McCulloch v. Wellington

28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 5
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 5 (McCulloch v. Wellington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCulloch v. Wellington, 28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 5 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

Talcott, P. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendant entered on the report of a referee in an action of ejectment.

The history of the plaintiffs’ claim is as follows:

In 1803 George McCulloch became the owner of a tract of land containing about ninety-eight and a half acres, situate in what is now the village of Corning, in Steuben county. He occupied this tract with other lands, in all about two hundred acres, until his death, which happened in 1826. He left him surviving five children, of whom George McCulloch, the father of the plaintiffs, was one. The father of the plaintiffs died in 1831, and in an action of [8]*8partition brought in the Steuben Common Pleas, judgment was entered, June 20,1832, setting off to the plaintiffs, in right of their father as one of the heirs at law of his father, the original grantee, sixty-four acres, parcel of the ninety-eight acres.

The action is brought to recover lots known as 7, 8 and 15, situated on that tract of sixty-four acres.,

The defendant claims title through sundry mesne conveyances, from a sale and conveyance of the said sixty-four acres, as a part of the real estate of the said George McCulloch, the father of the plaintiffs, made for the payment of his debts in 1833, by Sophia McCulloch, his widow and administratrix, by order of the Surrogate of Steuben county. The proceedings for a sale of the property, under the order of the surrogate, were objected to on various grounds, claimed to affect the jurisdiction of the surrogate.

The referee finds as a conclusion of law: “ That said surrogate’s court acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the said proceedings, to mortgage, lease or sell the real estate of said George McCulloch, deceased; for the payment of his debts, but not of the persons of said plaintiffs, . . . and that said Rufus Gorton, and those claiming under him, acquired no title under the conveyance by said administratrix to him, based on those proceedings.”

Rufus Gorton was the purchaser at the said administratrix’s sale, and the defendant Wellington claims under Gorton by virtue of that purchase and sale. As there appears to have been no objection or exception taken by the defendant to the finding and conclusion of law in that behalf, it is unnecessary to examine more particularly the grounds upon which such findings and conclusions of law were based.

The referee also found as a conclusion of law: “ That the defendant has not acquired any right to hold the possession of the premises described in the complaint or any of them, by adverse possession.”

But the referee also finds: “ That the said plaintiffs, by reason of the facts proved on the trial of this action, and heretofore found, are estopped from denying the title of the said Rufus Gorton, and of said defendant, derived from him, to said pieces or parcels of land in the complaint in this action described, or any or either of' [9]*9them, or any part thereof, and from claiming the possession thereof, or any part thereof, or any interest therein.”

And upon this ground the referee directed a judgment for the defendant in the action, and the question thus presented is, as we understand it, the only question open for our consideration.

The respective ages of the two plaintiffs at the time of the said sale under the surrogate’s order, were as follows: The plaintiff George was of the age of four years, and the plaintiff Francis E. was of the age of one year and a half, and they were the only children and heirs at law of their father.

The plaintiff George removed from Corning when he was fifteen or sixteen years old, and went to sea,- and was absent about twenty years. He then came to Corning, and remained thei’e some eight months, when he removed to Michigan, where he continued to reside till after the commencement of the suit. Francis McCulloch, the other plaintiff, became twenty-one years of age in June, 1852, and during most of the time afterwards lived within one or two miles of the property in question.

The referee has held that the plaintiffs are estopped to set up a claim of title to the land in question, because during the time since the sale by the administratrix, streets and lots have been surveyed and laid out, embracing .the land included in the sixty-four acres, and upon the ground that the premises have been held and claimed by Bufos Gorton, the purchaser at said sale, and those claiming under him, from the time of the conveyance to . him, under the title assumed to have been so acquired, and that sundry erections have been made on other parts of said tract, under the said title; and that the defendant toot a conveyance and possession of said lots, numbers 7 and 8, in the complaint mentioned, on October 22, 1870, and of lots 1 and 15, in said complaint mentioned, on May 3, 1871, and during the latter year built a large and valuable house and barn on said lots, which, with other improvements put thereon, have cost some $25,000. Belying, in the making of such improvements and expenditures, upon the title to said lots of the Corning Company ” which had been acquired and held by him, and not knowing or having any information of what are now claimed as defects in said title:

[10]*10In other words, the referee has held that the plaintiffs have forfeited their title to the estate, not by reason of any statute of limitations nor adverse possession, not by reason of any specific acts or declarations by them or either of them tending to encourage the defendant, or any of his predecessors, in the title, in the belief that their title was good, not by any specific acts or conduct which would render it inequitable for the plaintiffs now to deny that the title supposed to have been acquired under the sale by the administratrix was valid and effectual, but simply from their neglect to assert their rights during this lapse of time. To sustain his conclusion of law on this subject, the referee has furnished an elaborate opinion, and cited many cases claimed to have a bearing on the question, and to uphold his decision.

It will be more convenient, in "the examination of the subject, to refer to the well-established rules regarding estoppels vn pans, as derived, by the elementary writers on the subject, from the cases cited and from many others, than to undertake a critical examination of the cases cited; and for this reason reference will be had to the standard modern works of Mr. Bigelow and Mr. Herman on the law of estoppel, as embracing the law of estoppel vn pans as acknowledged and administered at this day, when the law on this subject has come to be better understood and more frequently administered than formerly.

In the treatise of Mr. Bigelow we find stated, under the heading of estoppel by conduct,” the following statement of the principles out of which the law hhd its origin and upon which it rests :

“ The origin of the peculiar branch of estoppel now to be considered, that by which a party and those in privity with him are estopped to deny the truth of representations made to and acted upon by another, we conceive to be found in the doctrine of equity, that if a representation is made to another, who deals on the faith of it, the former shall make the representation good, if he knew it to be’false. . .

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcculloch-v-wellington-nysupct-1880.