White v. Moore

73 Misc. 96, 132 N.Y.S. 441
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 Misc. 96 (White v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Moore, 73 Misc. 96, 132 N.Y.S. 441 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Jaycox, J.

The action is brought to restrain the defendant from interfering’ with, or molesting’ the plaintiffs in the use of the premises described in the complaint as a public park. The defendant claims to be the owner in fee of the premises, free from any rights or easements in the plaintiffs. The individual plaintiffs claim that as to them the property was dedicated for park purposes by the predecessor-in title to the defendant, who laid out the park and surrounding premises on a map. The portion which is now claimed as a park was thereon designated as a park and the surrounding premises were laid out in lots and streets. The streets are still open, have been accepted by the village as public streets, and are used as such by the public. All the lots laid out on the map, or maps (as the subsequent owner filed another which was the same as the former one), were sold by reference to such maps and conveyances given which referred to said maps. These plaintiffs were the grantees in those deeds, or the successors in title of the grantees in those deeds. The [98]*98village plaintiff claims the dedication to the general public by the predecessor in title of the defendant and an acceptance of such dedication by the village.

The premises were originally laid out in lots upon a map which .did not show a park. Upon the foreclosure of a mortgage upon the property one Henry Dnbois purchased the premises. He caused a map to he made which shows the park in question. This map was filed in the office of the clerk of the county of Queens, in which county said property was then located. Subsequently the county of Queens was divided and the property is now in the county of Nassau. The proof shows that at the time when Henry Dubois made the map in question there was at least one person holding a contract to purchase some portion of the premises embraced in the designation of a "park upon said map; that Henry Dubois procured him to surrender his contract and accept lots in another portion of the premises, upon the representation that he intended to create a park where those premises were situated. He then laid out streets surrounding this park which, as I have said before, have been accepted and used. He then placed a row of trees along the outer edge of the sidewalk. Then he placed another row of trees twenty feet or more inside of that row and some distance inside of the sidewalk surrounding the park. He then built an ornamental fence, consisting of-turned chestnut or locust posts, connected the same with ribbon wire, leaving an opening in each corner, in which he placed a turnstile. With the premises in this condition and with the map on 'file as before stated, he sold lots by reference to that map and made deeds of those lots, referring to such map.

If this question had not been passed upon I would feel that a complete and irrevocable dedication of these premises for park purposes had been made by the then owner, Henry Dubois. But the question, it seems to me, is not a new one. It has already been passed upon by the Appellate Division when a demurrer was. interposed to the complaint aAd the law of the case laid- down by that decision. That case apparently holds that if the facts alleged are true a dedication has been made. White v. Moore, 139 App. Div. 269.

[99]*99The facts above recited by me aro the facts set forth in the complaint. Numerous other authorities to the same effect may be cited in support of this proposition (9 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 57; 13 Cyc. 455-458; Trustees of Village of Watertown v. Cowen, 4 Paige, 510; Klug v. Jeffers, 14 Ann. Cas. 269; Burnett v. Bagg, 67 Barb. 154; Foster v. City of Buffalo, 64 How. 127; Kerrigan v. Backus, 69 App. Div. 329; Thousand Island Park Assn. v. Tucker, 173 N. Y. 203; Porter v. International Bridge Co., 200 id. 234. In the last ease cited the dedication was made by a map, upon which the premises were shown as a “ publick square,” and it was held that the effect of this dedication of the land designated as a “publick square” on the map of the proposed extension was to create an easement in favor • of the public coextensive with the purposes to which public squares in such localities are usually applied. The court cites with approval Trustees of M. E. Church of Hoboken v. Mayor, 33 N. J. Law, 1, and says there the dedication w;as effected by the making of a map of the well-known Stevens tract in Hoboken on which the property in controversy was designated simply by the word “ square ” and the owner subsequently executed conveyances referring to this map. The court discusses the meaning of “ square ” as thus used, saying: “The word ‘ square’ on this plot of ground indicated a public use, either for purposes of a free passage or to be ornamented and improved for grounds of pleasure, amusement, recreation or health. This is the proper and natural meaning of the term and its ordinary and usual signification. The word ‘ square ’ as a term of dedication imported a complete and unrestricted abandonment to the public uses above indicated.”

■ In Johnson v. Shelter Island Grove & Camp Meeting Assn., 122 N. Y. 330, 334, the court, speaking of a map of the lands of the defendant in that case, with reference to which the conveyances had been made, s-ays: “ Now, as to so much of the lands designated upon said map as appropriated to the use of the Shelter Island Community as public grounds, whether designated as streets, avenues, parks or places, each purchaser of a lot aeguired therein distinct and [100]*100independent rights by implied covenant as appurtenant'to the premises granted; an easement,.the enjoyment of which' the. defendant could not thereafter abridge.” Lennig v. Ocean City Assn., 56 Am. Rep. 16.

In an action brought by the predecessor in title of the defendant against one of the lot owners upon said map Mr. Justice Dickey found and decided that said “Frederick Wellenbrock acquired an easement in said park by implied covenant as appurtenant to the premises granted. The said park could not be used for any other purposes than park purposes.”

The attorney for the defendant, with commendable industry, has found many cases which he claims hold to the contrary of the cases above cited, but most of them upon examination are found to be based upon an entirely different set of facts. One upon which he places a great deal of stress is Johnson v. Shelter Island Assn., 47 Hun, 374. This was reversed in the decision above quoted by me (Johnson v. Shelter Island Grove & Camp Meeting Assn., 122 N. Y. 330), and so far as the law. is stated in 47 Hun the Court of Appeals holds absolutely to the contrary. Bissell v. New York Central R. R. Co., 26 Barb. 630, is reversed in 23 N. Y. 61.

It seems to me, therefore, that as to the individual plaintiffs a dedication has been made out beyond peradventure.

As to the plaintiff village, the case is not entirely free from difficulty, but bearing in mind the fact that under the law as stated in Porter v. International Bridge Co., supra, only an easement passed by the dedication in question, the acts and claims of the predecessors in title of the defendant become more consistent with the theory of the plaintiff. The claim of the village is that the'premises were dedicated by the map above mentioned and the laying out as above stated, and that its acceptance has been shown by user. The defendant, on the other hand, claims that there was no dedication to the village by means of this laying out or mapping and that the village never accepted.

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Related

In re the City of New York
162 A.D. 236 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
73 Misc. 96, 132 N.Y.S. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-moore-nysupct-1911.