General Proprietors of Eastern Division v. Force's Executors

72 N.J. Eq. 56
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 72 N.J. Eq. 56 (General Proprietors of Eastern Division v. Force's Executors) 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
General Proprietors of Eastern Division v. Force's Executors, 72 N.J. Eq. 56 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Pitney, Y. C.

In ordei to clearly understand the character of the issues it is worth while to advert briefly to the history of the complainants, their mode of conducting business, and the situation of their affairs at the time Mr. Force first became connected with them.

The complainants, as is well known, are successors in title to the original grantees of the executors of Sir George Carteret, of the eastern division of New Jersey. The twelve original grantees conveyed an equal undivided one-half to twelve other proprietors, and the property has ever since been held in shares of one-twenty-fourth each. In 1676 Sir George Carteret, and four other persons who were the grantees of Lord Berkeley, his original tenant in common of the whole province, entered into what is known in history as the guinti-partite deed (1 N. J. Arch. 205; Leam. [61]*61& Spi. 61), by which they agreed to divide the Province of New Jersey into two parts by a line which was described as running from the northerly branch or part of the Delaware river, and the most northerly point or boundary of the whole tract, agreed upon and called the north partition point, and from thence southward by a straight line to the east side of Little Egg Harbor, which was fixed as the south partition point. This division line was finally established in 1743 by the running of what is called the Lawrence line, under an act of the legislature of 1719. Allin. L. p. 43.

Prior to the act of 1719, and the running of the Lawrence line thereunder, the true division line between East and West'Jersey was, of course, unknown, and numerous surveys and returns had been made by the East Jersey Proprietors west of where it was finally established, and vice versa by the West Jersey Proprietors east of that line, and the object of the act of 1719 was not only to have the line run and established, but to settle and quiet all titles under the mixed surveys. In point of fact, all the southern and most of the western part of Morris county was located before 1719 and held under West Jersey patents or locations.

George Keith, on the part of the East Jersey Proprietors, had previously, in 1687, rün a line from Little Egg Harbor northwesterly as far as the Earitan river, the course of which line was farther west than the Lawrence line, and which Keith line now forms the boundary between Burlington and Ocean counties. The wedge-shaped piece formed by this line and that of Lawrence has been called the “gore.” The Lawrence line crossed the Delaware river at its present terminus, and ran into and across Pennsylvania to a point on the Delaware at latitude forty-one degrees and forty minutes north, which was then the recognized northerly point of the province. This northerly point was subsequently, in 1769, fixed at the rock on Carpenter’s Point, at the mouth of the Navesink river, considerably farther south and east of the original terminus of the Lawrence line. This change of boundary between New York and New Jersey led to a claim by the West Jersey Proprietors for a relocation of the division line, and, though no line was ever run in accordance with this claim, a second gore was claimed east of the Lawrence line at its south[62]*62erly end, and some locations of land were made as late as the beginning of this century east of the Lawrence line in Ocean (then Monmouth) county, under West Jersey warrants. The Lawrence line, however, was finally determined to be the true line of the division, in the case of Cornelius v. Giberson, 25 N. J. Law (1 Dutch.) 1.

The usual mode adopted by the proprietors for passing title, after the surrender of governmental powers, was by issuing warrants or rights of location, which entitled the holder to have a certain number of acres set oif to him in severalty wherever he might choose to locate them, if the warrant of location was general and unrestricted.- In some instances, however, it was restricted to certain localities. These warrants of location, which came to be called simply “warrants” or “Tights,” were usually issued by way of dividends to each of the proprietors according to the amount of his holding, and when issued were credited to the proprietor on a book called the warrant-book, and as often as any land was located under them the party who had credit for so many acres was charged with the amount actually located. The fact that the most usual occasion of issuing these warrants was by way of dividends among the proprietors resulted in the process being termed by the courts a mode of partition among the proprietors. Arnold v. Mundy, 6 N. J. Law (1 Halst.) 11; Den v. Sharp, 4 Wash. C. C. 609; Baeder v. Jennings, 40 Fed. Rep. 199; Estell v. Land Company, 35 N. J. Law (6 Vr.) 235; Jennings v. Burnham, 56 N. J. Law (27 Vr.) 289.

This making dividends among the proprietors was not, however, the only occasion when they issued warrants of location. The records, since 1760 at least, show a great number of instances, one as late as 1859, where warrants were issued directly to outside parties, not proprietors, on sale by the proprietors, at auction or otherwise, for a moneyed consideration. The proprietors sometimes put up at auction for sale general warrants of location, and sometimes made such sales without auction. On other occasions they sold particular tract's of land to outside parties by private contract, and in such case the machinery adopted was to issue a general warrant of location for a large number of acres to one or more trus[63]*63tees to hold in trust for the proprietors, and then direct the trustee to have a certificate of survey and return made in the usual way to the trustee, and a deed hv him to the purchaser of the particular tract of land. In other words, the mode adopted of issuing a warrant to Charles E. Noble, trustee for the proprietors, under consideration in Jennings v. Burnham, 56 N. J. Law (27 Vr.) 289, was one which had been in use by the proprietors on many occasions for a long period of years, and numerous titles in this division of the state depend upon them. In fact, the warrant of location for ten thousand acres under which the plaintiff claimed in Cornelius v. Giberson, 25 N. J. Law (1 Dutch.) 1, was issued to Newell, DeBow and Brinley, in trust for the proprietors (25 N. J. Law (1 Dutch.) 2; Minutes Council of Proprietors B. 308), and received the approval of the supreme court. I must therefore presume that if the custom just mentioned had been proven in the case of Jennings v. Burnham, and the attention of the court called to the decision in the ease of Cornelius v. Giberson, the title held under Noble would have received the approval of the court. Eor it must be observed that the mode of severing titles by partition, which was approved in the line of cases first referred to, is one resting entirely in the custom of the proprietors, and is not in accordance with the course of the common law. It has, indeed, been finally recognized by our courts without proof, but it must, originally, have been proven in the courts in the same manner as any other local custom must be proven.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.J. Eq. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-proprietors-of-eastern-division-v-forces-executors-njch-1896.