Court Opinion

ID: 5212793
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:16:21.680439+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:23.852637
License: Public Domain

Kellogg, J.:
The report of this case upon a former appeal is at 128 Appellate Division, 355, where a judgment in favor of plaintiff was *735reversed upon the ground that his alleged conveyance was chainpertons and void. The evidence now is substantially that on the former trial. It more fully appears that the premises directed by the judgment to be partitioned contain about an acre of land in a little village, upon which there is a blacksmith and wheelwright shop and defendant’s inclosed garden. A small part of the. premises was not inclosed by a fence until September or October, 1906, and then the defendant fenced the remainder of the premises and refused to allow the plaintiff longer to get water from his spring upon them. Apparently, up to the time the fence was built, the unfenced part of the premises had been run over more or less by cattle from the street, belónging to the plaintiff and others. The plaintiff swears he stored wagons on the premises and pastured it. It is evident he had one or two old wagons at the wheelwright shop, where many parts of old wagons belonging to others had been left, and that his cattle, with other cattle at large upon the street, had at times run upon the premises from the street."
The trial took place in November, 1907; the entire premises were fenced by the defendant in September or October, 1906, and the plaintiff and all others excluded therefrom by the defendant. There is an absence of any circumstances tending to show any act of possession by the plaintiff, especially since the fall of 1906. Thereafter, with knowledge of the defendant’s claim, he purchased the alleged outstanding titles and brings this action. We must, therefore, conclude, as we did upon the former record, that the plaintiff’s alleged title is within the letter and spirit of the Champerty Act, and void. (See Real Prop. Law [Laws of 1896, chap. 547], § 225.) The judgment should, therefore, be reversed upon the law and the facts and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred, except Cochrane, J., dissenting.
Interlocutory judgment" reversed upon law and facts and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.