Allaire v. Ketcham

55 N.J. Eq. 168
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 N.J. Eq. 168 (Allaire v. Ketcham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allaire v. Ketcham, 55 N.J. Eq. 168 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

This is a bill to quiet title under the act of 1870. Rev. p. 1189; Gen. Stat. p. 3486. The land in question is unenclosed woodland, situate in Wall township, Monmouth county, and the bill, in addition to the usual allegations, contained an allegation that the defendants or some or one of them were cutting the timber on the lands, and that those of the defendants who were cutting the timber, or causing it to be cut, were nonresidents of the state and irresponsible. Upon filing the bill a preliminary injunction was issued, restraining the cutting of timber or removal of any which had been cut, pending the hearing. The bill alleged peaceable possession of the premises and has been taken as confessed against all of the defendants except Rebecca Fielder and her husband, William Fielder.

A preliminary question of some difficulty has been raised. The statute confers the right to file a bill in equity to quiet title “ when any person is in peaceable possession of lands in this state, * * * claiming to own the same” &c. Actual possession and peaceable possession are, on complainant’s part, as has been settled, jurisdictional facts, and if denied, as has been done by the answer in this case, must be settled as the preliminary question. Sheppard v. Nixon, 16 Stew. Eq. 627 (Errors [170]*170and Appeals, 1887); Yard v. Ocean Beach Asso., 4 Dick. Ch. Rep. 306; Beale v. Blake, 18 Stew. Eq. 668, 669 (Vice- Chancellor Pitney).

As to actual possession, the lands here in question are unenclosed woodlands, and the proofs of actual possession in relation to such lands are to be such as are required by the character and situation of the lands. On the complainant’s part it is proved that about 1856 complainant’s predecessor in title, James P. Allaire, cut hoop poles from the whole tract up to the line claimed, his men working for three months, and that in 1871 stakes were placed on the line and trees marked, and'that since that time the complainant has stopped the trespassing by cutting wood on the lands by any person, so far as it has been brought to his knowledge by the persons whom he has employed to take charge of his lands. Other assertions of claim were made, not extending, however, to acts upon the land itself, such as stopping sale of the land by defendants in 1884. Except in these instances no wood has been cut from the lands in dispute for over twenty years and up to November, 1894, when persons working under some or one of the defendants named in the bill began cutting and were immediately enjoined under this bill.. So far as possession is required by the statute, I think the proofs ; show that the complainant was the actual possessor of the premises in dispute, and that this possession has been proved by acts of ownership such as were required by the nature and situation of the property. Has the possession been “peaceable” under the statute ? If by peaceable is meant quiet and peaceable as to every trespasser, whether claiming title or not, then the possession cannot be said to have been altogether peaceable, for the trespassers whom complainant ordered off disturbed this peaceable possession. But I think the true construction of the statute is that the possession must be peaceable as against the defendant. And further, it seems to me that in determining whether the possession as to the defendant is peaceable, the test must be whether the defendant setting up a claim of title has interfered with complainant’s possession by an act which is suable at law, and suit upon which will or may involve the title [171]*171of the defendant. This is the test applied by the courts to .the term “ peaceable ” as connected with the acquiring of easements by continued and peaceable possession for twenty years. Lehigh Valley Railroad Co. v. McFarlan, 14. Vr. 605 (Errors and Appeals, 1881), see opinion of Mr. Justice Depue p. 631.

The situation here in reference to the meaning of the word “peaceable,” in this statute, is analogous to that of the “peaceable” user in case of easements, and this construction carries out the object of the statute. And if the answering defendant, Mrs. Fielder, had admitted the cutting, or that it was done by her direction or under her order, as it now seems to me, the present bill must have been held simply as an injunction bill, restraining trespass pending trial of the title at law. But Mrs. Fielder does not, either in her answer or evidence, as I read it, admit that the cutting in 1894, west of the disputed line, was done by her direction. The affidavits to the bill show that it was done by the direction of another defendant, Rebecca Ketcham, who lives out of the state, and against whom the bill has been taken pro confesso. Mrs. Ketcham’s servants were enjoined from further cutting for her upon filing the bill, and have since desisted. If this cutting was not done by defendant Fielder’s orders or under her direction, then she is not suable for the trespass, and, so far as Mrs. Fielder, the answering defendant, is concerned, this cutting did not interfere with the peaceable possession of complainant. On the contrary, if the complainant, on being advised of the cutting under Mrs. Ketcham’s order, procured an injunction under this, which was acquiesced in by Mrs. Ketcham, then the immediate procuring of this injunction may be taken as proof of another assertion of right of ownership by complainant against Mrs. Fielder. Unless Mrs. Fielder is liable to be sued for this act of trespass, and thus involve her title, I see no interruption of the peaceable possession of complainant. The burden of proving that she is responsible for the cutting and may be sued for it devolved upon Mrs. Fielder, and in order to oust the jurisdiction under the act, this must appear affirmatively. I conclude, therefore, that as the case appears, I have jurisdiction.

[172]*172Upon the hearing, it appears that the principal dispute between the parties is the location of the easterly line of a lot of woodland, which was devised by one Benjamin Jackson to his son, Benjamin Jackson, by will dated November 7th, 1806. By this will the testator devised to Benjamin Jackson, the son, in fee, “ twenty acres woodland that I took up adjoining Painters Rhoad.” This twenty acres of woodland was the westerly portion of a tract of land containing thirty-eight and nineteen-hundredths acres, which had been conveyed by Thomas Parker to the testator, Benjamin Jackson, by deed dated January 24th, 1804, and this tract of thirty-eight and nineteen-hundredths acres had been taken up by Parker by a return from the board of proprietors, dated July 10th, 1802. By his will, Benjamin Jackson devised to his daughter, Rebecca Harris, for her natural life, eighteen acres off this tract he took up.

The defendant Rebecca Fielder claims title to or interest in the eighteen acres thus devised to Rebecca Harris for life, and in reference to her title, one dispute is as to the location of the boundary between the twenty acres of woodland and the eighteen acres. The complainant claims that the boundary between these two portions of the original thirty-eight and nineteen-hundredths-acre tract is the line now visible on the ground from the north end of the property, over a large portion of the property, this line having woodland on one side and cleared land on the other, and being continued by marked trees to the southern boundary of the tract. The defendant claims that the true boundary is located ten chains westerly of this line now dividing the woodland and cleared land.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.J. Eq. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allaire-v-ketcham-njch-1896.