The plaintiff’s title extended to the center of Genesee street, and it follows, therefore, that she was the owner of one-half of the stone taken from the sewer trench in front of her premises. (Higgins v. Reynolds, 31 N. Y. 151; Robert v. Sadler, 104 id. 229; Fisher v. City of Rochester, 6 Lans. 225.) This is a proposition which has thus far encountered no opposition from any source, and the learned counsel for the respondents does not now contend that there is anything in the case which will justify the conclusion that the plaintiff has been divested of her title to the stone. With this much virtually conceded, it would seem that, when the plaintiff proved the amount of stone converted by the defendants and their value, she had established her right to recover. But the case was tried upon the assumption that if, after due and reasonable notice, the plaintiff omitted to remove the stone from the street, the defendants had a right to remove them and compel the plaintiff to pay the cost of their removal; and the jury were instructed by the learned trial judge that if they found that the plaintiff’s failure to remove the stone was, under the circumstances, unreasonable, they might deduct from the value of the stone converted whatever was necessarily expended by the defendants in their removal. And that the jury acted upon and adopted this view of the case is made clear by the verdict which they subsequently rendered.
We have given to the question which arises in this connection careful examination, for it is a somewhat novel and an exceedingly interesting one, and as the result of our investigation, we are constrained to hold that the theory upon which this branch of the case was tried and submitted to the jury was an erroneous one and without any precedent, so far as we are able to discover, for its support.
In order to make plain our reason for reaching this conclusion it will be necessary to advert to one or two additional facts of the case concerning which there is little or no controversy.
*56By the terms of the contract entered into between the defendants and the city of Rochester, the former obligated themselves to clear the street from all stones and rubbish and to restore it “ in all respects to the same condition as before the trenching was commenced.” This was to be done without additional compensation, and in case the defendants omitted to do it after due notice given, the city reserved the right to clear up the street and deduct the expense thereof from any moneys due or to become due to the defendants.
There was also a city ordinance which prohibited any person from placing or causing to be placed any stones, bricks, boards, etc., in or upon any street, avenue, alley, lane or public square within the city of Rochester without permission from the executive board, under penalty of five dollars for each offense, and the further penalty of five dollars for every twenty-four hours the same were permitted to remain in any such street, etc.
So we find that if these stone were allowed to remain in the street after notice to remove them liad been received by the defendants, they were liable to have them removed by the city at their expense, and the plaintiff was liable to pay a penalty if they were suffered to remain there through any fault of hers.
In these' circumstances it appears that one of the defendants approached the plaintiff and offered to purchase the stone of her, but as she demanded $100 for them the negotiations came to naught. He then, as he testifies, talked with her about, their removal and, while she refused to remove them herself, she said she wanted him to draw the stone around back of, her house, and the person who served the notice upon the plaintiff also testified that she said to him that she would not remove the stone, but if the contractors desired they might draw them on to her lot. The defendants were, therefore, confronted with this situation of affairs: They had incumbered Genesee street with a large quantity of stone which they were under a contractual obligation to the city of Rochester to remove at their own expense. But these stone belonged to and were claimed by the plaintiff, who declined to remove them, insisting that the defendants should draw them on to her premises adjoining the street from which they had been taken. Whaf wrere the defendants to do under these circumstances ? Clearly they had two options *57presented to them, viz.: (1) To allow the city to intervene and either charge them with the expense of removal or compel the plaintiff to pay the penalty prescribed by the ordinance for obstructing the street, or (2) they might have drawn the stone on to the plaintiff’s lot. It would seem, in view of the obligation • which rested upon them to remove the stone from the street without receiving any compensation therefor from the city, that the defendants would have adopted the latter alternative; but instead they drew the stone to a distant part of the city, where they appropriated them to their own use, and when called upon to pay for the same they insisted that they should be allowed to deduct from their value what it cost to remove them. This strikes us upon reflection as a somewhat remarkable proposition, and it is because we are unable to persuade ourselves that it is one which can, under any circumstances, be permitted to obtain that we have reached the conclusion that there must be a new trial of the action.
Hakdin, P. J., and Spring, J., concurred; McLennan, J., concurred in the result; Follett, J., not sitting.
Judgment and order reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.