Frank Towers Corp. v. Laviana

97 A.2d 567, 140 Conn. 45, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 9, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 97 A.2d 567 (Frank Towers Corp. v. Laviana) 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
Frank Towers Corp. v. Laviana, 97 A.2d 567, 140 Conn. 45, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 204 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover a deposit of $5000 which it paid to the defendants on a contract for the purchase of a motel [47]*47and tourist court. The court rendered judgment for the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed.

The finding, which is not subject to correction, discloses these facts: The defendants own a motel and tourist court on North Broad Street in Meriden. On December 10, 1951, they executed a written contract to sell this property to the plaintiff, a New York corporation. The transfer of title was to be made in the office of the defendants’ attorney in Meriden on or before December 31,1951. The purchase price was $204,000. The plaintiff paid a deposit of $5000 and agreed to assume a first mortgage of $25,678.39, to pay $55,000 in cash and to execute a purchase money mortgage for the balance of $118,321.61. Taxes, interest on the first mortgage, water rates, and sewer and electric light charges were to be adjusted in cash as of the date of transfer. The contract contained a provision that the defendants “agree to convey said real estate to the [plaintiff] by a good and sufficient warranty deed in proper form duly executed . . . covering the absolute fee of the above premises free of all encumbrances,” with certain exceptions not of moment in the disposition of this case. It was further stipulated in the contract that the “premises are being operated as Colonial Park Tourist Court and the operation as a motel and tourist court are in conformity with the laws of the City and Town of Meriden and the State of Connecticut.” The parties agreed further that “[t]ime shall be of the essence of this contract, and in the event the [plaintiff] fails to perform the contract on its part, said sum of Five Thousand (5,000) Dollars shall be considered and held to be liquidated damages for its failure to perform.”

Following the execution of the contract, an experienced title searcher made an examination of the [48]*48chain of title. At the time and place appointed for closing the contract, the plaintiff made a tender in accordance with the terms of the agreement- but claimed that the title was defective because of uncertainty in the description of the southerly boundary of the premises to be conveyed, and also because there was a violation of the zoning ordinances. The plaintiff requested that the defects be corrected and suggested a postponement of the dosing for thirty days. The defendants, however, insisted that the contract be consummated. Thereupon, the plaintiff demanded the return of its $5000 deposit, which the defendants refused.

The decision of the case turns upon the question whether the defects complained of were such as to justify the refusal of the plaintiff to perform its contract. The premises to be sold and conveyed were described as follows: “[CJertain real property and personal property situated in the Town of Meriden, County of New Haven and State of Connecticut shown on ‘Map of Land conveyed to Earl & Geraldine Laviana North Broad St., Meriden, Conn. May 1948. Scale 1" - 30'. H. E. Daggett, Civil Engineer, Meriden, Connecticut’ on file in the Meriden Town Clerk’s Office, and bounded: Northerly by land now or formerly of Josaphat Lussier, as shown on said map, four hundred thirty-nine and one tenth (439.1) feet; Easterly on North Broad Street, as shown on said map, two hundred thirty-one and fifteen one-hundredths (231.15) feet; Southerly by land formerly of Emma C. and Albert J. Buel, as shown on said map, more lately of Joseph LeMay, four hundred sixty-seven and three tenths (467.3) feet; and Westerly by land now or formerly of Minnie Cerate, as shown on said map, two hundred thirty-seven and five tenths (237.5) feet.” There was [49]*49no question of the competency of H. E. Daggett, the engineer who made the map referred to in the description. This map shows the southerly line, which the plaintiff claims is so uncertain as to render the title defective, as extending westward from North Broad Street to a stone wall running in a northerly and southerly direction, which marked the boundary line between the property to be conveyed and land adjoining on the west owned by Minnie Cerute.

The southerly boundary line as set forth on the map corresponds with the southerly boundary line as shown on a map on file in the Meriden land records since 1893, both as to its easterly terminus, on the highway, and its westerly terminus at a stone wall. The latter map was prepared, apparently, at the behest of the heirs of Benjamin Twiss, at the time of the distribution of his estate. It shows the southerly boundary of the property as marked by a fence, and the westerly boundary, by a stone wall which separated it from the land adjoining on the west, then owned by Patrick Kinney. The map, however, gives the length of the southerly boundary line as 552.5 feet.

The named defendant acquired title from Albert J. and Emma Ruel in 1948. The length of the southerly boundary in the Ruel deed is stated to be 467.3 feet. The property is described as being bounded easterly on North Broad Street and westerly on land of Minnie Cerute, the adjoining proprietor. However, in the deed by which the Ruels acquired title from Pierre Dumas in 1941, the length of this southerly boundary is given as 252.5 feet, although the land is also described as being bounded easterly on the highway and westerly on the land of Patrick Kinney, who was then the adjoining proprietor. The plaintiff’s claim is that the difference in the statement of the [50]*50length of the southerly boundary makes the title defective. The length of 252.5 feet is also given for the southerly boundary in the deed by which Dumas acquired title from P. Ethan Hull in 1901, and in the deed by which Hull acquired title from Benjamin Page, acting as a committee appointed by the Superior Court for Hartford County in a judgment rendered in 1901 in an action entitled Fidelity Co., Conservator of Herbert M. Twiss v. Fannie L. Twiss et al. In these two conveyances, however, the land is described as being bounded easterly on the highway and westerly on named proprietors, so that the easterly and westerly termini of the southerly boundary are determined by known and fixed monuments as established by the map hereinbefore referred to as on file in the Meriden land records since 1893.

It is obvious that the change from 552.5 feet, as shown on the map, to 252.5 feet, as shown in the Page, Hull and Dumas deeds, is nothing more than a scrivener’s error. Irrespective of the length of the southerly boundary in feet, the controlling factor is that, in each of the deeds in the chain of title, as in the contract itself, the easterly terminus of the southerly boundary is described to be on a public highway, and the westerly terminus on the land of an adjoining proprietor, which land is separated from the land of the defendants by the stone wall appearing on both maps.

Where the boundaries of land are described by known and fixed monuments which are definite and certain, the monuments will prevail over courses and distances. Raymond v. Nash, 57 Conn. 447, 453, 18 A. 714; Benedict v. Gaylord, 11 Conn. 332, 335; Higley v. Bidwell, 9 Conn. 447, 452; Belden v. Seymour, 8 Conn. 19, 25; Beach v. Whittlesey, 73 Conn. 530, [51]*51534, 48 A. 350; Patton, Titles, §99; 11 C.J.S. 603, § 50, 628, § 56. A highway has always been regarded as a fixed monument. Texas Co. v. Slosberg, 112 Conn. 357, 363, 152 A. 152; Temple v. Benson,

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.2d 567, 140 Conn. 45, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-towers-corp-v-laviana-conn-1953.