49 Mo. 98 | Mo. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of ejectment to recover a strip of eight and a half feet, alleged to be a part of lot No. 11, in block 2, of the Arsenal addition to. the city of St. Louis, and the true location of the division line between lots 11 and 12 is the matter in dispute. The east half of said block 2 fronts upon Carondelet avenue on the east, and consists of seventeen lots, commencing with No. 1, on the corner of Gate street and the avenue, and running north to Arsenal street. Gate street runs at right angles with the avenue, and Arsenal street deflects southwardly from it, making the northeast corner of lot 17 an acute angle. Both plaintiff and defendant purchased their lots of one Joseph Ledue,
It is undisputed that where no other description is given of lands sold than by number of the lot in a survey of a tract of land or the plan of a town or an addition to the same, the authentic map of such survey is as much a part of the deed as though set out in it. The plan of this addition was duly certified and recorded under the statute, and everything in it may be treated as in the deeds to both the parties.
This is not the case, which so commonly occurs, of a discrepancy between the calls of the deed in course and distance, and the course and distance- of the line as actually run; nor does any mistake appear in the original survey of the block, for it is assumed that the surveyor only ran out the external boundary, being the lines of the streets and allejs, without measuring and staking out the separate lots, although they are all marked upon the surveyor’s maps, with the size of each. Had this been so staked out in the original survey, there would be no difficulty, for the division of the lines of the lots would then have been actually located, and the location must govern. The mistake was in assuming that the east half of block 2 was sufficiently broad upon Carondelet avenue to contain sixteen lots 25 feet wide, and one with a front of 32| feet, and so entering them upon the map, when it lacked eight and a half feet of being sufficiently wide to embrace so much land. Without saying whether the division line to which the parties occupied, and supposed they had purchased, is the true one, the case can be disposed of upon another principle.
This is a case of an agreed division line, with subsequent improvement, and the doctrine of estoppel in pais will apply to it. The parties both took their lots by number, which were staked
It is not the agreement alone that can protect defendant, for that is contrary to the statute of frauds, but the reliance upon such agreement, or the conduct of the plaintiff amounting to one — his express recognition of the line and acquiescence in the possession and improvement, upon which the person making them had a right to rely, and from the loss of which he would suffer great damage —that should estop him from seeking to establish a new line, although the true one, by which he would himself obtain such improvements or render them valueless to the other party. In the language of Johnson, J., in Corkhill v. Landers, 44 Barb. 218, the present plaintiff “ by his silence must be deemed to have consented
; The well-considered case of Taylor et al. v. Zepp, and its .affirmance by other cases, places the doctrine of estoppel in regard to division lines upon a more satisfactory basis than that upon which it rests in some of the States. The element of actual fraud need riot enter into it; it is rather based upon the substantial injury to the other party, which is an essential element of estoppel. This view was held in Rutherford v. Tracy, 48 Mo. 325.
, This does not come within the class of cases where acquiescence for many years is held tobe conclusive evidence of the true boundary line (Baldwin v. Brown, 16 N. Y. 359; Reed v. Farr, 35 N. Y. 113), for such acquiescence has nothing to do with the doctrine under consideration, and the distinction is recognized in Baldwin v. Brown; nor, for the same reason, does the view here taken conflict with Knowlton v. Smith, 36 Mo. 507, nor Thomas v. Babb, 45 Mo. 384. In the last case improvements were spoken of, but they were inexpensive; but if, under the facts in relation to the line, the defendant had erected the house upon the strip of land in dispute, the doctrine of estoppel should have protected him.
I have purposely refrained from commenting upon the pleadings and instructions in this case. Yielding all that the plaintiff claims in regard to the mistake and its character, the facts show that the plaintiff ought not to have judgment. It would be wrong, therefore, even if we could find error, to reverse the judgment and put the parties to the expense of a new trial.
The other judges concurring, the judgment of the General Term will be reversed and the judgment of the Special Term affirmed,