46 N.Y. 484 | NY | 1871
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *486
The case shows, that there was a bona fide dispute between the defendant and Connor, in respect to the true west boundary of the defendant's forty acre lot, and also between the plaintiff and defendant in respect to the north boundary of the defendant's lot; that Jonathan Whiting was the defendant's grantor of the premises with covenants of warranty; that a suit was pending in the Supreme Court between the defendant and Connor, involving the question as to the west boundary; that for the purpose of settling this suit and the entire controversy as to west and north boundary lines, and also the amount to be paid by Whiting to the defendant, in satisfaction for the breach of the covenants in his deed to the defendant; Connor, defendant, plaintiff who owned the lands adjoining the forty acres on the north, and Whiting, entered into a written agreement, by which the action of the defendant against Connor, was settled upon the following terms as therein stated: "Jonathan Whiting agrees to procure a competent surveyor to go upon the land occupied by the plaintiff (the defendant in the present case), and make a survey thereof, commencing at the south-east corner thereof *488
in the center of the highway; thence running west fifteen chains on a line of some marked trees, and on the line, which, if continued, will strike a stake and heap of stones about twenty-five links beyond; thence north on a line parallel with the aforesaid highway twenty-six chains and sixty-seven links; thence east fifteen chains to the center of the highway; thence south twenty-six chains and sixty-seven links along the center of said highway to the place of beginning. That after such survey the parties agrees that James Mann shall go on to the land and designate the line between Mr. Lafayette and Hiram Wood on the north end of the Lafayette lot, as the same existed when his father occupied the Lafayette lot, and particularly that he shall put a stake and stones, or other monument at the northern corner of the lot, so as to mark the boundary thereof. That so much of the land first described as the line so fixed by said Mann as above specified, shall cut or take off therefrom, the said Whiting agrees to pay Lafayette therefor at the rate of thirty dollars an acre." Connor and Wood both agreed that Lafayette might move the fences and place them upon the lines so fixed; and the parties further agreed with each other that the lines so ascertained by the survey and modified by Mann, as above provided, shall be and remain the boundaries of Lafayette's lot. This agreement was valid and binding upon the parties. Where there is a disputed, indefinite, or uncertain boundary line between adjoining proprietors, they may, by parol agreement, or by arbitration, fix upon a line between themselves. (Vosburgh
v. Teator,
All concur.
Judgment reversed.