Gray v. Hudson

375 A.2d 1039, 34 Conn. Super. Ct. 31, 34 Conn. Supp. 31, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 329
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1974
DocketFile 132663
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 375 A.2d 1039 (Gray v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Hudson, 375 A.2d 1039, 34 Conn. Super. Ct. 31, 34 Conn. Supp. 31, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 329 (Colo. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Saden, J.

This is an action for ejectment involving a peninsula comprising .62 acre of land *32 in Old Greenwich which is landlocked and bounded on three sides, north, south and west, by the tidal waters of Long Island Sound. 1 There are no buildings on the peninsula, but, from approximately 1948 to the present time, the defendant John J. Hudson has resided in a vessel moored to the southerly side. Hudson has occupied the peninsula since then and has used it in conjunction with an upland piece of land which he has owned bounded on Shore Road. This upland piece was some time in the past in part extended by reclamation along the westerly boundary thereof.

The state of Connecticut, a party to the suit, disclaims any interest or right to the land in dispute, so that at present the effective plaintiff in the case, by substitution, is James C. Fitter, and the sole defendant to whom reference may be made hereafter is John J. Hudson.

I

This action was started in September, 1961, by the executors of the estate of William W. Scofield. On July 17, 1967, by quitclaim deed, the executors conveyed all their right, title and interest to the disputed property to James C. Fitter, and on September 22,1967, he moved to be substituted as plaintiff in this action. The motion was granted. Thus the sole party plaintiff is now James C. Fitter, the grantee of the executors of William W. Scofield’s estate. It is noted, of course, that the executors were dropped as parties plaintiff upon substitution of *33 their grantee as the party plaintiff. On this set of facts the parties are at issue under General Statutes § 47-21. 2

The plaintiff concedes that as of October 27,1949, the defendant was in wrongful possession of the disputed peninsula which he continued up to the time of the deed to the plaintiff in 1967. Both parties argue at length their respective interpretations of Palmer v. Uhl, 112 Conn. 125, on the question of the applicability of $ 47-21, as well as Loewenberg v. Wallace, 147 Conn. 689; Morehouse v. Wood, 93 Conn. 113; and Paton v. Robinson, 81 Conn. 547. The language of Palmer (p. 127) perhaps best summarizes the Connecticut rule among modern eases, even though it actually is dictum. There can be little doubt that the purpose of § 47-21 is to codify the old common-law rule against champerty and maintenance, and normally a deed from a competent living grantor to a grantee is void if the grantor has been ousted of possession at the time of the conveyance. This would certainly bar the present claim by the plaintiff except for a decision in 1793 by the Connecticut Supreme Court in Barney v. Cuttler, 1 Boot 489, 490, a ease apparently overlooked by counsel on both sides in their otherwise elaborate, lengthy and well-organized briefs. Barney clearly provides that an executor’s deed issued by order of the Probate Court is not within the scope of § 47-21. An executor is an officer of trust who acts by virtue of his power, and when he sells land under that power pursuant to the order of the Probate Court he is not within either the letter or reason of the statute. The plaintiff’s deed *34 in this case, if it can be sustained in the ehain of title, is such a deed not affected by § 47-21, and the plaintiff can therefore sue.

n

The next question is whether either party obtained title by deed. One claiming title to real property must rely on the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of another’s title. Hurlburt v. Bussemey, 101 Conn. 406, 410. The rule applies to both parties in this action, and the first aspect of the question is to ascertain whether the disputed

peninsula existed above the mean high water mark in 1898.

A

Both parties start their chains of title with the deed from one Booth to Ferris in 1886, the language of which described the property conveyed as “3 acres more or less.” In 1898, Ferris subdivided the property into ten lots, shown on a recorded map, which contained 2.475 acres by survey. The plaintiff considers that significant as proving by inference that Ferris retained approximately .525 of an acre which is only .10 of an acre less than the size of the peninsula in dispute. Hence, says the plaintiff, Ferris did not subdivide all of his land but retained the peninsula in question for future disposition. While that argument is ingenious and plausible, the court finds it difficult to accept for several reasons. The language of the Booth deed to Ferris is broad and general and cannot be construed to be intended as an accurate measurement of the amount of land conveyed since it does not appear to have been based upon a survey. It was more likely a calculated guess or estimate by the grantor. Furthermore, it puzzles the court why, if any land remained to the west above the high water mark, the surveyor made no indication whatever on his *35 map of its existence. Other arguments offered by the plaintiff’s counsel that the peninsula existed in 1898 or before display considerable ingenuity but not sufficient cogency to persuade the court of their validity.

About a week after Ferris filed his subdivision map in 1898 he conveyed to one Alphonse lots six, seven and eight on the map. It is the defendant’s contention that the disputed peninsula was under the mean high water in 1898 and did not come into existence until late 1907 or 1908 by a landfill operation undertaken by one Scofield, the plaintiff’s immediate predecessor in title, pursuant to a permit issued by the secretary of war on an application filed by Scofield in September, 1907. The defendant claims that, at the time of the conveyance by Ferris to Alphonse in 1898, the westerly boundary of the lots conveyed was the waters of Greenwich Cove as indicated by a blue line on Ferris’ subdivision survey. Only after Scofield completed his landfill operation in 1908, claims the defendant, did the peninsula rise above the mean high water mark.

The court is confronted with the problem of determining what Ferris intended to do and what he actually accomplished by his deed to Alphonse in 1898 and later by his deed to Scofield in January, 1907. Needless to say, time always obscures the sharp outlines of all controversies, and to a large extent the court must rely wherever possible on reasonable inferences that may be drawn from such evidence as the parties have been able to offer. Nothing in the deed from Ferris to Alphonse in 1898 reserved or retains to the grantor any land to the west of the three lots conveyed. If land was there, as the plaintiff contends, one wonders why the deed was silent as to its retention by Ferris or at least as to the retention of a right of way to the unconveyed sliver of land now claimed to have existed *36 then. Compare New Haven Steamboat Co. v. Sargent & Co., 50 Conn. 199, 203, 206.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
375 A.2d 1039, 34 Conn. Super. Ct. 31, 34 Conn. Supp. 31, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-hudson-connsuperct-1974.