3 No. 68
G. Scott Walling et al.,
Respondents, v. Paul F. Przybylo et al.,
Appellants.
2006 NY Int. 84
June 13, 2006
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
William Maker, Jr., for appellants. G. Scott Walling, for respondents.
G.B. SMITH, J.:
This appeal arises from an action to quiet title by
adverse possession. Because actual knowledge that another person
is the title owner does not, in and of itself, defeat a claim of
right by an adverse possessor, we affirm the order of the
Appellate Division awarding summary judgment to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs and defendants are owners of adjoining
residential lots, 22 and 23, located in the Town of Queensbury,
New York, County of Warren. The disputed portion of the land is
on the northern border of lot 23. In May 1986, plaintiffs, the Wallings, purchased lot
number 22 on Butternut Hill Drive. In 1989, the Przybylos
purchased lot number 23. Both lots were unimproved land on which
the parties built homes and swimming pools. On lot 22, the
plaintiffs also built a small shed. Even though the defendants
purchased their land in 1989, they did not construct their
residence until 1991 and did not obtain a certificate of
occupancy and move in until May 1994. In May 1987, plaintiffs bulldozed and deposited fill
and topsoil on defendants' northerly side yard, including the
disputed parcel, dug a trench and installed PVC pipe for the
purpose of carrying water from plaintiffs' eaves and downspouts
to and under the disputed parcel, ultimately discharging the
water in and over the disputed parcel. Also prior to defendants'
arrival, plaintiffs constructed an underground dog wire fence to
enclose their dog and continuously mowed, graded, raked, planted,
and watered the grassy area in dispute. Also, on this portion of
the land, the plaintiff installed 69 feet of 4-inch PVC pipe in
such a way that all of the pipe ran underground but finally
surfaced within a swale. Defendants admit that the lawn was in
part cultivated before they moved in. In 1992, plaintiffs dug a
hole near the northwesterly corner of the grassy part of the
disputed territory and placed in it a post approximately 10 feet
long on which they affixed a bird house. Since 1992, the post
and bird house have remained in place. In 2004, defendants had the land surveyed and
discovered that they had title to the disputed portion of the
land. Upon learning of this, plaintiffs brought an action to
quiet title. On September 16, 2004, the Warren County Court
granted plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment quieting title
to the land. The court stated:
Based on the facts of this case, it is
clear that plaintiffs, as adverse users,
entered upon the disputed parcel of
property in 1986 under the
misapprehension that the parcel was part
of their land. Although not conceded by
the defendants, it appears that each
party was mutually mistaken as to the
true location of the boundary line.
Plaintiffs cultivated the parcel by
having various excavation work performed
on said property, by having topsoil
installed and by establishing and
maintaining a lawn on a significant
portion of the disputed parcel, a use
consistent with the nature and character
of the parcel. Surprisingly, defendants
do not allege to have ever mowed the
disputed parcel of property at any
time."
On December 15, 2004, after a motion to renew, the
motion court modified its decision by denying summary judgment to
the plaintiffs. Based upon an affidavit by the previous owner of
lot 22, and the 1986 survey of plaintiffs' property, the motion
court found that there were triable issues of fact as to whether
plaintiffs had actual knowledge of the true owners prior to
making improvements on the land. The Appellate Division modified
the order of County Court by reversing the denial of summary
judgment to the plaintiffs and granting that motion. The
Appellate Division determined:
In the absence of an overt
acknowledgment, our courts have
recognized since Humbert v Trinity
Church, that an adverse possessor's
claim of right or ownership will not be
defeated by mere knowledge that another
holds legal title (24 AD3d 1, 4 [1st
Dept 2005, internal citation omitted]). Adverse possession must be proven by clear and
convincing evidence ( Ray v Beacon Hudson Mtn. Corp., , 88 NY2d 154,
159 [1996]). Where there has been an actual continued
occupation of premises under a claim of title, exclusive of any
other right, but not founded upon a written instrument or a
judgment or decree, the premises so actually occupied, and no
others, are deemed to have been held adversely (Real Property
Actions and Proceedings Law § 521). To establish a claim of adverse possession, the
following five elements must be proved: Possession must be (1)
hostile and under claim of right; (2) actual; (3) open and
notorious; (4) exclusive; and (5) continuous for the required
period ( Belotti v Bickhardt, 228 NY 296, 302 [1920]; see also Van Valkenburgh v Lutz, 304 NY 95, 99 [1952]; Spiegel v Ferraro,
, 73 NY2d 622, 624 [1989]; Ray v Beacon Hudson Mountain Corp.,
88 NY2d at 159). Here the required period is at least ten years
( see Ray, id.). Plaintiffs possessed the disputed parcel of land as
early as 1986 in an open and notorious manner, hostile to the
interests of the title owners and continuously for 20 years, ten
of which occurred after defendants moved into their residence.
The ultimate element in the rise of a title through adverse
possession is the acquiescence of the real owner in the exercise
of an obvious adverse or hostile ownership through the statutory
period ( see Monnot v Murphy, 207 NY 240, 245 [1913]). It was
not until April 21, 2004, close to ten years after moving into
the house and almost fifteen years after purchasing the property,
that defendants sought to assert their rights over the disputed
parcel. The failure to assert their rights in a timely manner
prevents defendants from prevailing on this appeal. Defendants argue that there is no claim of right when
the adverse possessor has actual knowledge of the true owner at
the time of possession. However, longstanding decisional law
does not support this position. The adverse possessor must act
under claim of right ( see Van Valkenburgh). By definition, a
claim of right is adverse to the title owner and also in
opposition to the rights of the true owner. Conduct will prevail
over knowledge, particularly when the true owners have acquiesced
in the exercise of ownership rights by the adverse possessors
( see Monnot v Murphy, supra). The fact that adverse possession
will defeat a deed even if the adverse possessor has knowledge of
the deed is not new ( see Humbert v Rector Churchwardens and
Vestrymen of Trinity Church, 24 Wend. 587, 604 [1840]
[Possession by the defendant with a claim of title for twenty
years, can no more be answered by averring that he knew he was
wrong, than could the bar of two years, in slander, by the known
falsehood of the libel for which it is prosecuted]). The issue
is actual occupation, not subjective knowledge ( see id.). Adverse possession, although not a favored method of
procuring title, is a recognized one. It is a necessary means of
clearing disputed titles and the courts adopt it and enforce it,
because, when adverse possession is carefully and fully proven,
it is a means of settling disputed titles and this is desirable
( Belotti v Bickhardt, 228 NY 296 at 308; see generally Hindley v
Manhattan RR. Co., 185 NY 335, 355-356 [1906]). The facts of Van Valkenburgh v Lutz (304 NY 95, at 99-
100) are distinguishable. In Van Valkenburgh, defendant admitted
that he was aware of the rightful owner at the time that he built
his shed on the disputed property ( see 304 NY 95, 98).
Defendants point to this and other language in Van Valkenburgh
that may seem inconsistent with our holding here. We do not,
however, read Van Valkenburgh as contradicting the principle,
well established since the nineteenth century, that an adverse
possessor's actual knowledge of the true owner is not fatal to an
adverse possession claim. The Van Valkenburgh court mentioned
several bases for its holding, and any perhaps mistaken dictum in
that case did not change the law as Humbert, Monnot and other
cases previously stated it. The evidence in this case was sufficient to establish
title by adverse possession and to grant summary judgment to
plaintiffs. Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should
be affirmed, with costs. The certified question should not be
answered upon the ground that it is unnecessary.