Masten v. . Olcott

4 N.E. 274, 101 N.Y. 152, 56 Sickels 152, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 608
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 4 N.E. 274 (Masten v. . Olcott) 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
Masten v. . Olcott, 4 N.E. 274, 101 N.Y. 152, 56 Sickels 152, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 608 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The complaint in the partition suit described the premises sought to be partitioned, as being part of the lot “ known as the saw-mill lot,” and following this designation, courses and distances were given, and the description concludes, which said premises are known as the old saw-mill lot.” The saw-mill lot, as known and occupied at the time, was separated from the lot on the south, occupied by the plaintiff, by a heavy stone wall, erected in 1820. The premises in controversy comprise about an acre of land in a triangular form, south of, and adjacent to the stone wall, which has been inclosed and occupied as part of the plaintiff’s lot by him and his predecessors in title from about the year 1806. In that year, Johannas Hasten conveyed to Jacob Hasten and others, a lot described in the deed by the same description contained in the complaint in partition, and what was then known as the saw-mill lot, embraced the premises now in controversy. But soon after that conveyance an arrangement was entered into between the Hastens, and the owner of the lot next south of the saw-mill lot, to “ square the line ” between the lots, by which the line was located where the stone wall was subsequently built. Before the erection of the stone wall, and soon after the arrangement referred to, a wood fence was bnilt on the same line by the owner of the plaintiff’s lot. From that time to the commencement of the partition proceedings in 1873, a period of more than sixty years, the respective lots had been occupied according to. the line fixed in 1806, and when this action was commenced the stone wall had been for more than fifty years the division fence between the lots. The plaintiff has an unquestionable legal title to the premises in controversy unless he *157 is concluded from asserting such title by the judgment and sale in the partition action in which he was made a party defendant. It is claimed on the part of the present defendant that as the land in controversy is included within the lines mentioned in the description in the partition proceedings, and was in fact originally a part of the saw-mill lot, the plaintiff if he claimed title thereto was bound to set up his title in the partition action and having failed to do so, the judgment and sale therein is conclusive against any subsequent assertion of such title. This would be true on the assumption that it was adjudged in that action that the premises alleged therein to have been owned in common by the parties, and of which partition was decreed, embraced the part of the original saw-mill lot, now in controversy. The parties to a partition suit are bound by the judgment therein whether their interests were rightly stated or not, and an adjudication that they were tenants in common of the land adjudged to be partitioned concludes a party to the action, served with process, although he did not appear, and although his title to a part of the land partitioned was in severalty. This was a fact he was bound to put in issue, and have determined on the trial. (Jordan v. Van Epps, 85 N. Y. 427; Cook v. Allen, 2 Mass. 462.) It comes, therefore, to the question whether the judgment and sale in the partition action did embrace the part of the original saw-mill lot now claimed by the plaintiff. A survey, according to the metes and bounds and courses and distances in the description includes these premises. But the description by courses and distances is not the whole of the description in the partition,proceedings. It begins by declaring .that the premises sought to be partitioned are known as the saw-mill lot.” It is clear beyond controversy that the lot known as the saw-mill lot, when the partition action was commenced, and for fifty years prior to that time, was north of the stone wall. The stone wall was the line marked on the ground dividing the two lots. It had been located as the south line of the mill lot by agreement between the owners of the two lots and had been acquiesced in as the true line for all that long period. The conveyances of the *158 plaintiff’s lot from 1815, had bounded it on the north by the saw-mill lot or “ Masten’s saw-mill lot,” and the grantees understood that their grants carried them to the stone wall. Jacob Hasten, who died in 1852, and under whose will the plaintiffs in the partition suit claimed was a party to the location of the line in 1806 and he devised the saw-mill lot as the premises known as the old saw-mill premises.” It is apparent that he must have intended the premises north of the stone wall, and that it was these premises which were known to him at that time as the saw-mill premises. The rules for the construction of deeds, established to effectuate the intention of the parties, authorizes the rejection of false particulars in the description of the granted premises, and subordinates the less material facts to the more certain and material ones, where there is inconsistency. (Br ookman v. Kurzman, 94 N. Y. 272, and cases cited.) Thus monuments generally control courses and distances, because grants are supposed to be made with reference to an actual view of the premises. (Wendell v. People, 8 Wend. 183, 190.) It cannot be doubted that the parties to the partition action on reading the description in the complaint, would locate the land by reference to the actual inclosure of the saw-mill property, rather than by the courses and distances, which could only be located by a survey, the monuments mentioned, having been lost or destroyed, and so also as to a purchaser on. a partition sale. If the devisees under thé will of Jacob Hasten had conveyed by the same description contained in the complaint in the partition suit, could the grantee have claimed that the grant was intended to cover the premises in controversy ? If a grantee in a voluntary conveyance could not do so a purchaser on a partition sale stands in no better position. We think the words “ known as the saw-mill lot,” in the description in the partition action were the controlling descriptive words, and that the premises covered by the sale were the saw-inill lot as it was then known bounded on-the south by the stone wall. The judgment and sale in that action, therefore, did not conclude the plaintiff from asserting his title to the premises now in controversy.

*159 The defendants claim that an equitable estoppel has arisen against the plaintiff, by reason of acts and conduct before, at, and after the sale in partition; The claim cannot, we think, be supported. The interview with the attorney, when the plaintiff was served with the complaint in the partition action, was casual, and what was said, so far as appears, was never communicated by the attorney to any of the other parties, nor did it influence his action. The bidding off of the property on the sale by the plaintiff for one of the other parties to the action, was not an admission that the premises sold embraced the land now in question. The act was commensurate only with the thing to which it related, that is, a sale of the land included in the description, and this, as we have seen, did not embrace any part of the plaintiff’s lot. The surveys made after the sale, when the plaintiff was present were made with a view of ascertaining the location of the premises according to the courses and distances in the deed, and his pointing out the places where the old monuments were located did not in any way prejudice his legal rights.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E. 274, 101 N.Y. 152, 56 Sickels 152, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masten-v-olcott-ny-1886.