City of New York v. Govin

McLAUGHLIN, J.

On or prior to January, 1894, the city of New York made and filed in the office of the register of the city a map upon which appeared certain proposed streets, among others Leggett avenue; and in 1896 it instituted this proceeding to, and on the 1st day of July, 1897, did, acquire the land necessary to lay out such avenue. A portion of- the land taken for this purpose is designated in the record as “Damage.Map No. 10,” and in the preliminary report of the commissioners an award of $2,600 was made to unknown owners. Thereafter Edward K. Jones and the respondent, Rafael R. Govin, appeared in the proceeding, and objected to the report upon the ground that they were the owners, and that the damages awarded were insufficient. Evidence was subsequently offered which satisfied the commissioners that the respondent — he having in the meantime purchased the interest of Jones — was the owner, and an award was made to him of $3,787, which was the full fee value; but this was finally reduced to $250, upon the ground that he was only entitled to substantial damages, inasmuch as the land taken was burdened with an easement of passage and repassage. The court at Special Term refused to confirm the report, a motion having been made therefor, but instead sent the matter back to the commissioners for reconsid*674eration, upon the ground, as appears from the opinion of the justice sitting at Special Term, that “substantial damages as the facts warranted had not been allowed,” and it is from this order that the present appeal is taken.

It appears that the land taken originally was a part of a large tract formerly owned by one Casanova. After Casanova’s death, in an action of partition the whole tract was sold in two parcels. This sale, however, was set aside, and then the tract was subdivided into 123 lots, and a map made thereof, upon which appeared certain streets and other proposed streets, among which was Leggett avenue. On the 2d of June, 1897, these lots were sold at public auction by numbers, and as indicated upon the map made by the referee, and deeds delivered to the purchaser on the 2d of July following. The parcel here in dispute is made up of a part of six lots, four on one side of Leggett avenue and two on the' other, all owned by the respondent. The question presented is whether the respondent of his grantor had the absolute title to the land when the city acquired title thereto. If they did, then the order is right, and should be affirmed; otherwise it should be reversed — a substantial award having been made by the commissioners. It is well settled that, “without making such a dedication to the public, a grantor may, by selling lots, and describing them as bounded by streets running through his own land, create an easement in the land called a ‘street’ in favor of his own grantees, and that, although the fee of such land remains in him, it is incumbered by that easement.” Matter of 11th Avenue, 81 N. Y. 447. But it is equally well settled that, whether there is such a grant of an easement, however, either express or implied, depends entirely upon the intent of the parties to the grant; and for the purpose of ascertaining what that intent was the court' will take into consideration the words of the grant, as well as all of the facts and circumstances attending the transaction, the situation of the parties, and the condition of the thing granted. Matter of 116th St., 1 App. Div. 436, 37 N. Y. Supp. 508.

Applying this rule to the facts here presented, we think it is clear the referee did not intend to sell, nor the respondent and his grantor to purchase, the lots in question subject to any easement whatever; on the contrary, it was the intent of both parties that the entire • fee should pass to the purchaser. This intent is indicated not only by the boundaries of the lots, which included all of the land within the proposed street — some of them extending nearly across, others taking but a very small portion, and the greater part of one being in the street — but also by the clause inserted in the deed of conveyance to the effect that the sale was made subject to proceedings which might be pending for the opening of streets and avenues as indicated on the map. This clause evidently had reference to the proceedings which had already been taken by the city for the purpose of acquiring the title to a portion of these lots, and which it did, in fact, acquire after the lots were sold, and one day before the deed was actually delivered. It is also indicated by the fact that on the back of the map was a .■statement that Leggett avenue was only a proposed street. Uoon these facts we think the Special Term was right' in refusing to confirm *675the referee’s report, and sending the matter back to the commissioners for further consideration.

The order is right, and must be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur, except VAN BRUNT, P. J., who dissents.