Crary v. . Goodman

22 N.Y. 170
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 22 N.Y. 170 (Crary v. . Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crary v. . Goodman, 22 N.Y. 170 (N.Y. 1860).

Opinion

*172 Selden, J.

The premises in dispute are a part of lot No. 14, township 8, range 6, of the lands formerly belonging to the Holland Land Company in the county of Cattaraugus. Both parties claimed under the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, the deed under which the defendant claimed having been executed by said company to Daniel Huntley, in November, 1838, and that under which the plaintiff claimed by the same grantors to the plaintiff himself, in October, 1845. The deed to Huntley conveyed the west part of the lot, and the premises described were bounded on the west by the west line of the lot, and on the east by a line parallel to the west line, and at a given distance therefrom. These boundaries did not include the land in dispute; but Huntley, the grantee, under the mistaken supposition- that such land was embraced in his deed, took possession of, occupied and cultivated it as his own, from the date of his deed, until after the conveyance from the Farmers’ Loan Company to the plaintiff in 1845; and this occupation was continued by- Huntley, and those claiming under him, up to the commencement of this suit. At the time of the execution of the deed to the plaintiff, therefore, which deed embraced the premises in controversy, those premises were in the actual occupation of Huntley, claiming them under his deed; which however, as has been already said, and as clearly appeared upon the trial, did not in fact embrace them. The plaintiff’s deed, executed in 1845, covered the premises in question in connection with the residue of the easterly portion of the lot. These are all the facts which it is necessary to take into consideration in disposing of the question presented, viz.: whether this possession of Huntley, originating in a mistake as to the true boundaries of his lot, constituted such an adverse possession as rendered the plaintiff’s deed void under the champerty act. (1 R. S., 739, § 147.)

The great majority of the cases upon the subject of adverse possession have arisen, not under this act, but under the statute of limitations, by which an adverse possession of twenty years is made sufficient to bar the claim of the real owner. (2 R. S., 293, §§ 5, 8, et seq.) If there were no difference in the *173 construction of these two acts, in respect to what constitutes an adverse possession under them, respectively, then perhaps the question might be regarded as settled by authority; for although there does not appear to have been any direct and explicit decision upon the point, in cases depending upon the latter statute, still the question has so often arisen incidentally in those cases, and its proper solution has been so often impliedly assumed, and by so many different tribunals, that no doubt remains as to the current of judicial opinion upon the subject.

Thus in Jackson v. Loyd, stated by Woodworth, J., in Jackson v. Woodruff (1 Cow., 286), where the defendant, having a deed for lot Eo. 4, took possession of lot Eo. 5, supposing it to be his lot, and claiming it as such, the Supreme Court of this State held that the defendant could not establish an adverse possession of the whole lot, by the actual improvement of a part only. This plainly implies, that to the extent of the actual occupancy of the defendant, an adverse possession was established; and that the case was so understood by Judge Woodworth ; and that he approved of the doctrine is evident from his previous remarks, in support of which the case of Jackson v. Loyd was cited.

The Supreme Court of New Hampshire recognized the same doctrine in Enfield v. Day (7 N. H., 457), and Hale v. Glidden (10 N. H., 397). The first of these cases related to a gore of land lying between the towns of Enfield and Grantham. The proprietors of Enfield, supposing this gore to belong to them, had entered upon a portion of it, claiming the whole, and occupied such portion for more than twenty years; but it turned out that the gore was not embraced in their charter. They brought ejectment against the defendant, who was in possession of a lot within the gore. The court charged the jury, that if the proprietors of Enfield had entered upon, and had peaceable possession of the gore for more than twenty years, claiming it under their charter, they were entitled to recover, and that an entry into part, was in law for this purpose an entry into the whole. Upon motion for a new trial, this latter branch of the charge was held to be erroneous; but *174 the Chief Justice, who delivered the opinion of the court, expressly conceded, that to the extent of the actual occupancy of the plaintiffs, an adverse possession was made out; but held that the question as to the extent of that occupancy should have been submitted to the jury. • He said: “ With regard to a seisin in fact, which would be good as against this tenant, the cause was not put to the jury at all on that.”

In Hale v. Glidden (10 N. H., 397), the language of the court was still more explicit. There the ancestor of the defendant, in locating the tract conveyed to him had, by mistake it is to be assumed, as the case does not show to the contrary, taken possession of land outside the boundaries contained in his deed. He, however, and the defendant who succeeded him, had actually improved only part of this excess, inclosing the residue by a brush fence, and occasionally cutting firewood upon it. A verdict was obtained by the defendant as to the whole of the land in controversy, which the court set aside on the ground that he could not hold, by virtue of his adverse possession, beyond the'bounds of his actual occupancy and improvement. The court speaking of the defendant says: ‘' There is sufficient evidence to show that he held adversely beyond the limits of the one hundred acres (the contents of the deed) claiming title in himself; and twenty years actual possession will give him a title to the lands thus holden.” This, although not an authoritative decision, is nevertheless a very explicit declaration of opinion, upon the point we are considering.

The Court of Appeals of Kentucky has taken the same view of this question. It was held in McKinney v. Kenny (1 A. K. Marsh, 460), that a settler who, in taking possession under his own claim, accidentally and unintentionally intrudes upon the claim of another, acquires thereby no interfering possession outside of his actual close.- It was, however, assumed throughout this case, as well as in the subsequent cases of Smith v. Morrow (Sel. Cases, 5 Lit., 210) and Hunter v. Chrisman (6 B. Monroe, 463), that to the extent of the actual inclosure the possession in such cases must be regarded as adverse. There is, so far as I am aware, no decision nor any intimation to the *175 contrary in any judicial opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.Y. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crary-v-goodman-ny-1860.