Ferriday v. Grosvenor

86 A. 569, 86 Conn. 698, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 A. 569 (Ferriday v. Grosvenor) 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
Ferriday v. Grosvenor, 86 A. 569, 86 Conn. 698, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 72 (Colo. 1913).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

In September, 1888, the plaintiff acquired title to a tract of land containing seventy-seven acres, known as the Hall farm, located in the town of Pomfret, abutting westerly on the highway known as the Norwich and Worcester turnpike, easterly on land formerly of Payson Grosvenor, and southerly on land called the Jepson land. A map or plan of the land conveyed, made by one Sabin, a civil engineer, was made a part of the deed by reference. There was at the time of the conveyance an old fence extending easterly from *700 the highway to the Payson Grosvenor land. The line of this fence was designated on the Sabin map as indicating the southern line of the Hall farm, the tract which was conveyed. Shortly after the purchase, the plaintiff set out upon the land, a short distance north of this old fence, a number of oak, elm, and pine trees for ornamental purposes, and to conceal from view upon her premises an old barn which stood upon the Jepson land. She has since conveyed the easterly portion of her purchase to one Ash, but retains the westerly portion.

The defendant claims title to the Jepson land by deed from one Atwater, dated June 12th, 1907. This deed bounds him on the north by the plaintiff’s land, west by the turnpike, and east by the Payson Grosvenor land. In 1910 he erected a wire fence in a straight line easterly from the point on the turnpike where the old fence above mentioned began to the point on the Payson Grosvenor land where the old fence ended. The old fence was not straight. In some places it extended north of the line on which the defendant’s new fence stands, and at the west end where it left the highway it ran at a considerable angle to the south of the line of the new fence, then ran easterly nearly parallel with it, then ran northeasterly until it crossed the line of the present new fence a little to the east of the plaintiff’s present east line. The trees which the plaintiff set out, as before mentioned, and other trees and shrubbery, were upon the land, four fifths of an acre in extent, which is included between this portion of the old fence and the fence which the defendant erected. Some of these trees were cut down, and some were grubbed out by the defendant, and others were trimmed and left standing. These facts were not disputed.

The defendant claims that his land extends to the line of the new fence. The plaintiff claims that her line *701 extends to the line of the old fence, an<^ it is for the defendant’s entry upon the land north of that, and his erection of the fence and damage to the trees and shrubbery, that she brings this action.

The court has found, as conclusions from other facts stated in its finding, “that the plaintiff had not title to the premises in dispute, but the defendant had such ■title, and that the true line between their lands was that claimed by the defendant on which was built a new fence.”

The plaintiff claims that these conclusions are wrong, and that the facts upon which they are based are found without evidence and against the evidence, and asks to have the finding corrected and the judgment reversed.

An examination of the evidence convinces us that these claims must be sustained. Among the facts found, upon which the court’s conclusion is founded, are these: Edgar M. Smith, in 1849, conveyed by warranty deed to Eliza Hall Ward the Jepson tract, bounded therein easterly by Payson Grosvenor, westerly by the Norwich and Worcester turnpike road, southerly by land of Job Williams, and northerly by remaining land of the grantor; the deed reciting that “these presents being intended to comprise thirty acres of ground with a dwelling-house and buildings where Mrs. B. Partridge now resides, the east and west lines extending as far northerly as will include thirty acres and no more.” Eliza Hall Ward died domiciled in New York, intestate, in 1872, leaving as her sole heir at law a son, Henry H. Ward. Said Henry H. Ward subsequently, in the year 1872, died, leaving a will executed agreeably to the laws of New York, and admitted to probate there by the Surrogate’s Court of the county' of New York, but which has not been proven or recorded in any Court of Probate in this State. In a *702 proceeding by those claiming to be residuary devisees of this tract under this will, a partition sale was made of the Jepson tract. The grantee under this sale conveyed the tract to Atwater, who was the grantor of the defendant. Ellen M. Sessions, mentioned in the third clause of the will of Ward, died November 12th, 1888. Mary Hall Sessions, her daughter, named in the same section of the will, and who married Charles Jepson, died in 1883. Ann Eliza Partridge, named in the will, died in 1902. Said Charles Jepson died between 1902 and 1905. The original line of the old fence was practically the same as the line of the defendant’s new fence. The defendant and his predecessors in title have been in the open, notorious and exclusive possession of the premises in dispute for more than twenty-five years. The southern line of the Jepson tract is not established by the descriptions in any of said deeds, and was not determined by any evidence upon the trial. The area of the defendant’s land conveyed to him by Atwater, assuming the line of the old fence to be correct, is twenty-nine acres and seven and one-half rods; if the new line of fence is correct, it is just short of thirty acres. There are many other facts found which the plaintiff claims should be corrected; but from the view which we take of the case it is not necessary to refer to them.

There is no finding that the plaintiff was not in actual possession of the premises in dispute at the time the defendant took the deed of the Jepson tract and committed the trespasses complained of, except the-negative one in the finding that the defendant and his predecessors in title have been in exclusive possession thereof for twenty-five years.

The plaintiff alleged ownership and possession of the locus at the time of the alleged trespasses, and in support of her allegations laid in evidence her deed of September 14th, 1888, already referred to, and other deeds *703 showing title in her to the Hall farm by a complete chain of mesne conveyances back to the same Edgar M. Smith through whom the defendant claims to trace his title, and who, it was agreed by the defendant’s counsel, had title in 1849 to the entire tract comprising the Hall farm and the Jepson land. She supplemented this evidence of title by evidence tending to show continuous possession by her as owner ever since her purchase of the premises described in her deed up to the old fence indicated on the Sabin map. She thus made out a prima facie case of both ownership and possession.

The defendant claimed that the deed from Smith to Mrs. Ward, in 1849, carved out of the entire farm, which he then owned, a tract of precisely thirty acres. The deed does not fix the northern boundary. It is to be north of the Partridge buildings, and the side lines are to extend as far north as will include thirty acres. If the termini of the southerly boundary were then known to the parties, as we must presume they were, the description could be made certain by measuring an equal distance northerly on each side line to points where a straight line, or a line parallel with the southerly line joining them, would leave a tract of thirty acres to the south of it.

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Bluebook (online)
86 A. 569, 86 Conn. 698, 1913 Conn. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferriday-v-grosvenor-conn-1913.