Norris v. Hurd

1 Walk. Ch. 102
CourtMichigan Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Walk. Ch. 102 (Norris v. Hurd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norris v. Hurd, 1 Walk. Ch. 102 (Mich. Ct. App. 1843).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Before I proceed to the merits of the case, it is necessary to decide two or three preliminary questions.

1. It is insisted Jesse W. Taylor should be made a party. It appears from the evidence that complainant, in July, 1838, and soon after he had given a deed to Hurd, sold village lot No. 308, to Taylor, which lot is described in Taylor’s deed to be bounded on the north by land deeded to Hurd. Taylor’s lot lies south of the lot east of the canal. The lots sold to Hurd were surveyed and located by the parties long before Taylor purchased. The mistake in the deed to Hurd gives them a different location. It carries the north and south boundary lines about forty links north of their actual location, and the east and west boundary lines a little to the west; so that a correction of the error would not affect the interest of Taylor. It would only be correcting the deed, so as to make it agree with the actual location. If the object of the bill was to chango the actual location of the lots, and to carry them further south, so as to take in a part of Taylor’s lot, it would be necessary to make him a party; but as that is not the object of the suit, I cannot see he has any interest in it one way or the other. Besides, Taylor’s deed does not refer to any particular deed, but describes his lot as bounded “north by land heretofore deeded to A. M. Hurd. By whom and when is not stated. Pie therefore was not go[105]*105verned in his purchase by complainant’s deed to Hurd, but by the location that had been made of the lots.

2. Two of the defendants, Compton and Thompson, were examined as witnesses by complainant, and it is moved to suppress their depositions. The bill is taken as confessed against Compton, and it does not appear from the pleadings and proofs by what kind of a deed he conveyed to Church and Showerman. If it was by a quit claim only, he would be a competent witness for either party. 1 Cow. R. 613; 2 Stark. Ev. 786. A witness is presumed to be competent until the contrary is shown. But complainant asks no decree against Compton, although he is a party to the suit, and his interest, if any, is adverse to the complainant.

Thompson is situated differently. He and Showerman are the present owners of the lots as tenants in common, and complainant asks a decree against them. His deposition therefore must be suppressed. But complainant may still have a decree against him and Showerman, if there is sufficient evidence left to warrant it. The rule on this subject is not as supposed by the defendants, that the examination of a party as a witness is an equitable release to him, so that a decree cannot be had against him, except on matters to which he was not examined. In Thompson v. Harrison, 1 Cox Ca. 344, the complainant executed a release to one of the defendants, and then examined him as a witness in the cause. In that case it was the release, and not the examination, that precluded'the complainant from obtaining a decree against the other defendant who was only secondarily liable, the defendant who was examined as a witness, and who had been released for that purpose, being primarily liable. In Massy v. Massy, 1 Beat. R. 353, one of the defendants was examined as a witness on behalf of the complainant, but the case was [106]*106fully made out by the bill and answer. The Chancellor, adverting to the fact that the record made out the case, decided that the deposition might be suppressed, and a decree be made as if the party had not been examined. Chancellor Walworth, in Bradley v. Root, 5 Paige R. 637, says, “ The reason of the rule that the complainant cannot have an adverse decree against a defendant as to a part of the case to which he has examined him as a witness, is, that it would be charging him upon his own evidence, which can only be obtained against himself by proper charges in the bill, and by calling upon him to answer in the usual way.”

3. I have no doubt from the evidence a mistake was made, first in the bond and afterwards in the deed to Hurd, in describing the course and distance of the northwest or beginning corner of the east lot, from the northeast corner post of the headgate to the canal. The premises were surveyed and staked out by Pettibone, at or about the time the purchase was made, and before the bond was given, in the presence, and under the direction of complainant and Hurd, who agreed upon the starting point; and a diagram of the lots was made, showing the courses and distances, which, with the beginning corner, were also stated in writing at the foot of the diagram, with a blank left for the course and distance from the headgate to the beginning corner. The canal was dug at the time of the survey, and a pit prepared for the headgate, the timber for which was on the ground, and the blank was left to be filled up by the true course and distance to be ascertained after the headgate was erected. This blank, however, as appears from the diagram which is an exhibit in the cause, has never been filled. By what means the course and distance were ascertained when the bond was given, whether by survey or conjecture, does not appear. [107]*107There is no evidence of a change of location after the survey by Pettibone. If any thing of the kind had taken place, it is highly probable a new survey would have been made, and that the stakes of the former survey would have been removed, and made to correspond with the new location. That no change was made is evident from what afterwards took place. The bond agrees with the diagram, in describing the east lot as situate directly south of, and adjoining a highway, clearly indicating that no part of the highway was to be included, one half of which would, however, be included under the erroneous description of the beginning corner given in the bond. Hurd took immediate possession of the lots, and built a fence on the south side of them; and in building this fence, as well as one or two other fences, he was governed by the stakes placed in the ground by Pettibone when he made the survey. Hurd always occupied the lots as surveyed; and there can be no doubt complainant supposed, when the bond was given, that he was selling, and Hurd that he was buying, the land that had been surveyed by Pettibone, and none other. All who have owned and occupied the premises since that time, have occupied them according to the survey; and there is no evidence that any one •of the defendants, when he purchased, supposed he was purchasing any other than the premises subsequently occupied by him. Apple trees were set out, .and a barn was built so near the south fence as to be excluded from the premises by the deed. The question of a bona fide purchaser, therefore, does not arise in the case. The complainant does not ask to take away any thing from Thompson and Showerman which they supposed they were purchasing when the premises were deeded to them. Sage, Edmunds, Godard and Stuart, when they purchased, wer.e shown the diagram of the survey made by Pettibone, and [108]*108it is to be presumed they were governed more by that, in making their purchase, than by the stake pointed out to them as the northwest corner of the east lot. Why was the diagram shown to them, if it was not a true representation of the property they were about to purchase? None of them supposed at the time they were purchasing any part of the highway. The deed to Edmunds, Godard and Stuart, describes the east lot as lying directly south and adjoining the highway,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Walk. Ch. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-hurd-michchanct-1843.