19 Fla. 84 | Fla. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of ejectment by appellants against appellee. Taking a general .view of the appellants’ case as developed by their testimony in this record and discussed in their briefs, it may be divided into two parts : First, a claim that the title was in their ancestors, and hence their right to recover; second, that the title was in the United States, or in Charles E. Smith, who claims through the State of Florida and the Trustees of some railroad Company. The second ground may be disposed of by simply stating that proof that the title is not in the plaintiffs but in somebody else, gives no claim to the land to the plaintiffs as against Carruth, even though he may be a mere squatter. It would be a strange rule indeed that would enable a party to dispossess another by proving title in a third person, thus making him a general trustee with legal title for every person having a right to the possession of lands held by all parties having no paper title thereto. In this aspect of the testimony the verdict of the jury was correct. We cannot think, however, that this defense was seriously insisted upon.
This case was before this court at January Term, A. D. 1882, [18 Fla., 587,] and by reference to the opinion rendered therein granting a new trial, a statement of the facts of the case, so far as necessary to disclose the principles of law upon which each party relied, is concerned, will be found.
Plaintiffs, Hogans’ heirs and heirs of Purnal Taylor,
It is thus apparent that it is admitted by appellants and appellee that the title of plaintiffs’ ancestors was good. It also results necessarily that the only question here involved is, did the title pass from plaintiffs’ ancestors. Ascertaining the natui’e of the title of plaintiffs’ ancestors is therefore material to the determination of what passed to their ancestors’ alleged grantee, Isaiah D. Hart. This title is as follows: Upon a hearing of Zachariah Hogans in behalf ,of himself and wife, late Maria Suarez, widow' of Purnal Taylor, ffiy the Commissioners appointed by the United States to ascertain claims and titles to lands in East Florida, the claimant produced in evidence “ a title of absolute property from the Spanish authorities, dated September 13, 1816, to his wife as widow of Purnal Taylor, deceased, with a certified plat for two hundred acres of land, “ and the claim was by said Commissioners confirmed to Mm and Ms heirs.” This plat which accompanies the memorial to the Commissioners was made by Don George I. T. Clark, Lieutenant of the local militia of St. Augustine, Florida,
It is admitted by the plaintiffs and defendant that the lot in controversy here is embraced in this grant. It is distant from the river St. Johns in a direct line about four feet less than 44 chains, and is about 95 feet from the north line of the grant. This is the testimony of plaintiffs’ witness, E. K. Ellis.
The deed by which defendant claims that plaintiffs’ ancestors parted with their title is dated the 26th day of May, A. D. 1834. It is made by Lewis Z. Hogans and his wife, Maria, formerly Maria Taylor, and widow of Purnal Taylor, deceased, John Taylor, Charlotte Taylor and Purnal
The concluding or testificandum clause of the deed is : “ In witness whereof the said parties of the first part have hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above written,” and the seals appear upon the paper. The attestation clause is “ bargained, sold, transferred and acknowledged in-presents of us.”
There was objection to the introduction of this deed, because the execution of the deed had not been sufficiently proved; because it did not contain within its description the lot in controversy; because the rights of Maria Hogans
The concluding clause of this deed asserts the execution oí the deed by these parties under their hands and seals, and seals appear opposite their names.
Whatever may be the rule as to deeds not ancient, yet in an ancient deed such as this, if it appears that the name of one or more of the parties is in the hand-writing of a person then present, and not a party to the deed or in interest, and that some of the parties could not write, and there is neither charge nor evidence of fraud, the presumption is that the signature was made in the presence of the parties by virtue of an oral direction from the parties themselves, in which event as a matter of course the signatures are those of the principals themselves. (Frost vs. Deering, 21 Maine, 156 : Burns vs. Lynde, 6 Allen, 309, 310 ; Vidian vs. Griffin, 21 Cal., 392 ; Kinne vs. Brooks, 9 Ired., 219 ; McKay vs. Bloodgood, 9 John., 285.) The signing and sealing are therefore sufficiently established. The deed comes from the custody of the widow and executrix of the will of the grantee’s son, and this as to an ancient deed coupled with the testimony of John R. Hogans to the effect that his mother, Mary Hogans, delivered the title papers to this property to I. D. Hart, his mother being one of the parties to this and other deeds, as we- subsequently will see, is sufficient to justify and require the introduction of this deed in evidence. Philips on Ev., Cow. & Hill’s Notes, 4 Amer. Ed., p. 475 to 481, inc.
So far as the objection that it does not appear upon the
As to the matter of the attestation of the deed, our statute does not require any particular form of words for the attestation clause of a deed, and the attestation clause of a deed in the words: “ bargained, sold, transfei’red and acknowledged in presents of us,” where the testificandum clause is: “ in witness whereof the said parties of the first part have hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above written,” other facts showing delivery being established, is sufficient. The term “ acknowledged ” indicates that the parties affirmed the signing and sealing to be their act before these witnesses. As to the mistake in spelling the word presence, it is entirely immaterial, for “ mala: grammatiea non vitiat chartam,” and in a deed “ animus ad se omne ducit.” (Walters vs. Bredin, 70 Penn. State, 235.) “ The law fortunately is far from being strict in requiring any great accuracy or precision in respect to what is written so far as the rules of grammar or orthography are concerned, or as to the chirogaphy or evenness of the page or the straightness of the lines.”
The description of the boundaries of the land conveyed by this deed is as follows': “ All that certain tract, piece or parcel of land lying and being within the following boundaries, that is to say: bounded on the east by lands now claimed by John L. Doggett, on the north by lands claimed by the said party of the second part, on the west by lands of the parties of the first part, (it being part of the aforesaid tract) and on the south by St. Johns river, and
The question in this case is, does this deed embrace the lot in controversy ? If it does, then plaintiffs must fail.
We have here two calls for boundary, the first being by the lands then claimed by certain parties, and the second being in chains without giving any starting or terminal point which can be ascertained without reference to ownership of adjoining lands as described in the prior part of the deed. , The courses and distances enable us to denote on a plat a geometrical figure; that is all. The other description tells us it is a part of the Hogans’ Grant, and gives as the boundaries by land owned by adjoining proprietors. Certain deeds were introduced in evidence by the defendant to show what the boundaries were according to the description of “ lauds claimed,” or similar descriptions, to which the plaintiffs objected because the deeds did not contain the lot in controversy; because I. D. Hart, the grantor in one deed, acknowledged it before himself, and while the deed purported to be executed by him as administrator no power to sell was shown, and because proof of the execution was not sufficient.
As we remarked in the opinion delivered in a previous appeal in this case at a preceding term (18th Fla.) the question here is not one of absolute ownership, but of claim. "Whether, therefore, the failure to show power in Hart to sell as administrator would defeat a recovery of the land
As to the evidence of execution it is useless to repeat what we have said as to the proof of execution of deeds of this character. These deeds are ancient, and what has been already said upon this subject covers the questions here raised to the extent that we can reasonably conceive any importance is attached to them. These deeds were, therefore, properly admitted to show the boundaries according to description of ownership of contiguous lands.
The above plat shows the Hogans’ Grant as given in the last survey, accepted and treated by the government of
The northern boundary of deed of 1834 is lands of the parties of the first part (plaintiffs’ ancestors), and the eastern boundary of deed of 1836 is land of Isaiah D. Hart; the northern boundary is land of I. D. Hart, the western land of John W. Richard.
According to the testimony, lot 1, block 136, the lot in controversy, was embraced in these boundaries. Speaking of this matter the witness, R. N. Ellis, a surveyor, says: “ I would have to find the boundaries in deed of 1834 to get a starting point to make the survey of the land in that deed, and could not make a, survey of the areas called for in that deed until I found this starting point.” This witness says also: “ I would say lot 1, block 136, was in the boundaries given in the deed from Hogans and others to Hart of 1834,” according to the boundaries by contiguous lands given in the deed of 1834. To the same effect is the testimony E. E. L’Engle, a surveyor, who had surveyed the Hogans’ Grant and was familiar with the proof as to owmership of adjacent lands. This witness states that he had surveyed the greater portion of the lines marked on a plat similar to the foregoing plat; that he had run. the north and west lines of the Hogan’s Grant, B. A, and A. D.; that he had run most of the eastern line, E. B. C., as near as he could run it according to abuttals in deed of 1834. The amount of land according to measurement is 106 acres, but he does not know where the starting point
The testimony shows that if the first line of Hogans’ Grant is run from the southwest corner, the eastern line falls short of the river about seven or eight chains.
It is thus apparent that the deed of 1834 does not convey one hundred and six acres of land according to measurement, commencing with the eastern line, as the western line run forty chains, goes into the waters of the river several hundred feet. It is also apparent that if the western boundary is made the point of beginning, and the line is run north forty chains from the St. Johns river, that the eastern line will fall short of the bank of the river the same distance. These lines, the eastern and the western, are the ones which occasion this contention.
There is very little that is definite and certain here except that the lines as given do not embrace the quantity of land stated, and the southern terminus of the western line run forty chains is not the bank of the river St. Johns. The same discrepancies exist as to the Hogans’ Grant, for the lines, as given in the original grant, do not make any allowance for the meandering of the river, while the plat, according to the original survey, shows it existed, and if the south
When we look to the boundaries of the deed of 1834, however, as fixed by “ lands claimed ” and “ lands owned ” according to the deeds in evidence and the testimony, the lot, of which possession is sought in this suit, falls south of the northern boundary (lands claimed by I. D. ITart) about ninety-five feet, and the evidence leaves no reasonable doubt as to what is meant by the terms “ lands claimed ” or “ lands owned.” Two surveyors testify without qualification that accepting this description the lot was embraced in the deed of plaintiffs’ ancestors of 1834 to I. D. Hart, and deeds under which claim or ownership were made are in evidence.
Another fact which should not escape attention here is, that plaintiffs’ ancestors in 1836, two years after their deed of 1834, fixed by their deed of 1836 the western boundary of the deed of 1834, and that boundary is extended by that deed to the point H. as marked upon the plat. In the deed of 1836, (D. A. H. G-.) which gives boundaries entirely by ownership or claim, (omitting courses and distances) the eastern boundary is given as the “ lands of Isaiah D. Hart,” and the western boundary is given also as lands of the party of the second part (Isaiah D. Hart). The necessary consequence following this deed of 1836 between plaintiffs’ ancestors and I. D. Hart is, that they themselves make the western boundary of the land embraced in the deed of 1834 as they understood it extend so far north as to embrace this lot when the line is extended.26J chains east, and the boundary of 26J chains east is not questioned.
Again in 1851, Maria Hogans, in consideration of the sum of $25, conveys all of her dower interest in the entire Ho
These are the facts as the jury had a right to find. Did they in law justify a verdict for the defendant?
We understand the law to be that where the courses and distances in a deed do not cover the quantity of land called for, and are therefore uncertain as boundaries, and there are other boundaries given in the deed by adjoining tracts, which are ascertained and sufficiently established, the line will be extended to them, where such a course is consistent with the manifest intention of the parties. We do not propose to enter into any general discussion of the rules controlling in the matter of boundary. We confine ourselves to this case as we understand it from the testimony in the present record. Applying the rule of law as we have stated it to the facts here disclosed, we think the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court are sustained by the evidence and the law.
We have not examined in this case the errors assigned in the order in which appellants presented them in argument. This record discloses a case in which no evidence so material that it should operate to change the verdict of the jury was improperly admitted or rejected during the' trial, and according to the practice of this court if the evidence sustains the verdict, and the law as applicable to the facts clearly established sustains the judgment, the judgment must be affirmed. We regard this as a rule eminently conservative and salutary in its character, greatly
The judgment is affirmed.
indicates the lot in controversy.
A. B. O. D. indicates Hogans1 Grant.
H». ]?. C. G. indicates area of deed of 1834 by metes and bounds in chains.
H. B. indicates northern boundary of deed of 1834 as given by lands claimed.
B. O. indicates like eastern boundary in deed of 1834.