Court Opinion

ID: 5507435
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 03:19:48.144954+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:05.073623
License: Public Domain

VAN BRUNT, P. J.
This is one of the class of actions, with which the court has become somewhat familiar, brought to recover damages because of the construction of the elevated railway in front of and upon the plaintiff’s property, and the appropriation of the easements appurtenant thereto. Without considering the many points which have been raised by the appellant, and which are claimed te> *1015be fatal to the judgment herein, it will only be necessary to call attention to one radical error which has pervaded such judgment, which not only may have, but probably did, work great disadvantage to the plaintiff in the consideration of her claim for damages because of the rights appropriated by the defendants in the construction of their railroad. The plaintiff claimed in her complaint that she was the owner of the fee to the center of the street. She requested the referee to find this fact, which was refused. This claim was based upon the description of the premises contained in the deed by which the plaintiff derived title. It is as follows:
“All that certain lot, piece, or parcel of land situate, lying, and being on the northerly side of Murray street, in the Third ward of the city of New York, being part of the land heretofore belonging to the rector and inhabitants of the city of New York, commonly called the ‘Church Farm,’ and distinguished on a map or chart thereof by the number 380, being the eastern part of said lot, and bounded as follows: Southerly in front by-Murray street, westerly by the premises heretofore conveyed by Jonathan Sturgis and Mary P., his wife, to Francis W. Hutchins, northerly, in the rear, by lot No. 381,—containing in breadth in front and rear 22 feet, and in length on each side 100 feet, being the same premises now known by the street number 43 Murray street.”
That such a description carries to the center of the street has been too long the settled law of this state to need the citation of authority. The referee therefore erred in refusing to find this fact. The-judgment appealed from must be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event, and the order of reference vacated.
PARKER, J., concurs.