McKinnon v. . Bliss

21 N.Y. 206
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 21 N.Y. 206 (McKinnon v. . Bliss) 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
McKinnon v. . Bliss, 21 N.Y. 206 (N.Y. 1860).

Opinion

Selden, J.

The first question presented by this case is, whether it was sufficiently established upon the trial, that Sir William Johnson, prior to his death in 1774, was the proprie-. tor of a tract called the Royal Grant, situated in the now county of Herkimer, and embracing the premises in controversy. His title was claimed to have been derived from a grant directly from the British Crown.

For the purposes of this question I shall assume, that the plaintiffs had made all the search for the original grant of letters patent which the law requires; that they were not bound *210 to resort to the government records in London, • and that the proof on that subjeqt was sufficient, to entitle them to give secondary evidence of such grant. If then the evidence given on that subject, taken in connection with facts and circumstances of which the court was authorized to take judicial notice,. was sufficient to show prima facie that the grant or patent in question had ever existed, the nonsuit was wrong, and the judgment should be reversed.

The only evidence actually introduced upon the trial, having any bearing upon the question, consisted in the recitals con tained in the will of Sir William Johnson, and the two acts of the legislature passed respectively in February, 1797, and March, 1798. FTo other evidence was given or offered, having any tendency to establish the existence of the patent; unless some slight weight be attached to the fact stated by Mr. Ford, that there is a tract in Herkimer county, known as the Eoyal Grant. To establish that such a grant was made, therefore, the counsel for the plaintiff relies: First, upon the recitals in the will. Secondly, upon the two statutes read in evidence: and Thirdly, upon the public history of the period in which Sir William Johnson lived, and especially upon a manuscript 'memorial addressed to the Bring, and dated in 1776, published in the Colonial History of this State (vol. 7, p. 839), in which Sir William prays for a grant of the tract in question, of which history, memorial, &c., the counsel claims the court should take judicial notice. As the force of each of these items of evidence depends upon considerations and principles peculiar to itself, they must be separately examined.

The will read upon the trial recites or rather assumes that the testator owned the tract called the Eoyal Grant, or Brings-land. Is this ■ any evidence of such ownership, in favor of those claiming under the will ?

The general rule in regard to recitals in deeds or other instruments is, that they are evidence against the parties executing such deeds or instruments, and those who claim under them, but not in their favor. The admissibility of the recital .- depends upon the same principles as the admissibility of a *211 declaration of the party executing the instrument. Such recitals, therefore, are in general no evidence against third persons, who are strangers to the deed or instrument in which they occur.

■ It is true, that an exception has sometimes been admitted, in cases where the inquiry relates to transactions of an ancient date, and where, in consequence of the loss or destruction, from the lapse of time or other causes, of better evidence, it became necessary to resort to that of a secondary character. A reference, however, to a few of the cases of this class will, I think, show that they differ from this in an essential particular.

In-the case of Doe v. Phelps (9 John., 169), a deed executed in 1767, by one of several patentees of a tract of land in Otsego county, in which one of the grantors assumed to execute, not only for himself but as attorney for eight other persons, was treated as affording of itself sufficient evidence of the execution of the necessary power of attorney. But it was further proved in that case, that the lots in this patent generally were held under titles derived through this deed; and a witness testified, that the defendant did not pretend to claim any title to the premises. Reliance was placed upon these facts, and the court said: “After a lapse of forty-four years, and when the possessions have gone along with the deed, to Van Dam, and where no pretence of claim in opposition to that deed has been heard of, the execution of the power of attorney recited in the deed of 1767 may reasonably be presumed.”

So in Jackson v. Lamb (7 Cow., 431), where the mutilated fragments of an ancient lease, dated in 1774, which recited that it was given in order to support a release, were allowed to go to the jury as evidence of the execution of the release, but only in connection with proof of possession in accordance with the release claimed. • Upon the motion for a new trial Savage, Ch. J., said': ■ “ The facts are certainly sufficient to warrant the* presumption of a release. The léase for a year, preserved for a long time among Campbell’s papers, the possession of forty years, upon part of lot Ho. 1, and the possession of other lots in the patent belonging to the' same right, are abundantly sufficient to authorize the presumption,”

*212 But the case which goes as far perhaps as any other to support- the position taken here, is that of Jackson v. Lunn (3 John. Ca., 109). The action was ejectment for a lot of land in the county of Montgomery. A patent had been granted to several persons .in August, 1735, for fourteen thousand acres of land, including the lot in dispute. The lessees of the plaintiff were permitted to prove that their ancestor, Sir Peter Warren, who was not one of the original patentees, claimed in 1736 to own the whole tract, and executed a large number of leases in that year, in which he asserted such ownership. ' But it was further proved that Sir Peter continued to exercise acts of ownership of the property until the time of his death, and that his heirs did the same after his death, and that his title and that of his heirs was acknowledged by the tenants upon fhe patent, and remained undisputed until after the year 1783. Under these circumstances, the court held that a conveyance from the original patentees to Sir Peter Warren might be presumed.

That case bears a close resemblance to the present, in this, ' viz.: The heirs there were suffered to avail themselves, as evidence, of an assertion of title made in a document signed by their ancestor. But the difference in other respects is wide.' There the assertion of the ancestor was sustained by possession under an undisputed claim of title for nearly fifty years; and here there is no proof of possession for a single day.

These cases illustrate the rule on this subject, which is, that assertions of title, or claims of ownership made in deeds or wills, may in some rare cases be evidence in favor of- persons claiming under the grantor or testator by-whom such deed or will was executed, but only in connection with other proof of a long continued and undisputed possession, in accordance with the right or title claimed. Here there was no such proof, and I see nothing to take this case out of the general rule, that recitals pr assertions contained in any deed or other written instrument, are never evidence in favor of the party who executes the deed, &c:, or any person claiming under him, nor against strangers.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.Y. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinnon-v-bliss-ny-1860.