Zapf v. Carter

70 A.D. 395, 75 N.Y.S. 197
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 70 A.D. 395 (Zapf v. Carter) 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
Zapf v. Carter, 70 A.D. 395, 75 N.Y.S. 197 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

Chauncey B. Ashley died intestate in the city of Oswego in 1876, leaving him surviving his widow and no children, but a brother and two sisters his only heirs at law.' In 1871 he acquired by purchase the premises described in the complaint, and owned the same undisputedly at the time of his death. After his death his widow continued to occupy of lease the same to tenants, who attorned solely to her until her death, which occurred December 31, 1895. At the time of the death of Chauncey Ashley there was a mortgage covering the premises upon which there was then unpaid the sum of $450, and this lien was paid off and discharged by the widow in 1877. During her occupancy the widow paid the taxes, repaired the house on the lot, kept up the insurance, received the rents and claimed to strangers she was the owner thereof and endeavored to sell the same although there is no evidence that she gave any notice to the heirs at law, who were known to her and lived only a short distance from her that she was claiming title adversely to them. During this period the net rents received apparently exceeded considerably all the expenses she incurred in managing and repairing the property.

In 1863 the defendant, then a young girl of seven years, became a member of the family of Mr. and Mrs. Asliley, assuming their name, and continued thereafter to be treated as their daughter, and that was the ostensible relation at the time of the death of Mr. Ashley. She was married in 1878, and was then living with her foster [397]*397mother, who had remarried a man named Spalisbury, and while she moved west with her husband the filial relations remained unchanged during the lifetime of Mrs. Spalisbury, whose husband died in 1888. Mrs. Spalisbury left a will giving the bulk of her property, real and personal, to the defendant, and the only real estate of which she died seized was that in controversy in this action. After the death of Mrs. Spalisbury the defendant received the rents from the property in question, and the plaintiff, who was the sole executor of the will mentioned, acted as her agent. It soon developed that the defendant had no record title to the premises described in the complaint, and the appeal book discloses considerable correspondence between the parties relative to this situation. In 1898 the defendant obtained a quitclaim deed from the brother of the said intestate for a nominal consideration. The plaintiff on behalf of the defendant endeavored to secure a like conveyance to her from the other heirs at law, but there was some hitch in the matter and no deed was given. In July, 1899, the plaintiff acquired by quitclaim deeds the interests of these two heirs at. law for the sum of $75, the entire property being worth from $800 to $1,000, and has commenced this action of partition to •effect a. division or sale thereof. The defendant sets up title by possession for more than twenty years in hostility to that of the legal owners by her testatrix and in herself after the death of her foster mother.

• If Mrs. Spalisbury and the defendant had been strangers in title to the heirs at law of Mr. Ashley, unquestionably the acts •of these occupants, although founded on no muniment of title, were ample to ripen into ownership by open, notorious, adverse possession. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 371, 372; Barnes v. Light, 116 N. Y. 34; Baker v. Oakwood, 123 id. 16; Lewis v. N. Y. & Harlem R. R. Co., 162 id. 202.) The rule does not obtain in its severity where the occupancy is by one tenant in common; yet, if that occupancy is open, notorious, visible and by acts unequivocally conveying to the cotenants the information that the one in possession is holding in defiance of their cotenancy instead of in subordination to it, that possession may be adverse and grow into a title by prescription. (Jackson v. Whitbeck, 6 Cow. 632; Van Dyck v. Van Beuren, 1 Caines, 84; Abrams v. Rhoner, 44 Hun, [398]*398507; Millard v. McMullin, 68 N. Y. 345, 352; Florence v. Hopkins, 46 id. 182; Busw. Lim. & Adv. Pos. § 299.) In Florence v. Hopkins (supra) the court say (at p. 186): ‘‘ But even the possession- of one of the tenants in common may become adverse by acts on his part amounting to an exclusion of his co-tenants.” Wood, in his work on Limitations, thus gives expression to the doctrine (Yol. 2 [2,d ed.], § 266):. “ Prwna facie, the possession of one tenant in common is the possession of all. * * * But if one tenant in common enters upon the whole land and takes the entire profits, claiming and holding exclusively for the- full statutory period, an actual ouster of liis co-tenants may be presumed.” And in Angelí on Limitations the. following appears (6th ed. § 432): But it is not necessary in order to prove that a tenant in common has -claimed the whole exclusively, that it should be proved that he made an express declaration to that effect, for it may be shown.clearly by acts as well as words. (Law v. Patterson, 1 W. & S. [Pa.] 191; Bracket v. Norcross, 1 Greenl. [Me.] 89.) Where one enters. and takes the profits exclusively and continuously for a long period, under circumstances which indicate a denial of a right in any other to receive them, as by not accounting with the acquiescence of the other tenants, an ouster may be presumed in this country.” (See, also, Boll v. New York & Harlem R. R. Co., 33 Misc. Rep. 42; 102 N. Y. St. Repr. 139.) The authorities relied upon by the appellant do not infringe upon this principle. In Knolls v. Barnhart (71 N. Y. 474) the widow was in possession as dowress and guardian in socage of the minor heirs, and it was held that her occupancy was presumptively as tenant in common and that her attempt to buy in a title, upon which no sufficient length of possession had existed in her to erect -a title by operation of the Statute of Limitations by adverse possession, would inure to the benefit of the cestuis que trust. ' The court decided that her “ fiduciary relation to the property and the heirs * * * prevented her from purchasing or foreclosing the mortgage for her individual benefit,” and also that adverse possession was not found or proved.” In Culver v. Rhodes (87 N. Y. 348) the widow and daughter were in possession for more than twenty years, but her possession was that of the life tenant and also as trustee. During the running of the possession a judgment was recovered against her by her cotenants in an action of waste, committed by her on the [399]*399premises and there was no act of hers impeaching the title of the co-owners. The court in discussing what is essential to create a title by adverse possession in favor of one cotenant say that there should be notice of the adverse holding to the cotenant “or unequivocal acts so open and public that notice may be presumed of the assault upon his title and the invasion of his rights.” We may, therefore, regard the doctrine as settled that one cotenant may acquire title adversely which will oust that of her cotenant, but in order to. enable that holding to ripen into ownership, the possession must be open and notorious with an assertion of exclusive and hostile ownership. In the present case Mrs. Spalisbury received the rents and profits, paid off an outstanding incumbrance, repaired the property, paid the taxes, and it was continuously assessed to her. She repeatedly tried to sell it and did by oral agreement dispose of a strip of the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 A.D. 395, 75 N.Y.S. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zapf-v-carter-nyappdiv-1902.