2 N.Y.S. 529 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
This action was trespass quare clausum fregit. The plaintiff occupies the premises entered as tenant of one Peter Bulger, and in the case the latter is mentioned as the owner. The defendant occupies the lands lying north of those of which the plaintiff is in possession, and the division line runs east and west, and is 2 chains and 42 links in length. The board fence which separated their respective inclosures was torn down by the defendant, and he erected a line of posts, 12 feet to the south, with a view of rebuilding the fence on that line, and this act constitutes the trespass complained of. Both parties claim title to the locus in quo by mesne conveyances from John Sherman, the former owner of both parcels, who derived his title by deed directly from the Holland Land Company, in the year 1883. The deed first delivered by Sherman was to Maria Farnsworth, from whom the plaintiff derived title; and if that deed embraces the strip of land in dispute, then the plaintiff made a case for the recovery, and the judgment should be reversed. It becomes necessary to ascertain, as the primary question involved in the controversy, the true location of the starting-point mentioned in the deed from Sherman to Farnsworth, and, when that is determined, the dispute whether or not the plaintiff’s landlord has title to the lands where the posts were erected is ended. That deed was .executed and delivered on the 8tli day of December, 1875, and after giving the range and number of the lot, the description continued, namely: “Bounded as follows: Beginning at the southeast- corner of lands owned by John Sherman on the west side, and adjoining the Buffalo and Jamestown B. B. Co.; thence west on the south line of John Sherman’s land, and on the north side of E. C. Stancliffe’s land two chains; thence north two chains and seventy-five links; thence east, parallel to the south bounds of the land hereby conveyed, two chains and ninety-eight links, or thereabouts, to the west line of said railroad; and thence southerly along-said railroad line to the place of beginning. ” This was the first parcel of land sold and conveyed by Sherman out of his entire tract of 50 acres. At the time Sherman received his deed from the land company, they had conveyed part of lot Ho. 63 to Jesse Stancliffe, and this parcel was located to the
If a grant by sufficient description of the premises clearly ascertains the location of the premises conveyed, it is for the court to see that the grant is applied to the subject-matter, in accordance with the express intention of the parties. In such a case nothing but a question of law is presented for the court to determine, but whenever the location of the premises is doubtful through uncertain, inconsistent, or conflicting terms of description in the deed, the proper location of the premises becomes a question of fact to be determined by the jury on all the evidence. Pettit v. Shepard, 32 N. Y. 103; Green v. Collins, 86 N. Y. 254; Barclay v. Howell's Lessee, 6 Pet. 499; Brookman v. Kurzman, 94 N. Y. 276; Curtis v. Aaronson, 7 Atl. Rep. 886; Cronk v. Wilson, 40 Hun, 269. The mere reading of the deed in question from John Sherman, together with the deed to him from the Holland Land Company, discloses that the premises claimed by the plaintiff cannot be located without the aid of a surveyor, and a resort to oral evidence. A slight examination of the evidence in the case is sufficient to show the uncertainty in applying this grant to the locus in quo. A question of fact was presented, which the trial judge was required to determine. His conclusions on that question, if adhered to, determine as a matter of law that the plaintiff failed to establish a title to the gore of the land in dispute.
The plaintiff took an exception to one of the rulings'of the court, in receiving evidence bearing on the question of fact, which may be examined in connection with the point now under consideration. Prior to the delivery of the deed by Sherman of the Bulger lot, he engaged a surveyor to survey and locate the premises, who went onto the ground in company with Mr. Sherman, and they there located the boundaries by which the premises were described. The defendant’s counsel asked the surveyor this question: “What did you do, if anything, with reference to ascertaining the line described as the south line of John Sherman’s land?” This was objected to by the plaintiff, as immaterial and incompetent, and as tending to contradict the deeds in evidence by proving previous acts and declarations. On the objection being overruled,
We are also inclined to the opinion that it was competent for the defendant to prove that Sherman, while on his own land, engaged in making a survey of the premises which he intended to convey, stated to the surveyor where he claimed his south line to be, as it was at that time the boundary line of his inclosure. The surveyor was in his service, and the declaraction accompanied the act of pointing out the boundary lines, and may be regarded as a part of the res gestee. It was certainly competent to prove the fact that Sherman, before making the conveyance of the lands whicli he sold, went upon the premises, and located a boundary line, and, when done with the aid of a surveyor, the mode and manner of making it could not thereafter be proved fully and independently, without also proving the things done and said by Sherman, connected with the making of the survey, as he died before the trial. The declarations of deceased persons respecting boundaries are received as competent evidence, and are an exception to the rule which rejects hearsay testimony; but to bring the case within the rule of the exception it must appear that such declarations were made by deceased persons, while in possession of lands owned by them, and in the act of pointing out their boundaries, with respect to such boundaries, and when nothing appears to show an interest to deceive or misrepresent. At the time the survey was made there was no controversy between Sherman and the parties in the possession of the premises on the south of the line indicated. The point indicated by the declaration was on the line of Sherman’s inclosure, and nothing is indicated that he had any interest to deceive or misrepresent the location of the true boundary line. Daggett v. Shaw, 5 Metc. 223; Long v. Colton, 116 Mass. 414; Curtis v. Aaronson, 7 Atl. Rep. 886; Bartlett v. Emerson, 7 Gray, 174.
Subsequent to the conveyance of the Bulger lot, and several years before the removal of the fence, a person in charge of the premises for the owner erected the same, and thereafter it was constituted a division fence. As the plaintiff was in the actual possession of the locus in quo when the fence was
On the trial, the plaintiff contended that the defendant had failed to show any title to the land in dispute, and gave some evidence which tended to prove that the south-east corner of the Wilson lot, the starting-point mentioned in the Wilson deed, was at least as far north as the line of the fence removed by the defendant. By referring to the Wilson deed, it is found that the premises are located by commencing at a point in Elm street, 4 chains and 70 links south of the center of Sherman avenue, which street had béen laid out and used by the public for the period of 12 or 15 years. Evidence was produced by both parties, for the purpose of ascertaining the center line of Sherman avenue, and the records in the town clerk’s office were produced, which show that the street was opened in 1873, by an order made by thd highway commissioners, which was duly recorded. In 1874 another order was made by the highway commissioners then in office, laying out Sherman avenue substantially on the same line, which was also filed in the clerk’s office, but not recorded until after the commencement of this action. The plaintiff objected to the admission of this order upon the ground, among others, that the paper does not show on its face that the commissioners had jurisdiction to make it, and that there was no proof of the application, and other papers on which the order was made were filed, as the statute requires, within 30 days; and also, further, that there is no proof of any recording of the order. The objections were overruled, and the defendant excepted, and the order read in evidence. This the plaintiff contends was error, but we thijik it was properly received, for the reason that it was competent to prove the fact that such an order had been made, and filed in the town clerk’s office. If the plaintiff’s position is correct as to the true location of the south-east corner of the Wilson lot, then the starting-point given in the deed is repugnant to the first course in the -deed, and one or the other must have been inserted in that deed by mistake, for the course from the starting-point to the railroad is east, on the north line -of the Bulger lot. It was competent to ascertain the center line of Sherman avenue, with a view of ascertaining the true location of the AVilson lot; and in view of the repugnancy in the description, which had been referred to, it was competent to prove by paroi evidence, if such was the fact, that the surveyor in locating the AVilson lot commenced at some other point in Sherman avenue than the center line, as indicated by the first survey; and, as bearing on that question, the second order was properly received in evidence, as the plaintiff might have shown that the surveyor adopted the description contained in that order, in making his survey. Boundaries may be proved by every sort of evidence that is admissible to prove any other fact. If it was a good and valid order, then it was properly received. If it was not, it could only be used as an item of proof in connection with all the other evidence, for the • purpose of reconciling the repugnant clauses used in the description of the de
NOTE.
Boundaries—Evidence—Declarations oe Decedents. Declarations of disinterested parties, since deceased, who were in a position to know a boundary line, are admissible, in a controversy about such line, in Texas. Tucker v. Smith, 3 S. W. Rep. 671. But it is held in Curtis v. Aaronson, (N. J.) 7 Atl. Rep. 886, that such declarations, to be admissible, must be made by a declarant in possession as owner at the time, and while engaged in pointing out the boundary in controversy. They need not, however, be against his interest. Declarations made by the owner of land to a purchaser at the time of the sale, as to boundary lines, are admissible in evidence against one claiming title under such purchaser. Austin v. Andrews, (Cal.) 16 Pac. Rep. 546. Declarations of a, deceased surveyor as to boundaries are admissible in Pennsylvania. Clement v. Packer, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 907. Declarations of an original owner of land as to a way of necessity designated by him are admissible in a controversy between subsequent grantees. Kripp v. Curtis, (Cal.) 11 Pac. Rep. 879. See, also, as to the admissibility of the original owner’s declarations, Lamoreaux v. Meyers, (Wis.) 31 N. W. Rep. 331.