22 Wend. 277 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1839
After advisement the following opinion was delivered :
The writ of error in this case is brought to reverse a judgment of the supeme court, by which the heirs of the late General Shuyler, the lessors of
Another question has been raised as to the evidence of the will of Gov. Cosby as a will of real estate. Biff though I agree with the supreme court, that the probate was legal evidence in this case under the statute, even if it had been necessary for the lessors of the plaintiff to trace their title through that will, the question is of very little importance in the decision of this cause. The evidence shows that Gov. Cosby had two sons, William and Henry ; and it appears to be wholly immaterial whether the descent of the premises in question to Lady Elizabeth Fitzroy, is traced through her brother William, as the oldest son, who by the common law was the heir of his father, or through him as the devisee of his father under the supposed will. In either case, to enable her to take the property by descent, it must be presumed that her brother Henry died without issue ; or at least that his issue had become extinct previous to her
To establish the pedigree of the grantors in the deed of 1793, to General Schuyler, and to show that their mother Was the sister and only surviving heir of William, the eldest son of Governor Cosby, the lessors of the plaintiff called John Watts, w'ho was born previous to 1750; he being seventy-eight years of age at the time of the trial in 1627. He testified that Lord Southampton, one of the sons of Lady Elizabeth Fitzroy, or Jeffreys, was connected with him by marriage, having married his first cousin; that he had seen him in this country in 1771, as a colonel in the British army, and afterwards in England, in 1785 : that he also knew William Cosby, who resided at New Rochelle, and was reputed to be the only surviving son and the heir at law of William Cosby j and that he was supposed to be insane, and was reputed to have died unmarried, and without lawful issue. This witness also testified that he understood and believed, and it was generally reputed, that Elizabeth Cosby, the sister of William Cosby, of New Rochelle, married Lord Augustus Fitzroy; and after his death, married James Jeffreys, Esq., a commissioner of the custom in England ; and that the grantors in the deed of 1793, were her
This was also a case in which a witness connected as the late John Watts was, with this family, by the marriage of his cousin Ann, the daughter of Admiral Warren, with Charles Fitzroy, the first Lord Southampton, could not well mistake upon a question of pedigree and descent, which it was only necessary to trace back for -two generations. All the grantors in the deed to General Schuyler, claimed to be grandchildren of one of our provincial governors, and some of them were themselves not unknown to fame, as every reader of Junius’ letters is well aware. In addition to all this, two at least of the grantors in the deed of 1793, were of the blood royal of the Stuarts; although the quarterings of their escutcheons, which indicated their descent from the kings of England and Scotland, and of France, were debruised by a baton sinister. For it is a matter of public history that Henry Fitzroy, their great grand father, the first Duke of Grafton, who was killed at the siege of Cork, was one of the numerous illegitimate children of that royal libertine of whom Horace Walpole said :
“ Fortune, or fair or frowning, on his soul
Could stamp no virtue, and no vice control.”
He was the second son of Barbara "Fillers, or Mrs. Palmer, one of Charles the second’s seven favorite mistresses ; who was ennobled by that dissolute monarch, by the titles
The recital in the conveyance from Grace Cosby in 1762, is, after such a lapse of time, sufficient evidence of the fact that Governor Corby died shortly after the making of his will in 1735; although the date of the probate of that will
There was no legal evidence of the sale of any part of the land for quit rents ; and if such a sale had taken place during the lunacy of Wm. Cosby of New Rochelle, or after his interest had vested in the people of the state by escheat, it is probable that Gen. Schuyler, after the act of March 1790, thought it most safe to protect his title by a purchase from the heirs of Lady Elizabeth Jeffreys. The jury were therefore properly instructed. to presume a grant from the patentees to Gov. Cosby, as recited in his will and in the conveyance to De Lancy.
There was no proof of a tenancy which entitled 'the defendant to notice to quit. His declaration that he had once paid rent to General Schuyler for the land, without stating whether such tenancy was from year to year, or for a certain specified term, even if it was legal evidence, in his own favor, did not make out a tenancy or holding from year to year. And no notice to quit was therefore necessary.
For these reasons I am satisfied that the decision of the court below was correct, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
In the case of Jackson v. Lamb, 7 Cowen 431, a release of the whole of a tract of land was presumed, after the lapse of forty years, upon the prodution of the mutilated parts of a lease for one year, which recited that the object of such lease was to found a release thereon : and upon proof of the fact that some of the lots in the tract had been long possessed under title derived from the person named as lessee in such mutilated lease. And in the case of Jackson v. Lunn, 3 Johns. Cas. 109, a conveyance from the patentees to Admiral Warren, the father in law of this same Gen. Charles Fitzroy, was presumed after a great lapse of time, from the recitals of such a - conveyance, which were contained in leases of parts of the patent which had been
There was no legal evidence of the sale of any part of the land for quit rents ; and if such a sale had taken place during the lunacy of Wm. Cosby of New Rochelle, or after his interest had vested in the people of the state by escheat, it is probable that Gen. Schuyler, after the act of March 1790, thought it most safe to protect his title by a purchase from the heirs of Lady Elizabeth Jeffreys. The jury were therefore properly instructed. to presume a grant from the patentees to Gov. Cosby, as recited in his will and in the conveyance to DeLancy.
There was no proof of a tenancy which entitled the defendant to notice to quit. His declaration that he had once paid rent to General Schuyler for the land, without stating whether such tenancy was from year to year, or for a certain specified term, even if it was legal evidence, in his own favor, did not make out a tenancy or holding from year to year. And no notice to quit was therefore necessary.
For these reasons I am satisfied that the decision of the court below was correct, and that the judgment should be affirmed.