THE JURY WAS WRONGLY INSTRUCTED ON THE INFERENCE WHICH CAN BE DRAWN ABOUT THE LOCATION OF A BOUNDARY LINE FROM A SURVEY MAP FILED FOR MORE THAN 10 YEARS; VERDICT FINDING PLAINTIFF HAD WRONGLY SET THE PROPERTY BOUNDARY REVERSED (THIRD DEPT).
The Third Department, reversing the jury verdict finding that plaintiff had incorrectly set the western boundary of his property, held that the jury was wrongly instructed:
The jury received defective instructions as to the application of CPLR 4522. In that regard, Supreme Court charged the jury that “[a] 2002 survey map prepared by Surveyor Dickinson is in evidence. The survey was filed in 2002 with the Rensselaer County Clerk. The law provides that a map which has been on file with the County [Clerk] for more than [10] years is presumed to be accurate unless rebutted by other credible survey or expert opinion. In deciding whether the presumption of accuracy of the 2002 survey has been rebutted by other evidence you will apply the rules that I have already given you and will continue to give you about the evaluation of evidence.”
CPLR 4522 states that “[a]ll maps, surveys and official records affecting real property, which have been on file in the state in the office of . . . any county clerk . . . for more than [10] years, are prima facie evidence of their contents.” In analyzing similar statutory language from another hearsay exception contained in the same article of the CPLR, the Court of Appeals held that “[p]resumptive evidence[] is, . . . like the prima facie evidence to which CPLR 4518 (c) refers, evidence which permits but does not require the trier of fact to find in accordance with the presumed fact, even though no contradictory evidence has been presented. It is, in short, not a presumption which must be rebutted but rather an inference, like the inference of negligence denominated res ipsa loquitor” … .
Supreme Court’s charge required the jury to locate the western boundary of plaintiff’s property as depicted in the 2002 survey unless plaintiff offered evidence that rebutted the survey’s presumed accuracy. The jury should have been instructed that, in the absence of contradictory evidence, it was permitted but not required to adopt the western boundary as depicted in the 2002 survey. Hence, Supreme Court committed reversible error because the effect of the charge was to improperly require plaintiff to disprove the alleged accuracy of the 2002 survey map … . Kennedy v Nimons, 2019 NY Slip Op 09332, Third Dept 12-26-19