These three actions are tried as one, it being stipulated by the attorneys that the question of title should be now tried and determined and, if the plaintiff is entitled to recover, the amount of the recovery should be determined later. The premises in question involve what is called a gore, lying north of township 47 in Totten & Cross-field’s Purchase, Essex county, H. Y. This so-called gore lies between a line surveyed by Brodhead in 1797 and a line surveyed by Campbell, Mitchell and Wright, which latter line is coincident with the county line as established in 1903 and 1904 between the counties of Franklin-and Essex. It is a strip of land about one-half mile wide, containing some 2,000 acres of land. The plaintiff claims title to this land^
Though the 'Grown required that the legal title to these lands should come from it, it was known and understood that, upon purchase from the Indians, the Crown would issue the patent without further compensation; so that those who purchased from the Indians held the equitable title to the lands and were entitled to a conveyance from the Crown.
This description plainly marks the north line of township 47 as set forth on the map, as the north line of the said Totten & Crossfield’s Purchase. This title conveyed to Watson having been assigned to Effingham Lawrence and the patent having been issued to him by the State of township 47, it can hardly be said that the State intended to convey only a part of said township 47 as described on said map. And it is interesting here to recall the fact again that the title in the State to said Totten & Crossfield’s Purchase was a title subject to the equitable rights of those who had acquired said Totten & 'Crossfield’s Purchase from the Indians and paid therefor. The State would have no equitable right to retain any portion of said purchase; and -yet, if its patent to Effingham Lawrence did not include the entire township, it would be retaining inequitably a portion of the said original purchase. The State held the same bare legal title to the lands within said purchase that a landholder has who has given a contract to convey to another a certain piece of land owned by him, upon certain payments
This conclusion is upheld in the fact that at- no time until very recently have the people claimed to own any part of this township or any piece of land northerly of the township and southerly of the north line of Totten & Crossfield’s Purchase. The people, through act of the Legislature, have paid a claim made for the cutting of timber upon this gore at the time the county line was fixed between Franklin and Essex counties in 1903 and 1904,. and it executed a quitclaim deed of the Morse gore, so-called, which lies adjoining the gore in question on the south, and in the conveyance disclaimed any responsibility for the title. When the county line was fixed between Franklin arid Essex counties in 1903, monuments were placed by the State or its representatives along this line, four to the mile, on which was marked on the southerly side thereof, township 47, Totten & Cross-field’s Purchase. The .State had frequently issued maps in which it had marked lands claimed by the State; and, until the map of 1909, the gore in question was not- marked as State lands. These acts are referred to as evidence that, at all times since the patent to Effingham Lawrence of township 47 by the State in 1792, it has apparently been understood by the State and its representatives -that township 47 included all the lands to the north line o.f Totten & Cross-field’s Purchase within the side limits of said township. If I am correct in my conclusion, it disposes of the entire case; because, if the State then conveyed this township to Lawrence, it never has reacquired the title, and therefore cannot maintain these actions. It is not necessary, therefore, to pass upon defendant’s claim of title. The State fails in these actions because it has no title to the gore in question.
There is a vast amount of evidence in the case bearing more or less directly upon .the title to township 47, but no evidence which .seriously conflicts with the above conclusion. It is true that there have been some conveyances by those who have later claimed to own the gore and some papers filed by which they seem to concede that they are not the owners north of the Brodhead line; but those concessions
It is interesting to note the result of the action of Thompson v. Burhans, 61 N. Y. 52. Burhans had received a quitclaim deed from the State of what in this ease is known as the Morse gore and Thompson claimed said gore under a tax deed, and in this action it was found that there was no gore between township 47 of the Totten & Cross-field’s Purchase and the north line of said purchase. The State, of course, was not a party to that suit; but the patent to Effingham Lawrence by. the State in 1792 was in the case, and the Court of Appeals concluded that neither Thompson, who claimed under a tax deed, nor Burhans, who claimed under a quitclaim deed from the State, had any title to any of the lands north of, or in the northerly part of, township 47, in Totten & Crossfield’s Purchase.
It also appears in the evidence that, in 1905, a certificate of the same part of township 47, bounded on the north by Franklin county, under a tax sale of said township, was issued to the McIntyre Iron Company and Finch; and, on June 16, 1908, in pursuance of said certificate, a deed was executed by the Comptroller to the said parties. These. actions were not begun until June or July, 1910, two years or more after the said deed was delivered 'by the Comptroller. At the time this certificate and deed were executed and delivered, the boundary line between Essex county and Franklin county had been fixed as identical with the north line of Totten & Crossfield’s Purchase; so that, when the Comptroller conveyed by his tax deed the lands bounded on the north by Franklin county, he conveyed all the lands -in question in this action.
The defendants, respectively, are entitled to judgment dismissing the complaint, with costs.
A decision may be prepared accordingly.
Judgment for defendants.