Baeder v. Jennings

40 F. 199, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2472
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 18, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 F. 199 (Baeder v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baeder v. Jennings, 40 F. 199, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2472 (circtdnj 1889).

Opinion

Bradley, Justice.

The land for which the action was brought, as described in the declaration, is a parcel of 5 acres and 61 hundredths of an acre, situate on Long Beach, in the township of Eagleswood, in the comity of Ocean, and state of New Jersey, being to the east of the line between East and West Jersey, bounded south-easterly by the Atlantic ocean, and north-easterly by the line between lots numbered 17 and 18 of the Cox patent, as divided by J. S. Earl and others in the year 1818,- and being part of said lot No. 18. The plaintiff set up two grounds of title: Fird, bv grant from the proprietors of East Jersey to Daniel Cox in 1691, and deduction of title to the plaintiff; second, by continuous possession under claim of title for a long period of time, to-wit, more Ilian 20 years before the defendant took possession. The defendant claimed title under a warrant for 10,000 acres of land from the proprietors of East Jersey to Charles E. Noble, trustee for themselves, issued in .1.884, and a survey thereunder to said trustee, dated March 18, 1886, duly returned and recorded, and a deed of conveyance from Noble to the defendant. Of course, the defendant relies upon 1ns possession,'and claims that the plaintiff must prove title in herself; but it is not pretended that tho defendant acquired “possession in any other manner than under the said survey of 1886, made for the use of the proprietors. The controversy is really with them. The links in the chain of documentary title on which the plaintiff relies are as follows, to-wit:

1. Certain deeds of conveyance vesting in Daniel Oo'x two shares of propriety in East New Jersey. These deeds are: First. One from Edward Byllynge, one of the original 24 proprietors of East Jersey, [202]*202(see Learning <& Spicer, 78,) being a lease and release for one share, dated 19th and 20th of March, 2 Jas. II., (1685-86;) second, a deed from the widow and heir of William Gibson, another of the original 24 proprietors, to Thomas Cox, for one share, dated 6th April, 8 Jas. II., (1687 ;) and a deed from Robert West and Thomas Cox to Daniel Cox, for the same share, dated 4th December, 1 W. & M., (1689.) These deeds, if duly authenticated, show that Daniel Cox — who, history tells us, was not only a noted person at court, being physician to the queen of James II., and to Princess, afterwards Queen, Anue, but a very prominent man in the affairs both of East and West Jersey —was the owner of two shares of propriety in 1689. It will be seen that he disposed of them to the West Jersey Society in 1692. But in the mean time he made other deeds or mortgages affecting these shares. The records show' that he conveyed tho first share, purchased from Byllynge, to one Samuel Stanclitf, in April, 1687, and that Stancliif got out a warrant for 10,000 acres of land upon it, but W'hether he ever procured surveys therefor is not shown. It would seem that this conveyance was by way of security or mortgage, and that the share was re-conveyed to Daniel Cox; for, in January, 1690-91, Cox conveyed the same share to John II}'de and John Haskins by way of mortgage; and they joined him in releasing it to the West Jersey Society, in March, 1692, soon after the conveyance of his property in America to that association, as will presently be mentioned. The other share, derived from the Gibson estate, was also mortgaged by Daniel Cox to Robert West and Benjamin Wetton, by lease and release, dated 5th and 6th of June, 2 W. & M. (1690;) and these persons joined him in a quitclaim to the West Jersey Society, in March, 1692. The records and certified copies of all these conveyances were produced in evidence on the trial. The objections to their reception will he noticed hereafter. Meamvhile it is pertinent to observe here that they were recognized by the proprietors of East Jersey, as will presently appear.

2. The next link in the plaintiff’s chain of title is a survey to Doctor Daniel Cox, returned and entered October 7, 1691, for 2,400 acres of meadow at Little Egg Harbor beach, which it is conceded embraces the premises in question. The plaintiff first introduced a resolution of the council of proprietors, adopted May 20, 1690, as follows:

“Forasmuch as this board is given to understand by the surveyor general that there is at least 24,000 acres of meadow at Barnegat, it is therefore agreed and ordered that each propriety have allotted to it 1,000 acres of the said meadow, and that warrants be granted to each proprietor, and such other person or persons, their equal quantity, according to each one’s proportional share in a propriety as they now hold, when desired, and that all the upland adjoining to the said meadows be granted to such of the said proprietors as desire the same, provided it join their own meadow.”

Several of the proprietors availed themselves of this resolution, and took up lands at-the Barnegat meadows and on Little Egg Harbor beach, and took patents therefor. Four of these patents were produced in evidence, — one to Peter Somans, dated 24th May, 1690, for 6,300 acres, [203]*203partly on the beach; one to A. Gordon, of «une date, for about 4,000 acres, embracing 3 miles of the beach: ones to Thomas Hart; and one to William JDockwra, — all including portions of the beach in continuous tracts. The tenor of tho survey to Dr. Cox is as follows, to-wit:

“By warrant from the proprietors of East blew Jersey, dated .May 20, 1690, surveyed and laid out for Doctor Daniel Oox, (in right of two proprieties,) two thousand four hundred acres of meadow and upland at Barnegat, in two tracts: The first on the beach of Little Egg Harbor, beginning at the north side oi the mouth or opening of the harbor on the point of the beach, or the beginning of the partition lino betwixt East and West Jersey, and running north-easterly, as the beach goes, six miles, more or less, to Peter Soman’s line in length, and from the sea to the bay in breadth, including all the meadows and islands adjoining oil the side of the main channel of the sound or bay, bounded east by the sea, south by Little Egg Harbor, west by tho channel of the bay, north by Peter Soman’s. Tho other tract oil the main side of the bay, opposite to the last-mentioned tract, beginning,” etc., (describing the same.) “Also, five hundred acres of land at Wickatunk, which is his lot there, being number twenty-three, beginning,” etc., (describing the same.) “Also live hundred acres of Topenenny, which is his lot there, being number eleven, beginning,” etc., (describing the same.) “Also a home lot, being 24 chains in length, and 12 chains in breadth, bounded north-west by land un-surveyed, north-east by Thomas Warno, south-east by Robert Barclay, southwest by a highway. [Signed] John Babobay.”

This survey has an entry in the margin, as follows, to-wit: “Entd. 7 Oct. 1691.” It is objected that there is no proof that John Barclay was a deputy surveyor in 1680 or 1691, Itis hardly credible that a man of Ms high position, a sou of the then recent governor, Robert Barclay, himself identified largely and in many ways with'the proprietary affairs, a member of the council, and afterwards appointed surveyor general, (April, 1692,) would have ventured to act as a deputy surveyor if he had not been duly authorized so to do. It is hardly credible that tho council of proprietors would have allowed his surveys (and there are great numbers of them) to have remained on their records without some protest, if he had not held a commission as deputy surveyor. I think that they, and all claiming under them, are estopped from denying his authority. Wo have the positive testimony of the historian, William A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 F. 199, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baeder-v-jennings-circtdnj-1889.