88 N.Y.S. 276 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1904
The parties hereto own the nonresident land in the northeast quarter of Township 24, Ma-
Upon this second tax sale the description included all the quarter township except 400 acres of resident land in the northeast corner thereof. It then describes particularly the resident land and shows that the westerly boundary of the westerly parcel is two miles distant from the east boundary of said township. ¡November 21, 1883, the easterly half was redeemed from said tax sale under the description “ Township 24, ¡Northeast quarter, east one-half, except 400 acres in the northeast corner, resident land, 3,550 acres.” It is clear that under the deed to the State it could only get title to the land which had not been redeemed from the tax sale, and the same is true as to the other conveyances. So that if we determine what was redeemed it is evident that the nonresident land in the remainder of the quarter township belongs to the State, for the State could not get title to the redeemed land, as no tax was then due upon it, and no authority existed for a deed thereof, as the sale had been canceled.
We have seen that the westerly boundary of the resident land is two miles distant from the easterly corner of the township, and at this westerly boundary of the resident land we find the Gilcrist or Colvin1 line coinciding with that westerly boundary and continuing in a straight line to the south bounds of the quarter. It' consists of a well-marked and known line of blazed trees. The blazes are apparently upward of fifty years old and mark an old survey, and in 1897 this line was recognized and reblazed by the superintendent of the Adirondack survey, a State official, as the well-marked line separating the easterly and the westerly half of the township. And such officer, in his report to the Legislature, which by law he was required to make, states that it is such line. It will be noticed that if the McClintock line, or any other line east of the Colvin line, is recognized as the
But it is urged that the old deeds and certificates recognize that there are 7,100 acres of nonresident land in this quarter of the township, which, with the resident land, make 7,500 acres in all, and that the redemption certificate only redeems 3,550 acres, thus showing, as it is claimed, that the expression in the certificate, “ except 400 acres in the northeast comer of resident land,” excepts it from the quarter township rather than from the east half of the quarter township. At
The State, by chapter 627 of the Laws of 1898, authorized the superintendent of public works to enter upon and take possession of any lands in the easterly half of said quarter township which were necessary for the construction and maintenance of the dam contemplated thereby. And thereafter the State Engineer and Surveyor served upon the defendant, pursuant to such statute, a map describing the appropriated land, and bounding it on the west by a line which is in fact the Gilerist or Colvin line, thereby recognizing it as the dividing line between the east and west half. If the plaintiff’s version is right, the State was taking a- part of its own lands by proceedings against this defendant. The Saranac Land and Timber Company brought an action against the Comptroller to recover the westerly half of this quarter township, which action was defended by the Attorney-General, and the defense relied upon in the answer was the State’s title under these deeds, the answer further alleging that none of the resident lands were situated in the west half. This act seems to be another recognition by the public officers of the State of this Colvin line. It is contended, however, by the plaintiff that the words “ east half ” and “ west half ” mean the mathematical halves, and, therefore, that the HcClintock line is the correct line. But, as stated above, if the exception of the 400 acres is from the whole quarter township rather than from the east half of such quarter, then the redemption was clearly of the east half of the nonresident land in the township, and the HcClintock line would clearly not be the dividing line. The words “ east half ” and “ west half ” in a deed, while naturally importing an equal division, may lose that effect when it appears that at the time some fixed line or known boundary or monument divides the premises somewhere near the center so that the expression more properly refers to one of such parts than to a mathematical division which never has been made. The
“ The rule is well settled that a conveyance is to be construed in reference to its visible locative calls, as marked or appearing upon the land, in preference to quantity, course, or. distance; and any particular may be rejected, if inconsistent with the other parts of the description, and sufficient remains to locate the land intended to be conveyed.” Robinson v. Kime, 70 N. Y. 147, 154.
But here the fact that all of the resident land is described as being in the east half, and all the west half is conveyed to the State as nonresident land, and that the westerly line of the resident land coincides with the old survey, is very strong evidence that this old survey is the dividing line and that the reference to the east half and to the west half refers to that line. While it does not appear who made that survey, its years are in its favor, and no other reason is suggested why a line should be blazed north and south in this locality unless it was intended for this purpose. The blazed line is a fixed and well-known line, a monument as it were, intended to mark the center line, and the land east of it is the east half and on the west of it the west half of the quarter township. And we must assume that the redemption certificate was made with reference to this dividing line, for otherwise the exception of the resident land is meaningless, while if so recognized it has full effect.
“It is the settled rule in this state, resting upon public policy," that a practical location of boundaries which has been acquiesced in for a long series of years will not be disturbed.” Katz v. Kaiser, 154 N. Y. 292, 298.
I, therefore, hold that the resident land is all in the east half of the quarter of said township and that the Gilcrist or Oolvin line running north and south along the westerly boundary of the westerly parcel of ■ resident land is the dividing line between the easterly and westerly half, and that the plaintiff has not title or right of possession of any of the land in said quarter township east of that line. The complaint is, therefore, dismissed, with costs.
Complaint dismissed, with eostia.