Holbrook v. Bowman

62 N.H. 313
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 N.H. 313 (Holbrook v. Bowman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Bowman, 62 N.H. 313 (N.H. 1882).

Opinion

Cakbenter, J.

The rights of the parties in the property in question must be determined by the law of Vermont. The law of this or any other jurisdiction is immaterial, except in so far as it may tend to show what the law of that state is. The case may be considered as if the shares reserved for charitable and public uses were the property of individuals,'so that until 1847 the town and sixty-seven natural persons were tenants in common of the third division. The plaintiff contends that a title acquired by adverse possession to the rights of one or more tenants in common in a specific parcel of the common land can have no greater effect than a title to the same interest conveyed by deed; that such a conveyance, though good against the grantor, is as against his cotenants void or voidable at their will, and in making partition may be disregarded; that, inasmuch as in the partition of 1847 lot 23 fell to the town, against which under the statute no right by possession *320 could be acquired, Fuller’s title fails, although he was not a party to or notified of the making of the partition.

' Whether in such a case title by possession stands upon precisely the same footing as title by deed (Wade v. Johnson, 5 Humph. 117, Florence v. Hopkins, 46 N. Y. 182, Sullivan v. Sullivan, 66. N. Y. 37, Braker v. Devereaux, 8 Paige 513), is a question which need not be considered. It may, for the purposes of the case, be assumed that Fuller’s title is the same in legal effect as if the sixty-seven individual proprietors had conveyed to him their interest in the lot. If A, B, and C are tenants in common of a tract containing three hundred acres, all severally of equal value, and A and B join in conveying one hundred acres by metes and bounds to D, equity seems to require that upon partition D’s title should be rfonfirmed, and that one hundred acres of the land not conveyed should be assigned to C and fifty acres each to A and B. According to the plaintiff’s doctrine, C may bring his petition for partition against A and B without making D a party or giving him notice, and if the committee happen to assign D’s lot to C, D takes nothing, while both A and B take double what justly belongs to them; if they assign it to either A or B, D holds it by estoppel, the one to whom it is assigned gets nothing, and the other grantor twice the quantity to which he is equitably entitled. To avoid the expense of legal proceedings, they may divide the whole, into three equal parts, of which the tract conveyed to D is one, and draw lots for them, as was done in this case. In that event D would have two chances in three to hold his land, while A and B would have an equal chance of losing the whole, and each a chance of obtaining twice what fairly belongs to him. They need not resort to legal proceedings, or to the ceremony of casting lots; they may make by agreement any division which the law warrants, and convey to each other accordingly. They may, by bargain between themselves, give to C in severalty the lot conveyed to D, and thus deprive him of the land. By the first named method of partition, D’s title would depend upon the action of the committee; by the second, upon the chances of the lot; and by the third, upon the conscience of his grantors. It would not affect the legal aspect of the transaction if the three inherited the land, and C, at the time of their ancestor’s decease and of the execution of the deed to D, were erroneously supposed to be dead. In that case, says Jackson, J., in Varnum v. Abbot, 12 Mass. 478, “it would be highly unjust and absurd that his return should wholly avoid such a conveyance made by the others in his absence. It is just that he should not be prejudiced by it. But there is no reason why the other cotenants should by this accident he enabled to avoid their own contract, and to reclaim the land which they had fairly sold for a valuable consideration.”

It has 'been held that a tenant’s conveyance of a specific parcel of the common land, or his undivided part of such parcel, is, under *321 some circumstances, valid against bis cotenants. It has been said, for example, that where the lands lie in different counties, or where a part of them has been assigned as dower, a tenant’s deed, conveying his share of the land in one county, or his share in the reversion of dower, or in the residue of the land, is binding upon his cotenants. Martin v. Collester, 38 N. H. 458; Peabody v. Minot, 24 Pick. 329. If a tenant in common conveys a distinct parcel, or his interest in such parcel, to a stranger, and afterwards conveys the remainder of the common lands or his interest therein to the same person or to his cotenants, or if his cotenants subsequently convey the parcel or their interest therein to the same or to another person or to their cotenant, the conveyances are not invalid. Varnum v. Abbot, 12 Mass. 477, 478; Crocker v. Tiffany, 9 R. I. 505; Stevens v. Norfolk, 46 Conn. 227; Reed v. Spicer, 27 Cal. 58; Dall v. Brown, 5 Cush. 289. The doctrine of these cases appears to rest upon the ground that the eotenants have expressly or by implication assented to and ratified the conveyances, or that, by reason of the situation of the property or nature of their estate therein, they cannot, upon partition, be prejudiced by them. So it has been held that a tenant’s deed of a parcel or of his share in a parcel of the common land is effective in all cases to give the grantee the same right to the possession, use, and enjoyment of the property which the grantor had, until partition is made, upon the ground that the exercise of that right cannot injure the cotenants; the deed cannot be avoided except by proceedings for partition. Ballou v. Hale, 47 N. H. 347; Rising v. Stannard, 17 Mass. 282; Stark v. Barrett, 15 Cal. 361. Upon partition, a tenant is entitled to no particular part of the common property, but only to his due proportion in quantity and quality of the whole. If that can be given him »ut of the lands not conveyed by his cotenant, he has no just cause to complain of the conveyance. The general doctrine deducible from the numerous authorities on the subject is, that a tenant’s deed of a specific part, or of his share of such part, of the common land is valid against his cotenants, except in so far as it may injuriously affect their right to a just division. The grantee takes a good title to all that is conveyed to him, unless upon partition it is found necessary to take the whole or a part of it in order to give the cotenants their equitable share of the property, in view not only of the value of the whole and of its several parts, but also of the convenience of the parties, and all other circumstances. Thompson v. Barber, 12 N. H. 563; Whitton v. Whitton, 38 N. H. 134; Bartlet v. Harlow, 12 Mass. 347; Nichols v. Smith, 22 Pick. 316; Brown v. Bailey, 1 Met. 257; Hartford Ore Co. v. Miller, 41 Conn. 132; Soutter v. Porter, 27 Me. 405; Tilton v.

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.H. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-bowman-nh-1882.