Busby v. Littlefield

33 N.H. 76
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 33 N.H. 76 (Busby v. Littlefield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Busby v. Littlefield, 33 N.H. 76 (N.H. 1856).

Opinion

Eastman, J.

Some of the most important matters set forth in the complainant’s bill are admitted by the defendants’ answers. The deed from Trickey to Busby of the hundred foot lot, and the boundaries of the same ; the erection and occupation of the buildings; the bargain for a portion of the lot only, and the error in all of the deeds from Busby to Jordan, and Jordan to Crawford, and Crawford to Littlefield, are facts not in dispute. It is conceded by the defendant that Littlefield has a [84]*84legal title, derived from Busby, through Crawford and Jordan, to sixty-eight feet of the lot, for which no consideration has been paid, and which in equity belongs to Busby. It is also conceded that when Crawford took his deed from Jordan he was aware of the mistake, and knew that he was receiving a deed of land which he did not purchase. The same may likewise be said with regard to Littlefield; he was well aware of the error in the deeds, and he took his, containing the error, with a fall knowledge that it covered a lot three times as large as that which he purchased. Whatever may have been the controversy between the parties originally, when the suit at law was commenced, it is now narrowed down to one question only, and that is, whether the bargain between Busby and Jordan was for thirty feet front on Chesnut street, or for thirty-two ; and consequently whether the deed from Busby to Jordan should have been drawn for the thirty or thirty-two feet ?

The description in the deed is as follows: “ A certain lot of land on the west side of Chestnut street, in said Dover, with the buildings thereon standing, beginning at the southeasterly corner of lot conveyed to me by John Trickey, by deed dated August 29, 1844, thence on my line northeasterly, thirty feet, to F. W. Baptist meeting-house, thence northwesterly one hundred feet, to land of Parker Clay, thence southwesterly thirty feet, to southwest corner of my lot, thence southeasterly one hundred feet, to the bound begun at. The whole of the lot so conveyed to me by said Trickey being subject to a mortgage to the Savings Bank for the county of Strafford, for $600, and to Oliver Libby for the sum of $500.”

The error in the deed consisted in this: By beginning the first course at the corner of the lot, whereas it should have begun, according to the complainant’s statement, seventy feet from the corner ; or, according to the defendants’ admissions, sixty-eight feet from the corner.

In deciding the question, the first point which arises is this: To what extent are the answers to be regarded as disproving the plaintiff’s case ?

[85]*85As a general rule, where a replication is put into an answer, and the parties proceed to a hearing, all the allegations of the answer which are responsive to the bill, will be taken as true, unless they are disproved by two witnesses, or by one witness with corroborating circumstances. 2 Story’s Eq. Juris, sec. 1528; 2 Danl.’s Ch. Prac. 983; Gresley’s Eq. Ev. 4; Hollister v. Barkley, 11 N. H. 501; Dodge v. Griswold, 12 N. H. 573; Hughes v. Blake, 6 Wharton 468; Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 Johns. Ch. 92; Miles v. Miles, 32 N. H. 147.

When, however, the answer of the defendant is not responsive to the bill, but sets up affirmative allegations, in opposition to or in avoidance of the plaintiff’s demand, and is replied to, the answer is of no avail in respect to such allegations; and the defendant is as much bound to establish the allegations so made, by independent testimony, as the complainant is to sustain his bill. 2 Danl. Ch. 984, note; Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 Johns. Ch. 88; also note to that case; Wakeman v. Grover, 4 Paige 23; Bank v. Lewis, 8 Pick. 113; Paynes v. Coles & al., 1 Munford 373; Thompson v. Lamb, 7 Veasey 587.

Story, in speaking of the rule that an answer when responsive to the bill is evidence for the defendant, says: “ We are, however, carefully to distinguish between cases of this sort, where the answer contains positive allegations as to facts responsive to the bill, and cases where the answer, admitting or denying the facts in the bill, sets up other facts in defence or avoidance. In the latter case the defendant’s answer is no proof whatsoever of the facts so stated; but they must be proved by independent testimony.” 2 Story’s Eq. Juris., sec. 1529.

In Beckwith v. Butler, 1 Washington 224, a bill was filed in the Court of Chancery in Virginia against an administrator for distributive shares of an intestate’s estate. The answer, among other things, set up a gift from the intestate to the administrator of a bond, which formed the principal part of the personal estate. This allegation was not supported by proof, and the chancellor directed the administrator to account for the amount of the bond. The defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals, [86]*86and the decree was affirmed. In delivering the opinion of the court the President observed, that “ the answer of a defendant in chancery is not evidence where it asserts a right affimatively, in opposition to the plaintiff’s demand. In such a case he is as much bound to establish it by independent testimony, as the plaintiff is to sustain his bill.” And he adds that it would be monstrous indeed if an executor, when called upon to account, were permitted to swear himself into a title to part of the testator’s estate.

Upon the doctrine of the authorities, as well as upon the equity of the case, it would seem that these answers, so far as they set up an error in the deeds different from that complained of by the plaintiff, and different from that appearing by the deed of Busby to Jordan, and thereby making a new demand, should be established by independent testimony.

The complainant in his bill puts the specific interrogatory, whether the bargain was not for a lot of land thirty feet only in width, on Chestnut street ? And the defendants, instead of answering directly and positively that such was not the bargain, “ affirm” that the bargain was for thirty-two feet on Chestnut street; and they then proceed to detail various circumstances and conversations with Busby tending to show that the bargain was as they state it.

It is true that the purport of their answers is to deny the case made by the plaintiff in his bill, but there is not that direct, positive and unequivocal denial, which would appear to be required by the rule in order to make the answers conclusive upon the complainant, unless controlled by evidence. The defendants, in fact, set up a new case. They admit that there was a mistake in the deed from Busby to Jordan, and that the error was knowingly continued in the subsequent deeds. They concede that the attorney, in drawing the deed, commenced at the wrong point, but they “ affirm” that instead of commencing at the point designated and claimed by the plaintiff, he should have commenced two feet further south, and thus give them two feet more of the width of the lot. This is the demand which they make ; [87]*87and making it, it seems to us that they should prove it. That there was a mistake in the deed, all admit; but when the defendants make a new demand, not indicated by the deed, nor intimated by the complainant, by which they are to acquire a part of the estate of the complainant, they should establish their claim by evidence independent of their own answers.

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Related

Wakeman v. Grover
4 Paige Ch. 23 (New York Court of Chancery, 1832)
Gillespie v. Moon
2 Johns. Ch. 585 (New York Court of Chancery, 1817)
De Riemer v. Cantillon
4 Johns. Ch. 85 (New York Court of Chancery, 1819)
Keisselbrack v. Livingston
4 Johns. Ch. 144 (New York Court of Chancery, 1819)
Hugg v. Brown
6 Whart. 468 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1841)

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.H. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busby-v-littlefield-nh-1856.