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Full Opinion
(dissenting). In my judgment, the weight of evidence lies with the determination made by the court at Special Term and affirmed by the Appellate Division. But whether that is so or not, there can bé no doubt whatsoever that the record contains some evidence that the premises here involved were occupied by William Lutz, defendant’s late husband, for fifteen years under a claim of title — and that, of course, should compel an affirmance.
The four lots in suit, located in the city of Yonkers, comprise a fairly level parcel of land, triangular in shape, with approximate dimensions of 150 by 126 by 170 feet. It is bounded on the north by a “ traveled way ”, on the west and south by Gibson Place, an unopened street, and on the southeast by a vacant lot. Immediately to the east of the parcel, the land descends sharply to Leroy Avenue, forming a steep hill; on the hill are situated two lots, purchased by Lutz in 1912, upon which his family’s home has stood for over thirty years.
Wild and overgrown when the Lutzes first moved into the neighborhood, the property was cleared by defendant’s husband
Although disputing the referee’s finding that the dimensions of Lutz’s farm were substantial, the court’s opinion fails to remark the plentiful evidence in support thereof. For instance, there is credible testimony in the record that “ nearly all ” of the property comprised by the four lots was cultivated during the period to which the referee’s finding relates. A survey introduced in evidence indicates the very considerable extent to which the property was cultivated in 1950, and many witnesses testified that the farm was no larger at that time than it had ever been. There is evidence, moreover, that the cultivated area extended from the “ traveled way ” on one side of the property to a row of logs and brush — placed by Lutz for the express purpose of marking the farm’s boundary — at the opposite end of the premises.
According to defendant’s testimony, she and her husband, knowing that they did not have record title to the premises, intended from the first nevertheless to occupy the property as their own- Bearing this out is the fact that Lutz put down the row of logs and brush, which was over 100 feet in length, to mark the southwestern boundary of his farm; this marker, only roughly approximating the lot lines, extended beyond them into the bed of Gibson Place. The property was, moreover, known in the neighborhood as “ Mr. Lutz’s gardens ”, and the one-room dwelling on it as “ Charlie’s house the evidence clearly indicates that people living in the vicinity believed the property to be owned by Lutz. And it is undisputed that for upwards of thirty-five years — until 1947, when plaintiffs became the record owners — no other person ever asserted title to the parcel.
Quite obviously, the fact that Lutz alleged in the 1947 easement action — twelve years after title had, according to the referee, vested in him through adverse possession — that one of the plaintiffs was the owner of three of the lots, simply constituted evidence pointing the other way, to be weighed with the other proof by the courts below. While it is true that a disclaimer of title by the occupant of property, made before the statutory period has run, indelibly stamps his possession as non-adverse and prevents title from vesting in him (see, eg., De Lancey v. Hawkins, 23 App. Div. 8, affd. 163 N. Y. 587; Luce v.
In view of the extensive cultivation of the parcel in suit, there is no substance to the argument that the requirements of sections 39 and 40 of the Civil Practice Act were not met. Under those provisions, only the premises “ actually occupied ” in the manner prescribed— that is, “ protected by a substantial inclosure ” or “ usually cultivated or improved ” — are deemed to have been held adversely. The object of the statute, we have recognized, “ is that the real owner may, by unequivocal acts of the usurper, have notice of the hostile claim and be thereby called upon to assert his legal title.” (Monnot v. Murphy,
Judge Dye considers it significant that the proof “ fails to show that the cultivation incident to the garden utilized the whole of the premises claimed ” (opinion, p. 98). There surely is no requirement in either statute or decision that proof of adverse possession depends upon cultivation of “ the whole ” plot or of every foot of the property in question. And, indeed, the statute — which, as noted, reads “usually cultivated or improved ” — has been construed to mean only that the claimant’s occupation must “ consist of acts such as are usual in the ordinary cultivation and improvement of similar lands by thrifty owners.” (Ramapo Mfg. Co. v. Mapes, supra, 216 N. Y. 362, 373.) The evidence demonstrates that by far the greater part of the four lots was regularly and continuously used for farming, and, that being so, the fact that a portion of the property was not cleared should not affect the claimant’s ability to acquire title by adverse possession: any frugal person, owning and occupying lands similar to those here involved, would have permitted, as Lutz did, .some of the trees to stand — while clearing the bulk of the property — in order to provide a source of lumber and other tree products for his usual needs. The portion of the property held subservient to the part actively cultivated is as much ‘ ‘ occupied ’ ’ as the portion actually tilled. The nature of the cultivation engaged in by Lutz was more than adequate, as his neighbors’ testimony establishes, to give the owner notice of an adverse claim and to delimit the property to which the claim related. The limits of the parcel in suit were indicated in a general way by boundaries natural as well as man-made: the declivity to Leroy
In short, there is ample evidence to sustain the finding that William Lutz actually occupied the property in suit for over fifteen years under a claim of title. Since, then, title vested in Lutz by 1935, the judgment must be affirmed. To rule otherwise, on the ground that the weight of evidence is against that finding — a view which I do not, in any event, hold — is to ignore the constitutional provision that limits our jurisdiction to the review of questions of law (N. Y. Const., art. VI, § 7; see, also, Civ. Prac. Act, § 605).
I would affirm the judgment reached by both of the courts below.
Lewis, Conway and Froessel, JJ., concur with Dye, J.; Fuld, J., dissents in opinion in which Lotjghran, Ch. J., and Desmond, J., concur.
Judgments reversed, etc. [See 304 N. Y. 590.]