Johnson v. . Taber

10 N.Y. 319
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 10 N.Y. 319 (Johnson v. . Taber) 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
Johnson v. . Taber, 10 N.Y. 319 (N.Y. 1852).

Opinion

The articles of agreement, and the deed given in pursuance thereof, which are sought to be reformed, are for three distinct parcels of land. The articles which bear *Page 321 date September 3, 1836, provided for the sale of a quantity of hay and one hundred bushels of oats, together with the three parcels of land; for all of which, the land, the hay, and the oats, the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff the gross sum of $7500. The deed was executed on the first day of May following, and conveyed the land by the same description as contained in the articles, expressing the same consideration in gross for the same three parcels of land. There is nothing in the case to show what was the particular price or estimate put by the parties upon either of the parcels of land sold, either by the acre or otherwise.

The controversy is in relation to the west boundary of the first parcel mentioned, being the east half of lot number two, in the first township of the Chenango Triangle, which lot number two lay between the Otselic and Tioughnioga rivers, and bounded on the east and west by those rivers.

At an early day, and long prior to November 12th, 1814, this lot was held and owned by the plaintiff and his father, John Johnson, as tenants in common. On the day last mentioned, a division of the lot was made, and the plaintiff, by indenture of that date, released and quit-claimed to his father and five others, being his brothers, the west half of the lot, "to be divided by a survey thereof made by Salmon Rose. A hemlock is the bounds or corner on the south line, and a stake and stones in the north line of said lot number two, containing two hundred and eleven acres, more or less." The grantees in the last mentioned indenture, at the same time released and quit-claimed to the plaintiff the east half of the lot, with a similar reference, to Salmon Rose's survey, and to the hemlock tree and stake and stones, for the north and south corners, and as containing the same quantity of land as the east half. Upon this division being made the parties to it built a division fence through so much of the lot as was cleared, commencing at the hemlock tree standing in or near the south line and running northerly through the cleared land to the woods, and marked a line in continuation *Page 322 of the fence through the woods to the north line; and thenceforth occupied and held up to that fence and line on each side without dispute, and so continued to occupy, and to cultivate the land on the cleared part of the lot until the sale by the plaintiff to the defendant, of the east half of the lot.

Such was the condition of things early in September, 1836, when the parties to this suit commenced their negotiation for the purchase by the defendant from the plaintiff, of the east half of the lot. Immediately previous to the purchase, the parties, in company with several other persons, went upon the premises and spent two or three hours in examining them, and with a view to the purchase. The evidence, I think, establishes that on that occasion the plaintiff pointed out to the defendant the boundaries of the land proposed to be sold. That he was shown the hemlock tree as the southern terminus of the division line, and the fence running from thence north to the woods, and he then understood that such fence and a line continued north through the woods to the north line of the lot was the west boundary of that parcel of the land, for the purchase of which he was then in treaty with the plaintiff. After agreeing upon the terms of the purchase, the parties went directly from the land in question to the plaintiff's residence, in the town of Greene, where the articles of agreement were drawn and executed. On that occasion a map of the lot number two was presented by the plaintiff with a division line drawn through it from north to south, with the courses and distances marked on all the lines of both the divisions excepting the east line of the east half, and the west line of the west half, which were the two rivers mentioned; and from this map the attorney who drew the articles drew the description in them of the east half. This map purported to have been made from a survey of the whole lot made by one Burlingame, in 1805. *Page 323

The defendant afterwards went into possession of the east half of the lot number two under his purchase, occupying up to the division fence mentioned, treating the fence as the true division line between him and the adjoining owners on the west for some two or three years, when he ascertained that his deed from the plaintiff actually embraced some sixteen acres of the land lying west of the division fence and the line in continuation north, and leaving out some eight acres which was included in it. The defendant afterwards brought an action in the common pleas of the county of Broome for a breach of the covenant of seisin contained in the plaintiff's deed, in relation to that portion of said lot number two, embraced in the deed, lying west of the line of practical location between the east and west parts thereof. The present suit was commenced in the court of chancery to correct the mistake in the deed and to reform the same, and for a perpetual injunction against proceeding in the action of covenant. The supreme court at special term decreed that the east half of said lot number two was sold by the plaintiff and purchased by the defendant upon a view and practical location thereof by the parties, and that the same is bounded on the east by the Otselic river, on the north and south by the north and south lines of the said lot number two, and on the west by the division line of said lot as established by the said plaintiff and the owners of the west half as aforesaid; and that the west line of the said east half, as described in the said deed from the plaintiff to the defendant, was inserted by mistake. The decree directs a survey to ascertain the quantity of land in the east half agreeably to the practical location thereof, and upon ascertaining the deficiency or the quantity of land less than two hundred and eleven acres, three roods and six perches (the quantity which the plaintiff represented to the defendant the east half contained), that compensation be made for such deficiency by the plaintiff to the defendant at the average price which the consideration mentioned in the contract and *Page 324 deed bears to the said quantity of two hundred and eleven acres, three roods and six perches. The general term, on a rehearing, affirmed the first part of the decree at special term, and reversed all that part of it relating to compensation, and decreed costs to the plaintiff of the suit and the rehearing.

I concur with the justice at special term that the premises were sold by the plaintiff and purchased by the defendant, upon a view and practical location thereof. It is quite manifest that the plaintiff did not intend to sell any part of lot number two, west of the practical division line referred to. This is evident from the fact that the line is shown to have been established and recognized by him and the opposite owners as a division line between them for more than twenty years, and he therefore could not convey title to anything west of it; also from the fact that this line was pointed out by him to the defendant as the true west line when they were in treaty for the purchase. The plaintiff's brothers were in actual possession on the other side, occupying up to the line, and the plaintiff does not appear to have ever made any claim beyond it.

I think it about as clear that the defendant never supposed he was purchasing or contracting for any part of the lot west of this line.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 N.Y. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-taber-ny-1852.