of the bluff, so sis'to embrace within their property a strip lying between, the edge of the bluff on the east and the defendants’ land on the west.

The issues were tried before Mr. Justice Garretson, and the defendants appeal from the judgment entered on his decision in favor of the plaintiff. They also appeal from an order made by the same justice at the Queens Special Term, denying a motion for a new trial on the ground of newly-disCovered evidence.

The first finding of fact relates to the ownership, and reads as follows:

“First. That the plaintiff is, and was at and during the time stated in the complaint, the lawful owner and in actual possession of the lands and premises therein mentioned and described, the easterly line or boundary whereof runs along the east bluff of the steep part of the mountain, as shown by the irregular or indented fed line, marked ‘East bluff of steep part of the mountain’ on plaintiff’s map in evidence as Exhibit No. 2, and entitled ‘ Map of lands of Mrs. Laura A. Weiant, near Rockland Lake, Clarkstown, N. Y., surveyed June, 189Y, to May, 1898, by L. Wilson, Surveyor,.’ and as also shown on Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, entitled ‘ Map B of the East Bluff of the steep part of the mountain.’ ”

The first question before us is whether there was sufficient evidence upon which to base such a finding.

William Perry was the owner of the whole mountain through [385]*385■whom, both parties herein derive title. The plaintiff’s land consists' ■of three parcels, called the “ Wagonhofer,” “Drew” and “Dickey ” tracts, the Wagonhofer lying to- the south, next the Drew, and, north of that, the Dickey tract. It is not necessary to trace the title to-the plaintiff through the several mesne conveyances in evidence. To analyze their descriptions with accuracy within the bounds of an' opinion is difficult; and, by reason of a personal examination of the ^premises by the trial justice, hereinafter referred to, we think it unnecessary to give more than a general outline.

The deed from Finch to Perry was dated January i, 1812, and conveyed the Wagonhofer tract by the following description: “Beginning at a butternut tree, being the northwest corner, of the mountain lot of Dowah Tenure, and runs thence north forty degrees east, six chains; then north fifty-eight degrees east seven chains and thirty-nine chains to the southeast corner of the old house of the said William Perry; then south thirty-four degrees and thirty minutes •east thirteen chains along a line of marked trees tó a heap of stones; then south sixteen degrees east three chains and fifty links; then -south twelve degrees east four chains and fifty links to a stone heap; then north sixty-five degrees west twenty chains to the place ■of beginning, and is bounded on the west and north by the public road, on the east- by -the lands of the said James W. Finch; on the south by the land of Dowah Tenuré¡ containing by estimation fifteen ■acres, one rood and nineteen perches, be the same more or less.”'

The initial point of the description in the Perry deed is a butternut tree which long since lias disappeared, and the primary difficulty is to determine where this'tree was located, the plaintiff contending that it was on the east side of the public road as the latter now exists, while the defendants contend that it was about twenty-seven and one-quarter feet farther to the westward and that the road at that place has been changed- to the eastward. As the demised, premises are described to be bounded on the west and north by the public road, it is more-natural to believe that the initial point of description was on the east side of the road than that it was on the west side of the road upon property not conveyed by the deed.

The southerly line of the description of the Wagonhofer tract in the Perry deed ended at the' butternut tree, and is described as [386]*386.■.running “ north’sixty-five degrees west twenty .chains to. the place of 1 beginning,”- that is, the butternut stump. . Running this line j reversely from that stump, that-is, south twentyTfive degrees east (.twenty -chains, we- should have no difficulty in arriving at the easterly line .of the Wagonhofer tract, if the stump was in the easterly dine of .the public road as the latter is. now located. There is some : evidence tending to show- that the road has been widened in some ¿places since -the.Perry conveyance. The defendants find confirmation of this in the fact that the description in the deed from Finch . to Perry describes the line from the butternut tree as running on two . courses “to the southeast corner of the old house of the said (William- Perry.” -.-The vuins.of this house are shown on the plaintiff’s map. to- be north and west of the public road. The house, however j. was.-several hundred feet north of the tree. It -is difficult to :understand why a boundary line would be described as commencing ; on the easterly ¡side .-of. a public road and running in-a long diagonal ■.direction across, the road nearly the full length of the line, a distance of. forty-five "chains, about fourteen hundred feet. Naturally, such a-boundary fine .runs"along and not. diagonally across a public road. .The; plaintiff’s .counsel, in his brief, asserts that it was meant that .“the line was ¡intended to run to a point on the south side of the public highway."opposite the southeast corner of the old Perry house; ” .and if we so decide, many of the difficulties in the case disappear.

Evidence as" to the change in the width of the road is to be. found in: the testimony of Wagonhofer,-.a witness for the plaintiff, who ■said s “ I- don’t know of any change in the road that runs along in ■front of the Methodist Church only they made it a little wider than ■it was. I couldn’t say just when. They done-it at times.. Some •places it wasn’t wider at all, and in some places a little wider. There was a butternut tree in the corner of the Methodist Church lot near ."the road, but he broke down, and right behind the church is a chestnut tree. The road there by the church is about the same now as it was years ago only it. is a little better fixed up and a little wider.”

- William Perry, a son of Findh’s grantee and seventy-eight years old at the time of the trial, testified that the old Perry house was on -the north side of the road and the Wagonhofer tract on the south :a.nd east side. of the road; that years, ago. the road ran eight or ten feet in front and south of the house, and.that the road is now close [387]*387to the house, but that this is several hundred feet north of the south line of the Wagonhofer tract, where the butternut tree stood.

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Weiant v. Rockland Lake Trap Rock Co.
74 A.D. 24 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.D. 383, 70 N.Y.S. 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiant-v-rockland-lake-trap-rock-co-nyappdiv-1901.