Carney v. Hennessey

60 A. 129, 77 Conn. 577, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 9, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 A. 129 (Carney v. Hennessey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carney v. Hennessey, 60 A. 129, 77 Conn. 577, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 16 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Hamersley, J. The acts of trespass complained of were done on a piece of land lymg between a northerly line including the face of the plaintiff’s building, and a southerly line including the face of the projection of the defendant’s building, the distance between the face of the projection and the face of the plaintiff’s building being about four feet. The plaintiff bases her claim of ownership of this land, or that portion of it on which the alleged trespass may have been committed, upon the deed of Joseph Fairchild to his daughter, Mrs. Easton, of October 16th, 1874. Fairchild owned at the

The acts of trespass complained of were done on a piece of land lymg between a northerly line including the face of the plaintiff’s building, and a southerly line including the face of the projection of the defendant’s building, the distance between the face of the projection and the face of the plaintiff’s building being about four feet. The plaintiff bases her claim of ownership of this land, or that portion of it on which the alleged trespass may have been committed, upon the deed of Joseph Fairchild to his daughter, Mrs. Easton, of October 16th, 1874. Fairchild owned at the *581 time of conveyance not only the land conveyed, but the land to the north and south of it, and described the land conveyed as bounded on the north and south by his own land. He gives no point as the beginning or ending of any of the boundary lines; the only certainty as to the location of the boundaries being that they must include the building he has recently erected, which is expressly conveyed by the deed, and presumably must exclude his own residence. Any location of the land conveyed which will give a frontage on State Street of 28 feet and on Olive Street of about 35 feet, and include the recently constructed building, 24 by 36 feet between the boundary lines, whether straight or not, measuring about 67 feet on the north and about 90 feet on the south, will conform to the description. It is patent that a location in substantial accord with the description may exclude all the land in dispute, or may include any part of it; and that there is nothing in the deed either by way of direct description or reference to monument, course, or distance, by which to determine the real location, within this limitation, of the land conveyed. In such a case, resort must be had to the acts and conduct of the parties at and following the time when possession under the deed was given. In this case the burden of proof is on the plaintiff, and she cannot affirm ownership of land by virtue of the Fairchild deed, southerly of a boundary line including the south face of her building, without resort to evidence outside the deed that a line farther south was intended by the parties and accepted by them at and after the time of the conveyance. The plaintiff insisted that the conduct of the parties at the time of the conveyance to Mrs. Easton proved that the land intended to be conveyed, and of which she took possession in pursuance of the deed, included land southerly of the building conveyed to her, and that the southerly boundary line of this land was 82 feet from and parallel with the southerly boundary line of Joseph Fairchild’s premises, viz, the line dividing his land from that of Abram Lewis.

The defendants insisted that the evidence proved that the building conveyed to his daughter was built by Fairchild on *582 tlie line of an existing fence dividing the land used as his home lot or yard from that used for other purposes, and that at the time of the conveyance the south face of the new building and the remainder of said fence extending through to Olive Street formed the northern line of his said yard and the southern line of the land accepted by his daughter as that conveyed by the deed; and that the evidence also proved that from the time of the conveyance, said Fairchild and the subsequent owners of his land had continuously occupied and. used the land lying south of said line.

In 1881 the land of Joseph Fairchild passed by devise to his five sons as tenants in common, and by means of releases between themselves Edward L. Fairchild, in 1885, became sole owner of an equity of redemption of that portion of his father’s land adjoining and south of that conveyed to Mrs. Easton in 1874. This equity he conveyed by quitclaim deed to Spier and Straus in February, 1891, who in the following month conveyed the land by warranty deed to the defendants. In both deeds the land is described as bounded southerly on land formerly of Joseph Fairchild, and westerly on State Street 46 feet. It appears from the plaintiff’s requests to charge, that upon argument to the jury the plaintiff claimed that the documentary and other evidence proved that Edward L. Fairchild, one of the five sons to whom Joseph Fairchild had in 1881 devised all his real estate, became, in 1885, by force of the various deeds of release between these sons, which were produced in evidence, the sole owner of all Joseph Fairchild’s land south of that which he had conveyed to Mrs. Easton; that subsequently he conveyed, in 1885, to his brother Sidney B. Fairchild, that portion of this land lying south of a line commencing on State Street at a point just 86 feet north of the land of Abram Lewis and running easterly to the land of the railroad company, being parallel with and 36 feet from the land of Abram Lewis, which formed the southern boundary of Joseph Fair-child’s original lot; and in 1891 conveyed to Spier and Straus, who immediately afterwards conveyed to the defendants, just 46 feet of land as measured on State Street, *583 bounding it northerly on land formerly of Joseph Fairchild, and southerly on that he had conveyed to his brother Sidney; that Edward never conveyed any more than these two pieces of land, malting in all 82 feet of land; that the deed of Edward to the defendants’ immediate grantors conveyed no land north of a line running from State Street to Olive Street parallel with and 82 feet from the north boundary of the Abram Lewis land; and therefore, unless they could prove a title by adverse possession to land north of this line, the defendants had no defense to this action, so far as the plaintiff’s title to the land is concerned.

It is obvious from an inspection of the record, that the facts affirmed in this claim are open to more or less serious question, and that in any event the conclusion is unsound. In view of the state of evidence as recited in the finding,' the defendants had a defense to the action so far as the plaintiff’s title to the land is concerned, unless the plaintiff sustained her burden of proving that the deed of Joseph Fairchild to Mrs. Easton included land south of the building conveyed by it, and upon this question the deeds of Edward Fairchild in 1885 are not conclusive. The plaintiff put her argument in support of this claim in the form of an affirmative proposition of fact and law, and requested the court to adopt this proposition as its own, and so charge the jury. This request should have been absolutely denied. The court did charge the jury as requested in the language of the plaintiff, attempting, however, to indicate by the interpolation of a word or two the facts stated as affirmed by the court, and those stated as claims of the plaintiff. The erroneous conclusion was charged unqualifiedly in the language of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 129, 77 Conn. 577, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carney-v-hennessey-conn-1905.