78 N.J. Eq. 78 | New York Court of Chancery | 1911
Objection is made to confirming tire master’s report because he has reported that partition cannot be made without great prejn
1. The premises in question consist of a farm near Hasbrouck Heights, having a width of about five hundred and fifty feet and a length of about four thousand feet. The Pollifly road runs through the easterly end of this long, narrow farm. The whole tract is adjacent to similar lands which are in the hands of real •estate operators for “development,” and it is no longer capable of being advantageously applied to farming purposes. Its value, about one thousand dollars an acre, shows that it cannot any longer be dealt with as a farm or as farm lands.
The complainant Mark W. Davis is one of six equal tenants in common of the above-mentioned farm; the defendants embrace the other five tenants in common.
2. Having in view th'e shape of the land and the number of tenants in common, there seem to be very strong grounds to sustain the report of the master to the effect that this tract of farm land cannot be actually divided into six parts without great prejudice to the owners. The main scheme for division, which was the subject of examination and argument before the master, seems to involve the dividing of this long, narrow strip of land, one end of which just projects beyond the road, into six strips, each of which would be less than one hundred feet wide and about four thousand feet long.
3. The reference, however, in this ease was not the ordinary reference in an uncontested partition suit. The five owners who appear as defendants unite in an answer joining in the prayer of the bill that a commission issue to make partition but expressly declaring their election to have their shares set off to them jointly, and praying that the interest of the complainant be
4. The rule in equity is well settled that where one tenant in common has improved a portion of the land or has wasted a portion, or where one party owns a larger share than the others, the partition often must be made so as to recognize all equities, and a division into shares of equal value may be impracticable and inequitable. Polhemus v. Emson, 30 N. J. Eq. (3 Stew.) 405.
Where one party holds five shares and the other party holds one share, the question is not whether the land can be divided into six shares of equal value, but whether the land can be divided into two shares having the ratio of value of five to one. Otherwise stated, the question is whether a portion can be set off which will be one-sixth the value of the whole tract without prejudice to the owners, and without disregarding any equities of the two parties.
The distribution of parcels by lot in such a case, as well as in many other cases, where equity requires particular portions to be assigned to particular parties, is impracticable, and the use of the lot is not obligatory upon the court of chancery. McMullen v. Doughty, 62 N. J. Eq. (17 Dick.) 252, 257, 258; S. C., affirmed, 63 N. J. Eq. (18 Dick.) 800; Dan. Ch. Pr. (6th Am. ed.) 1156, 1158.
5. Our present Partition act (P. L. 1898 p. 66 § 65) expressly empowers the court of chancery in its discretion to gratify the desire of tenants in common who elect to have their shares set off in one parcel without partition inter sese. No reason has been suggested why the request of the five defendants set forth in their answer should not be granted. The master, as stated above, apparently did not consider such request. Unless some facts are hereafter disclosed, which do not now appear, these five defendants should be treated as a single owner of an undivided five-sixths share.