46 Barb. 518 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1866
It is conceded by the defendant that the plaintiffs showed title to the premises in question, as the matter stood when they rested their case. There can be no doubt that the deed to their father from Perry Cornwall, dated March 19,1852, covers these premises, as do all the deeds in the plaintiffs’ chain of title, beginning with that of Baltus Lingenfelter to Aaron Putnam, of July 13, 1824. All these deeds describe the south line of the premises as a line 24 chains 59 links in length, and this corresponding with the other lines in the deed, from a certain and undisputed starting point, would, beyond any doubt, embrace the lands in question.
The only questions in the case arise upon the defendant’s offers to show title out of the ancestor of the plaintiffs, and in himself. He first proved a conveyance from Baltus Lingenfelter to Oliver Blanchard, dated March 20, 1829, of certain premises described therein by metes and bounds, and proved several successive conveyances of the same premises by the same description, the last being to himself from Edward Duggan, dated April 1, 1853. It was claimed by the defendant that the premises thus conveyed would overlap the premises described in the deed from Baltus Lingenfelter to Putnam, and in those down to Raynor, the father of the plaintiffs, so as to shorten the south line of their premises, making it only 19 chains and 91 links, instead of 24 chains 59 links. The defendant then ¡Droved a conveyance from John M. Raynor to himself, dated April 30, 1857, of nine acres of land, described by metes and bounds, which description commenced as follows: “Beginning at the north-east corner of lands
The real question in dispute to be tried between the parties, in this aspect of the case, was whether Baynor,1 the plaintiffs’ father, had not himself conveyed the six acres in question to the defendant. This depended altogether upon the true starting point mentioned and described in the deed. The parties of course intended to have but one starting point, and the deed is to be so interpreted as to name and describe but one, in fact, although two objects are named to indicate more clearly its location. But suppose it turns out as matter
The real question at issue was not whether the ancestor once had title and the right of possession, but whether the plaintiffs, at the commencement of the action, had such title j and right. <’ The cardinal rule on this subject is, that under the general issue or a general denial of all the allegations of the complaint, the defendant may controvert by evidence any .and every fact which the plaintiff is bound to establish to make out his cause of action. (Andrews v. Bond, 16 Barb. 633.) He can not, under such an answer, prove a discharge of a cause of action once existing in the plaintiff against him, because that is an affirmative defense, or new matter which must be pleaded. 1 But he may show that the plaintiff never had any such cause of action against him as is alleged in the complaint. Of course if Raynor had, in his lifetime, conveyed the premises in question to the defendant, the plaintiffs
In respect to the plaintiffs’ second objection to the evidence offered, it had no pertinency whatever, if the defendant claimed title to the six acres in question, by virtue of his. conveyance from Raynor of the nine acres on the 30th of April, 1857, and not by virtue of his deed from Duggan in 1853, and the conveyance by Lingenfelter to Blanchard ip 1829. In. that case there was no statute of limitations in question, as there was no claim to these six acres, by adverse possession, on the. part of the defendant. Upon that view of the case, and under that claim of title, the evidence, as I have before shown, would be competent and material to show the true starting point given by the deed. But if it was intended to claim title to the six acres under the conveyance from Lingenfelter to Blanchard, and by adverse possession under that claim of title, it should unquestionably have been pleaded for that purpose, or it was inadmissible to establish such title. Upon that hypothesis Raynor’s title, being the oldest, and
There must therefore be a new trial, with costs to abide the event.
WeUes} 22. 2)anoin Smith And fJohnson, Justices,]