Hart v. Blabey

39 N.E.2d 230, 287 N.Y. 257, 1942 N.Y. LEXIS 1104
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 39 N.E.2d 230 (Hart v. Blabey) 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
Hart v. Blabey, 39 N.E.2d 230, 287 N.Y. 257, 1942 N.Y. LEXIS 1104 (N.Y. 1942).

Opinion

Desmond, J.

This action was brought in 1939 to reform a warranty deed given by plaintiff Mary L. Hart to defendant Mary Blabey, in 1912. Plaintiffs assert that the description in the deed is incomplete, that it does not correctly or sufficiently describe the property intended to be conveyed, and that the defendant is asserting title to more land than the deed was intended to cover. Defendant denies all this, and as a defense pleads that the ten-year statute of limitations has run against plaintiffs. The land lies along the shore of Thompson’s lake in Albany county. Prior to the date of the deed, August 8, 1912, plaintiff Mary L. Hart’s brother, the attorney who later drew the deed, went out to the property with defendant Mary Blabey, the intending purchaser, and pointed out to the latter the part which was to be sold and deeded to Mary Blabey. The attorney located on the ground a fixed starting point in a so-called “ base line ” along the lake *260 shore and then indicated to defendant the location of a line which was to be the southerly line of the latter’s purchase and the dividing line between the land that was to go to her under the deed and the balance that was to be retained by plaintiff Mary L. Hart. This southerly line of the premises to be conveyed was intended, this attorney testified, to be a line running at approximately right angles with this base line on the west shore of Thompson’s lake, back directly west to a private road. This attorney testified that he set stakes in the ground to mark that line. If, in the deed as later written out, this southern boundary line had been described as so pointed out and marked out there would be no dispute here, since the southerly boundary would then be sufficiently located as to termini and direction. But in the deed as actually drawn, the scrivener described the southerly boundary as running from said [starting] point west to the easterly side of a private road.” This description of the southern boundary of the land conveyed to defendant Blabey is obviously incomplete, since, while it definitely locates the eastern end of the southern boundary line, it fails to indicate the exact direction of that line or its length, and furnishes no description, or way of locating, its western terminus, somewhere along the private road. The attorney who pointed out the bounds of the property to defendant Mary Blabey and who later drew the deed, testified that he meant to describe the southern boundary as running “ generally west ” from the fixed point in the base line, at about a right angle to the base line. Defendant did not take the stand and produced no witnesses to deny any of this. Trial Term made findings that the deed was intended to convey a parcel of land bounded on the south by a line drawn at approximately right angles to the base line from the fixed point in the base line, and that the description as found in the deed was the result of a mutual mistake of the parties.

In 1925 plaintiff Mary L. Hart sold to plaintiffs Meineker the.balance of the tract, lying south of the property con *261 veyed to defendant by the 1912 deed, above referred to. In the 1925 deed to the Meinekers, their northern boundary was described in the same way as the faulty description of the Blabey southern boundary in the 1912 deed here sought to be reformed. In 1939 plaintiffs Meineker sold their property to plaintiff Harry A. Weaver. Meanwhile, however, it had become evident, in 1937, that defendant Blabey was claiming land to the south of what would be her southern boundary line as agreed upon in 1912. So, when plaintiffs Meineker conveyed to plaintiff Weaver in 1939, they, in that deed, gave warranties as to the undisputed part only and quitclaimed as to the part over which a dispute had arisen.

Trial Term, on sufficient proof, has found that plaintiff Mary L. Hart and the plaintiffs Meineker, as her grantees, were, from August 8, 1912, to the fall of 1937, “ in exclusive possession and control and used and occupied the property south of the line which the plaintiffs claim was agreed upon as the southern boundary of the plot conveyed to defendant. Also on sufficient proof, Trial Term has found that none of the plaintiffs had knowledge or notice until the fall of 1937 that defendant claimed the gore of land now disputed, and that defendant during all that time recognized that her premises did not extend south of a line drawn at about right angles to the base line on the shore of the lake. Trial Term held that the action was not barred by the statute of limitations, and judgment was entered, reforming the description in the 1912 deed to conform to the intention of the parties to that deed.

The Appellate Division reversed the judgment upon the law and the facts and dismissed the complaint, but did not specify or refer to, by number or otherwise, any particular question or questions of fact upon which the reversal was made. Accordingly, as commanded by the statute (Civ. Prac. Act, § 602) we must consider the reversal to be upon the law, and not upon the facts. There is no conflict in the evidence, and the reversal by the Appellate Division cannot stand unless there were errors of law at the Trial Term.

*262 The case is a proper one for invoking the equitable remedy of reformation. “ Where there is no mistake about the agreement and the only mistake alleged is in the reduction of that agreement to writing, such mistake of the scrivener, or of either party, no matter how it occurred, may be corrected.” (Born v. Schrenkeisen, 110 N. Y. 55, 59.) In such a case equity will conform the written instrument to the parol agreement which it was intended to embody.” (Pitcher v. Hennessey, 48 N. Y. 415, 423.) Here it sufficiently appears that the parties agreed that the southern boundary of the Blabey land was to be a line running approximately at right angles to another line. Since the description in the deed did not conform to that agreement, equity will reform it. It need not be shown that the parties did not realize that inaccurate verbiage was used, nor need the language used be ambiguous. “ Although the parties understood what language was contained in the deed, if they believed the description corresponded with the actual boundaries of the land intended to be conveyed, and were mistaken, the case for a reformation was made out.” (Bush v. Hicks, 60 N. Y. 298, 302.)

The Appellate Division in its opinion held that the action was barred by the ten-year statute of limitations (Civ. Prac. Act, § 53) which, it said, runs from the time of the delivery of the deed, not from the time of discovery of the mistake, citing Exkorn v. Exkorn (1 App. Div. 124). We do not agree with this. Under the facts as found in this case we are of the opinion that the statute began to run not in 1912 when the deed was given, but in 1937, prior to which year, as found by Trial Term, the plaintiffs Hart and Meineker had been in undisputed possession of the gore of land here in litigation, and prior to which year, as similarly found by Trial Term, defendant had never made any claim to ownership of the piece now disputed.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E.2d 230, 287 N.Y. 257, 1942 N.Y. LEXIS 1104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-blabey-ny-1942.