2 Cai. Cas. 198 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1804
Three questions have been made on the above facts:
1. Whether the possessions, according to Jacob. G. Klock’s line, for forty years, are or are not conclusive against the plaintiff’s right of recovery in this action ?
2. Whether the agreement, in 1789, is or is not binding, it being by parol, and no part of it having been carried into execution, according to the survey then made ?
8. Whether, if this last agreement was obligatory, it has or has not been rescinded by the subsequent agreement ? and whether it was not incumbent on the plaintiff to entitle himself to a recovery, to have proved that the cause between Klock and Wills was decided, and had eventuated in favor of Klock ?
The line run by Jacob G. Klock, forty years ago, was run at the instance of the then proprietors of lots No. 12 and 18, by a person acting under their mutual employ. This line was assented to at the time, and, independent of the subsequent acts of the parties, would, in my opinion, be conclusive upon them, after such a lapse of time, and possessions of such antiquity. It was competent to the parties to waive that line, and it appears that they did agree to waive it, and abide by the line run in 1789. An agreement by parol, to the settlement of a line, appears to
The submission to two surveyors, made by the lessor of the plaintiff and Jacob Klock, and their decision thereupon, cannot be considered as extending to the title of the land, or to have the operation of a conveyance. This *principle I think fully recognized in the case of Jackson, ex dem. Morris, v. Rosser, 8 East, 15. The title to lot No. 12, is admitted to be in the lessor of the plaintiff, and the submission was of a mere matter of fact, to ascertain where the line would run on actual survey, begining at a place agreed 'on between the parties. I cannot consider this agreement in any way affected by the statute of frauds. But, admitting it to have been void in its origin, that cannot make void the acknowledgments of Klock, subsequent to the determination of the arbitrators. After the line had been ascertained, and he knew where it run, he agreed to give up the possession and move his fence. Here, was, then, a full and complete recognition of the extent and boundary of lot No. 12, to which it is admitted the lessor of the plaintiff has title. It is immaterial in what matter this line was ascertained, whether by a joint submission to one or more surveyors, or by an ex parte survey : it is enough that Kloelc, after it had been ascertained, recognized it as the true line. This would preclude him from denying the
But for the new line run in 1789, and the parol agreement then made, it is not pretended that the plaintiff can recover; for the parties claiming these lots, having no less than forty yeas ago determined on the true line between them, by running the same, and having held their possessions accordingly ever 'since, no court would
Judgment of nonsuit.
See Jackson v. Bowen, 1 Caines’ Rep. 360, n. (a.)
See Jackson v. Defenderf 3 J. R. 269; Jackson v. Lunn, 3 J. C. 109; different authorities in case, Britter v. Phelps, 17 Wend. 642; Jackson v. McConnell, 12 Wend. 421, 12 Wend. 127, 12 Wend. 130; see Adams v. Rockwell, 16 Wend. 286; Van Wyck v. Wright, 18 Wend. 157; Bradstreet v. Platt, 17 Wend. 44; Jackson v. Woodruff, 1 Cow. 276; Dibble v. Rogers, 13 Wend. 536; Lamb v. Coe, 15 Wend. 642; Jackson v. Van Antwerp, 8 Cow. 273, 10 Wend. 109, 7 J. R. 283, 17 J. R. 29, 7 Cow. 723, 1 Cow. 101, 6 Wend. 467, 10 Wend. 104, 12 Wend. 421, 12 Wend. 127.