On May 12, 1906, defendants entered into a contract with Joseph E. Humbert by which they agreed to sell and he agreed to purchase a tract of land near the village of Rockville Center, known as Reservoir Park and Lynbrook Driving Park, and more particularly described in said contract as the property conveyed by three several
The burden of showing that the title was unmarketable is upon plaintiff. (Reynolds v. White, 134 App. Div. 248.) The alleged defect was in connection with a part of the land described in the deed from Bedell to White, above referred to. This deed appeared to describe three pieces of land. The second parcel lay to the east of the highway, known as Ocean avenue, and was excepted front the contract and need not be again referred to. The first parcel was situated on the westerly side of said highway and was irregular in form and was described by metes and bounds, the distance being measured in feet and fractions of a foot and the angles being measured by degrees and minutes of a circle.
That which appeared to be a third separate and distinct parcel was thus described: “All that certain piece or parcel of Sprout Woodland situate in said Town, County and State, and lying West of the residence of Robert M. Carman, Bounded and Described as follows, Westerly by land of Henry Hewlett, Southerly, Easterly and Northerly by land of Joseph Pearsall, containing by estimation two acres be the same more or less.”
In declining to carry out the contract, plaintiff contended that the only record title to these two acres of land consisted of a quitclaim deed from Oliver S. Denton to Richard Bedell, dated February 21,1876, and duly recorded, and a quitclaim deed from Zachariah Abrams to Oliver S. Denton, dated September 4, 1871, and duly recorded. This latter deed contained a recital that the premises were the same as those conveyed by a warranty deed bearing date the 21st day of February, 1828, made and executed by Isaac Pearsall and Nancy, his wife, to Zachariah Abrams. This deed was not recorded, nor was the original produced, at the time when the contract
The doubt about the title arose from the inability of plaintiff’s examiners to locate the plot referred to as the “ two acres of sprout woodland.” When the title was rejected, they seem to have supposed that this two-acre piece was not included within the boundaries of the parcel previously specifically described, but was separate and distinct therefrom.
Upon the second trial it was established by old surveys and the testimony of witnesses, beyond dispute, that substantially the whole of the parcel referred to in the “ two-acre ” description was already included in the large piece specifically described, the title to which was acquired by Bedell from the executors of Pearsall in 1872. If there is any part thereof which is not thus included, it is so small and insignificant that, even if the title through quitclaim deeds was defective, it would be no ground for rejecting the entire title, as the price was fixed in the contract at a certain sum per acre, the amount of the acreage to be determined by an actual survey, which was subsequently made.
When the case was here before (Reynolds v. White, supra) we said: (t There was no evidence offered that the quitclaim deed was essential to the title of Bedell, whose chain appears as from the. executors of Q-. Pearsall by their said conveyance of 1872. * * *
It may be that the plaintiff could prove that the quitclaim deed was essential, and in that event another question might arise, but we do not find that he did so.”
It would appear now as if there were two chains of title to this two-acre piece, one of them derived through the executors of Pearsall, and the other through the quitclaim deeds. As to the whole of the parcel derived from the Pearsall executors, there is no evidence to establish that the defendants did not have both a good and marketable title, and if it were not for a concession of counsel for the defendants, made upon the trial, wTe should suppose that defendants could rely upon this title, and that it could be no objection to
In the face of this concession we feel that we cannot rely upon that which would seem to be another and perfect title to these two acres through the Pearsall deed. It, therefore, would appear through this concession that the plaintiff has now shown that it is essential to defendant’s title that such title as was acquired through the quitclaim deeds should be both good and marketable. If there had been in this case clear and positive evidence of actual possession under the deed made in 1871, continued down to the date when the contract was to be completed, it might be that the trial court would have been justified in holding the title to be marketable. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 369, 370; Freedman v. Oppenheim, 187 N. Y. 101.) But the evidence in this case fails to establish ting. The property was rough woodland. During a part of the time it had been surrounded by a fence,'but for a long period of years prior to the date in question this fence had been removed from the westerly portion of the said two acres. It is true that there was some evidence that there was a ditch along the westerly boundary of the land, but a ditch could hardly be deemed a substantial inclosure for property of that character. There was no evidence that it had been in any way cultivated or improved, or used for the supply of fuel or fencing timber, or for any of the
It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff was not under obligations to carry out his contract, and that he is entitled to recover back the earnest money paid, with the interest thereon, and the reasonable expenses incurred by him in the examination of the title. As to the amount of this, there was no dispute, and the judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff in this action for such amount must be affirmed, with costs.
Thomas, Carr and Woodward, JJ., concurred; Jenks, P. J., taking no part.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.