Crandol v. Garrison

169 A. 507, 115 N.J. Eq. 11, 14 Backes 11, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 15
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 169 A. 507 (Crandol v. Garrison) 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
Crandol v. Garrison, 169 A. 507, 115 N.J. Eq. 11, 14 Backes 11, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 15 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Complainant heretofore petitioned this court for leave to file a bill of review for the purpose of obtaining a correction or reversal of two final decrees heretofore entered in two partition proceedings. Leave was granted, the bill filed and the matter has been heard on final hearing.

The facts disclosed by the evidence and the files of the two partition suits aforesaid disclose that one William F. Garrison died in the year 1904, testate, and seized of one thousand acres of land and upwards, in Cape May county, New Jersey. This land consisted of various tracts and parcels of land, purchased at various times and scattered, as to some of it, in various sections. Some of the land was under cultivation, some timber, some marsh and bog land. The exact boundaries of the tract, I think, were not ascertainable without the benefit of a survey, and until 1930. *Page 13

At the time of the death of Garrison, he owned and lived on a farm which comprised in area four hundred and fifty-four acres. This farm, by the will of the said Garrison, was devised to his son, Belford Garrison, who was, at the time of his father's death, an infant of about the age of seventeen years. I think that there can be no question but that Belford Garrison did not know the boundaries of the farm and that he thought it comprised tracts from 1 to 8 inclusive, as delineated on the map or survey annexed to the bill of complaint.

Belford went into possession after his father's death, i.e., rented the farm and exercised acts of ownership until January 16, 1917, when he conveyed the same to the complainant herein.

Complainant went into possession, and he did not know the exact boundaries of the land so conveyed to him. There can be no question, however, that he exercised full ownership of all of the tracts mentioned in the bill of complaint, save some parts of tract No. 11. I think that all of the parties probably considered the farm to comprise tracts 1 to 8, both inclusive.

As to tract No. 11, complainant had purchased from Francis Garrison a portion thereof in 1915, then believing that Garrison was the owner thereof, and having no idea that Belford Garrison was the owner by virtue of the devise from his father.

Thus the situation stood, until sometime late in 1929, when Francis Garrison made some claim to tract No. 2, whereupon complainant had a survey made, according to which it appeared that Francis Garrison had no title to tract No. 2 or to any of the other tracts from 1 to 11, both inclusive, and, if the survey was correct, it also appeared that Francis Garrison had no right to convey the portion of tract No. 11, which complainant had purchased from him as aforesaid. With this information in hand, complainant filed a bill in this court, asking for a construction of the will of William F. Garrison, with the result that a decree was entered therein, adjudging:

"That that portion of the last will and testament of William *Page 14 F. Garrison, deceased, designated as the `fourteenth' paragraph thereof and reading as follows: `I do give, devise and bequeath to my son, Belford Garrison my farm and cottage, which I heired of my father,' was intended to and did include and comprehend all of the land and premises" comprised in tracts 1 to 11, both inclusive, and thus it became apparent that complainant did not have a clear title to tracts No. 2, No. 10 and No. 11, by reason of the two decrees in partition, now the subject of review.

William F. Garrison left him surviving seven children and, after specific devises of portions of his land, including the devise to Belford of his "farm and cottage," he devised the remainder thereof to these children, so that they each became entitled to a one-seventh interest in the real estate late of their father which he had not otherwise disposed of by his will.

A bill to partition these lands was filed in 1905 by William Garrison and others, against Belford Garrison and others, resulting in a decree that each of the children were entitled to a one-seventh interest in the land described in the bill, in which were included tracts No. 2, No. 10 and No. 11, the subject of this present controversy, and they were sold by a special master, as directed by the decree, to Francis Garrison as to tract No. 2 and to Edward P. Garrison as to tracts No. 10 and No. 11.

Thereafter, Edward P. Garrison died intestate, leaving six brothers and sisters and, in 1906, Francis Garrison filed a bill to partition land which he claimed he and his brothers and sisters owned as tenants in common, as heirs of Edward. A decree was entered in these proceedings and the land sold by a special master, in pursuance thereof and, at the sale, Francis Garrison became the purchaser, and there was included in the conveyance to him tracts No. 10 and No. 11 aforesaid.

So that, Francis Garrison had a paper title by virtue of a special master's deed, in the first partition suit, of tracts No. 2 and No. 10, and tract No. 11 by virtue of a special master's deed under the second partition suit, and in December *Page 15 of 1932, this court, by its decree aforesaid, declared tracts No. 2, No. 10 and No. 11 to have been included in the specific devise in the will of William F. Garrison to Belford Garrison, and which lands Belford Garrison deeded to complainant in 1917, as aforesaid. The question before me is, should these partition decrees be reversed in so far as they relate to tracts No. 2, No. 10 and No. 11?

Defendants say that the decrees should not be reversed or corrected because Francis Garrison has been the record owner thereof for over twenty years, and the complainant has been guilty of laches in such manner as to bar his suit.

It must be borne in mind that Belford Garrison was an infant when the decrees in the partition suits were entered, and that he did not attain his majority until 1909.

The allegation upon which complainant rests his right to relief is, generally speaking, that the testimony upon which the special master advised the two decrees in the partition suits was false in so far as the same referred to tracts No. 2, No. 10 and No. 11, in that "said testimony made false reference to the identity and location thereof, thus causing the special master to find that said land was the property of all of the parties to said suits, rather than that it was, as to these tracts, lands devised to Belford by his father as `my farm and cottage.'" Proofs submitted before the master are before me and complainant also submitted evidence, at the final hearing, of a surveyor who surveyed the lands which this court has decreed were devised to Belford as "my farm and cottage," with which lands the surveyor is familiar, and I think there can be no question but that the testimony given before the special master in both partition suits was untrue as to the location of tracts No. 2, No. 10 and No. 11, as well as to the character of these lands.

It will serve no useful purpose to recite the testimony as given before the master in the partition suits as to locations,c., and compare it with the evidence adduced by complainant, showing the falsity and incorrectness thereof. Suffice it to say that my close study of the testimony of the witnesses appearing before the master convinces me that they knew *Page 16 not whereof they spoke. Counsel for complainant, in his brief, has pointed out the incorrectness of the testimony as given before the master. I have checked it and consider it as a part hereof as a basis for my conclusions as above stated. In this connection, it must not be overlooked that there was no contradiction of the testimony of Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 A. 507, 115 N.J. Eq. 11, 14 Backes 11, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandol-v-garrison-njch-1933.