Court Opinion

ID: 3620906
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:02:42.588293+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:12.102124
License: Public Domain

The action was brought to compel the determination of a claim to real property; and, in order to sustain it, the plaintiff, among other things, must show that she has "been in the actual possession of the premises claimed for three whole years before the service of the notice." (3 R.S. [5th ed.], p. 600.) No possession of any kind on the part of the defendant was claimed or proved, and the only question appears to be whether the plaintiff had actual possession within the meaning of the statute giving this form of action. It does not appear to have been questioned but that the plaintiff had the legal title to the premises; and it does follow, as no adverse possession is pretended, that she had the constructive possession.
The difference between actual and constructive possession *Page 523 
of real estate, has for a long time been reasonably well defined in the law, and we may presume that when the law giving this action was made, those who made it understood the distinction between the two classes of legal possession as well as we may be supposed now to understand it.
It may, possibly, be, that upon proof of legal title, and at some time actual possession, a court might presume — nothing to the contrary appearing — that actual possession, for all purposes, still continued. In the present case no such presumption can be indulged; for, although it appears that, many years ago, the premises in question were actually occupied and cultivated as a part of a farm, yet, for much more than three years prior to the commencement of this suit, the property has been vacant, unfenced and unoccupied by anybody. That this is notactual possession seems to be clear, no matter where the legal title resides. The three years actual possession, to entitle the plaintiff to this action, must immediately precede its commencement; otherwise, actual possession of a farm fifty years ago by an ancestor, and long since abandoned, might enable his descendants to sustain an action of this character without having, in the remotest degree, given any attention to their inheritance. This was not the intention of the statute (Churchill v. Onderdonk, Court of Appeals*); and there must be a new trial.
All concur.
DWIGHT, C., concurs on authority of Churchill v. Onderdonk.
Judgment reversed.
* 59 N.Y., 134. *Page 524