Wilson v. Wightman

36 A.D. 41, 55 N.Y.S. 806
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 36 A.D. 41 (Wilson v. Wightman) 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
Wilson v. Wightman, 36 A.D. 41, 55 N.Y.S. 806 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The ¡action was in ejectment, brought to recover a strip 'of land four inches in width and five feet in depth on the westerly side of West End avenue, between Eighty-ninth and Ninetieth streets, in the city of New York. The answer denies the title of the plaintiff to the land in question, admits that the defendant is in possession of the premises, and alleges that such premises are covered by a portion of a building known as No. 505 West End avenue,, which building, .together with the premises upon which it stands, was conveyed by the plaintiff and his wife to the defendant; that the said building was erected by the plaintiff as a dwelling house, and that at the "time of the conveyance to the defendant it was erected and standing upon the premises so conveyed, and to the same extent and in the same manner as it existed at the time of the commencement 'of this action.

The ease coming on for trial before a jury, evidence was offered tending to show that the plaintiff, being the owner in fee of a plot of" land, built thereon two houses and subsequently conveyed one of them.to the defendant by a conveyance dated April 8, 1890, and recorded April 21, 1890. The property conveyed by this deed is described therein as follows:. All that certain lot of land, with the buildings erected thereon, situate on the westerly side of West End Avenue in the city of New York, commencing at a, point thereon distant forty-four feet northerly from the northwesterly corner of West End Avenue and Eighty-ninth street; running thence westerly parallel1 with Eighty-ninth street and partly through a party wall.ninety feet; thence northerly parallel with West End Avenue twenty feet; thence easterly parallel with Eighty-ninth street and partly through another party wall ninety feet to the westerly side of 'West End Avenue; and thence southerly along the same twenty feet to the -point or place of beginning. Being premises known as number 505 West End Avenue, New York City.” Subsequent to this conveyance, the plaintiff conveyed to John L. [43]*43Brower, by deed dated April 28, 1890, and.recorded Hay 1, 1890,. the house and lot of land adjoining the premises conveyed to the defendant on the north, by substantially the same description, except that the place of beginning was at a point on the westerly side of West End avenue, sixty-four feet northerly from the northwesterly corner of West End avenue and Eighty-ninth street, the boundary line of the plaintiff’s property on the south also running through a party wall. The building upon the defendant’s property was a four-story and basement dwelling house, twenty feet wide, and was-built of brown stone and brick. The front of both houses stands about five feet back from the building line. The party wall between these two houses is twelve inches thick and stands upon the dividing line, heing six inches upon each of the lots. In front of the defendant’s house and extending into the street, the plaintiff had erected a stoop to afford access to the house conveyed to the defendant, four inches of the northerly side of this'stoop being upon the portion of the premises which was not conveyed to the defendant, but was reserved by the grantor and included in the lot subsequently conveyed by the plaintiff to Brower.

We think that the four inches in question did not pass under, the conveyance to the defendant. The property was described by metes and bounds, being a specific plot of ground twenty feet in width. The buildings erected upon this specific piece of ground thus conveyed passed to the defendant by the conveyance; and by a subsequent deed the title to this strip of land in controversy passed to Brower, (Griffiths v. Morrison, 106 N. Y. 165.) In the case cited a plot of land was conveyed by a similar description, with the buildings-thereon, and Judge Peckham, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “ I think the estate granted was a lot of land twenty-two feet wide and such building as was on that lot.”

We think, however, that by this conveyance the plaintiff granted to the defendant an easement which would entitle her to use this piece of land for the support of the northerly side of her stoop so long as she desired to maintain such stoop as an appurtenance to her house in the condition that it was in at the time of the conveyance to her. The plaintiff, being the owner of a piece of property, erected upon it two houses, with a party wall between them, half of which was upon each lot. He conveyed one house [44]*44to the defendant, retaining the ownership of the other, house. It is not disputed but that, this conveyance would entitle the defendant to .an easement for a party wall which would subject the six inches of the land remaining in the possession of the plaintiff upon which the northerly half of the party wall was erected to an easement of support for the party wall. There was also the grant' of an implied •easement to use that portion of the plaintiff’s land upon which the . .stoop was erected so long as the stoop should be maintained as. a means of access to the house. The stoop thus erected at the time ■of the conveyance to the defendant was an appurtenance to the house conveyed to her and passed by the conveyance to her from the plaintiff. - '

.This implied easement rests upon the principle stated in the ■case of Lampman v. Milks (21 N. Y. 505), that whén the owner of land sells a part thereof he grants by implication to the grantee all fhose apparent and visible easéments which are necessary, for the reasonable use of the property granted, and which,, at the time of the grant, are used by the owner of the entirety for the benefit of the part granted. This case was considered in Paine v. Chandler (134 N. Y. 387), where the court, discussing the question as to what ■easement would pass by such a conveyance, held that it extended to ■such an easement as was reasonably necessary to the1 enjoyment of the property granted.;, and that the necessity required is a reasonable, not an absolute one. In, the case now before us, to maintain the structure granted by the plaintiff to the defendant as it existed .at the time of the grant, it was necessary that the portion of this stoop resting upon the premises reserved by the plaintiff should be ¡subject to an easement for. the support of the northerly Wall of the ■stoop. Four inches of that northerly wall having been erected upon the land reserved by the grantor, the structure as it then existed -could not be continued except, by an implied grant of an easement -of support upon the land so reserved. Thus an easement must, of necessity, be implied, if the structure as it existed at the time of the conveyance was to remain. I think it could hardly be claimed that on the day after the conveyance to the defendant, the plaintiff ■could have entered upon the premises and torn down the portion of ■the stoop upon the premises reserved by him. The plaintiff’s conveyance to Brower conveyed the fee of this property, subject to this [45]*45implied easement to support the northerly wall of the stoop so long as it should be necessary for the use of the premises conveyed to the defendant. • When the stoop for any reason shall be destroyéd, if it appears then the defendant could erect a new stoop on his own property without inconvenience, the easement will, under the principle stated in Buss v. Dyer (125 Mass. 287) terminate; but as long as the stoop stands as an appurtenance to the defendant’s house, the easement will continue.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.D. 41, 55 N.Y.S. 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wightman-nyappdiv-1898.