Kimble v. Mayor of Newark

102 A. 637, 91 N.J.L. 249, 1917 N.J. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 19, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 A. 637 (Kimble v. Mayor of Newark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimble v. Mayor of Newark, 102 A. 637, 91 N.J.L. 249, 1917 N.J. LEXIS 236 (N.J. 1917).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bergen, J.

This record embraces two causes of action, one in ejectment for the possession of a tract of land, and the [250]*250other to recover damages Cor waste resulting from the destruction and removal of all buildings from the land by the defendant while in its possession. The trial court directed the jury to find that the plaintiff' was entitled to recover possession of the land but submitted to them the determination of the amount of damage which the plaintiff had suffered because of the waste. The jury found for the plaintiff on both issues and assessed her damages for the waste, upon which judgment was entered from which the defendant has appealed.

The alleged errors upon which the defendant rests its appeal are, that the court refused to nonsuit the plaintiff or to direct a verdict for the defendant; that the trial court erroneously excluded and admitted testimony over the objection of the defendant, and that tne court did not properly instruct the jury as°to the legal principles applicable to the cause.

But two questions require solution, one being was the trial court correct in directing a finding for plaintiff on the question of the right of the plaintiff to the possession of the land in disperte, which is to be determined b}r the title deeds, and the other is, does the record disclose any error in the proceedings had at the trial which require the reversal of the judgment for damages for waste.

The facts are not in dispute and show that the land in question was conveyed to Jacob Ralph, and Elizabeth Ralph his wife, by a deed bearing date February 7th, 1897, made by Janett Sehulster and her husband; that Elizabeth Ralph died October 6th, 1898; -that Jacob Ralph conveyed his estate in "the land to Wesley Chamberlain May 10th, 1902; that Chamberlain conveyed his estate in the land to the defendant April 22d, 1911; that in the latter year the defendant demolished the house and all the buildings standing on the land and removed and appropriated to its own use all the material of which they were constructed, and that Jacob Ralph died March loth, 1915. In support of her possessory action the plaintiff claims that the deed to her father and mother, made by Janet Sehulster and her husband in 1897, conveyed an [251]*251estille by the entirety to her father and mother with right of survivorship for the life of her father, with a limitation of the fee thereafter to the heirs of Elizabeth Ealph, her mother, and that upon the death of her father in 1915, her mother having predeceased him, plaintiff’s title became absolute; that the conveyance lyy Jacob Ralph to Wesley Chamberlain conveyed only his life estate, and that Chamberlain could convey no greater title to the defendant.

The trial court adopted this view and not only refused the defendant’s motions to nonsuit the plaintiff and to direct a verdict for the defendant, but on the contrary directed the jury to find for the plaintiff on this issue.

The legal accuracy of this action of the trial court depends upon the construction to be given to the deed made by the Sehulsters to Jacob and Elizabeth Ralph. In it the names of the grantees are Jacob Ralph and Elizabeth Ralph, his wife, «of the second part,” and the grant is «Unto the said party of the second part and to her heirs and assigns forever,” and the habendum is «Unto the said party of the second part, her heirs and assigns, to the only proper use, benefit and be-hoof of the said party of the second part, her heirs and assigns forever.”

The covenant of seizin was with the said party of the second part «her heirs and assigns,” and that, of warranty «Unto the said Jacob Ralph and Elizabeth Ralph heirs and assigns forever.” Neither of these covenants can enlarge or qualify the grant, and if the estate granted was not a fee-simple in Jacob Ralph, the covenants will not enlarge bis estate.

Mr. Justice Whelpley, speaking for this court in Adams v. Ross, 30 N. J. L. 505, said: «The inconsistency between the conveyance and covenant shows a mistake in one or the other. The safest rule of construction is that propounded by the Supreme Court; that the quantity of the estate conveyed must depend upon the operative words of conveyance and not upon the covenants defending the quantity of the estate conveyed, * * * to adopt, as a settled rule of interpretation, that deeds are to he construed like wills according to the presumed intent of the parties making them, to he deduced from [252]*252an examination of the whole instrument would be dangerous, and, in my judgment, in the last degree inexpedient.”

Reading the words of conveyance contained in this deed it is quite plain that,the limitation is to the heirs of the wife, and that the husband took a life estate only.

The appellant argues that because there are two grantees designated as the party of the second part, and the grant is to the party of the second part he?- heirs and assigns, the party of the second part being plural and the pronoun singula]’, that it is apparent “that the parties have not said precisely what they meant.” To adopt this argument would require a court of law to reform the deed so as to express wliat the parties intended, but this can only be done in-a court of equity, and most, if not all, the authorities upon which the appellant relies to sustain its proposition are cases in equity, and a court of law cannot say that the limitation in this case, to the heirs of the wife, is an obvious mistake of a verbal or clerical character requiring a correction in order to make all parts of the instrument harmonious, for there is no reason why a grantor may not in the same deed convey a life estate to one grantee with a limitation -over to the heirs of another. There is, in this case, no obvious verbal or clerical mistake either of intent, or grammatical misuse of words.

The effect of a deed to a husband and wife with a limitation over to the heirs of the husband was considered in Den v. Hardenburgh, 10 N. J. L. 42. In that case the husband died during the life of his wife and she brought ejectment against the heir of her husband who had taken possession of the land, and her claim was based upon a deed originally drawn to the husband and his heirs, but before execution the name of the wife was interlined without alteration of the words of limitation to “his” heirs.

Chief Justice Kinsey and Mr. Justice Drake each read an opinion sustaining the right of the wife to possession. The Chief Justice saying it was not necessary to determine whether under the deed the wife took a fee-simple, as she claimed, or a life estate, because she was entitled to the possession during the continuance of her estate by right of survivorship [253]*253as tenant by entirety, "Although to ascertain the duration of the estate of the lessor is not essential.” In his concurring opinion Mr. Justice Drake said: "The grantees are 'party of the second part, bis heirs and assigns,’ the term party embraces both grantees, and is used for that purpose with strict grammatical accuracy; and the word 'hi.?’, is definite in its reference to only one of them. More formally expressed, the grant would read, 'to James Hardenburgh and Eliza, his wife, and to the heirs and assigns of the said James Hardenburgh,’ ” citing Coke

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A. 637, 91 N.J.L. 249, 1917 N.J. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimble-v-mayor-of-newark-nj-1917.