Ocean Beach Ass'n v. Yard

48 N.J. Eq. 72
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 48 N.J. Eq. 72 (Ocean Beach Ass'n v. Yard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocean Beach Ass'n v. Yard, 48 N.J. Eq. 72 (N.J. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Bird, V. C.

The controversy in this ease involves the title to portions of the land on which" the seaside resort of Ocean Beach has been -erected. The bill is filed under the act of March 2d, 1870, and the supplements thereto, which provide for quieting the title to lands. The complainant, who made the improvements-and had. the possession of the premises, alleges that the defendant, Henry H. Yard, sets up a title to certain portions of the land and claims some interest therein. The complainant claims the superior title.

The lands claimed by the complainant are bounded on the north by Shark river, upon the south by Three-Cornered pond, on the west by lands of other parties, and on the east by the Atlantic ocean. Nearly equi-distant- between Shark -river, and Three-Cornered pond is another body of water, called Silver lake or West pond. The land claimed by the defendant I will speak' of as 'being comprised of two different parcels, one lying north of West pond, adjoining the Atlantic ocean, and containing thirty-one and eight hundred and fifty-seven thousandths acres; the other lying south of West pond and north of Three-Cornered pond, and near to, although not bounded by, the waters of the Atlantic ocean, and contains eight and forty-eight hundredths acres.

I will consider the complainant’s title by deed. It offers a general warranty deed from Joseph Wardell and wife to John [74]*74Lipett White, dated September 1st, 1800, in which is this-description : “ Bounded northerly by said Shark river and easterly by the sea” &c. This is followed by the will of said White, approved July 14th, 1831, in which he gave to his sons-Richard and Peter all his lands and buildings, to be equally divided between them. Richard quit-claimed his -interest by deed, executed by himself and wife, to his brother Peter, August. 15th, 1874, in which appears this description :

“ Beginning at a stone planted at the head of West’s pond, being the southeast corner of Drummond’s patent and the southwest corner of William West’s-patent, both granted in 1701; thence down West pond to the sea; thence-along the sea to Shark river; thence down Shark river, the several courses-thereof, to Drummond’s patent; thence to the place of, beginning.”

It next offers a general warranty deed made by Peter White and wife to Joseph B. Yard (one'of-the members of the association), dated November 1st, 1872, in which the land therein conveyed is described as adjoining the southerly edge of Shark river, with the following-among the courses:

“Thence (11) along the ocean north, twenty-two degrees and twenty-minutes east, at low-water mark, forty chains more or less to the inlet of said river; thence along the southerly edge of said river and inlet, the several, courses thereof, to the place of beginning.”

Joseph B. Yard and wife conveyed the same, lands to the association by deed- dated May 26th, 1873. Before proceeding-further, I desire to call attention to a troublesome fact, and that is, the great'uncertainty of description,'locations and quantities-in the deeds which have been and will be referred to, and upon which the parties rely, and which the court must deal with in coming to a conclusion upon the merits of this case; such for example:

“Beginning at the mouth of a small run that vents into a pond called' Three-Cornered pond, and on the north side, and about ten chains from the-northeast corner thereof, which pond lieth near the sea.”

And such as “ bounded on all sides by prior locations ; ” and’ such as the constant changes which it is admitted have beeni [75]*75going on in the shore-line of the ocean and of the inlet of Shark river, and the disappearance of monuments referred to in ancient surveys and deeds. If these considerations are borne in mind, many of these difficulties will be apparent as we progress.

I now note two other descriptions, both referring to the-same premises, to wit, one “Rec’d in the Surveyor-General’s-Office, at Perth Amboy, N. J., in Book O, page 207,” and is bounded as follows, to wit:

“A neck of land of ye mouth of Shark River, on ye south side, lying ini breadth south sixteen Chains & up ye River in a straight line sixty eight Chains in length, together with two sedge banks in ye river opposite thereunto, John Reid.”

The other, “ Deed with quit-rents, Proprietors of East New' Jersey to William West, 17Ó1, Rec’d in Book G of D.eeds, page-351, Secretary of State’s Office, at Trenton,” and described as-follows: ’ ■"

“All that tract or neck of land lying & being-at ye mouth of Shark River in ye sd. County on ye south side thereof, being in breadth south sixteen chains, & up ye river on a straight line sixty eight chainss in length, together with two sedge banks in ye river opposite thereunto, containing in ye whole ninetie acres. Together with all & all manner of rivers, rivulets, springs, runs, streams, dams, waters, water-courses, water-falls, ponds, pauls, pitts, trees,, woods, underwoods, marshes, meadows.”

And executed as follows, to wit:

“ In witness whereof wee have caused the common seale of our said Province to be hereunto • affixed &"ye Samé to'be signed by our Governor of oursd. Province & ye major part of his eouneill for ye time being, this 28th day-of August, in ye 13th year of ye Reign of our Sovereign Lord William ye-third, by ye grace of God, King of England, Scotland, France & Ireland &c. Annoque Dom. 1701.”

The first of these speaus of a nech of land at the mouth of Shark river, and the next one of a tract of land at the mouth of Shark river. These phrases show that the parties used and understood the word neeJc in a different sense from that oí mouth. But the manner in which they are used shows that they had an> immediate and positive physical connection. They as conclus[76]*76ively show an intention to include and convey all the land lying between the last line of the survey and the ocean, as they ■do all the land between the north line of the survey, which is a straight line, and the line of Shark river, which is a very irregular line.

. It will be seen that in the first description reference is made to a neck of land by the mouth of Shark river breadth south sixteen chains, and up the river in a straight line where, the shoreline of the river now is, and I believe that in the discussion it Was conceded that it always has been very irregular. And the sedge banks referred to have no other certainty connected with them except that they are opposite.

Plainly enough, if the tract of land thus surveyed did not include all of the lands south of Shark river to the Atlantic ■ocean, it must have been in that immediate neighborhood, and this the defendant admits, and says that the “ mouth of Shark river,” and the “ inlet to Shark river,” and “ on the Atlantic •ocean,” are terms which were used for the purpose of ascertaining the location of objects, generally, and hot as monuments ■determining with certainty the exact boundaries of any given parcel of land.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.J. Eq. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-beach-assn-v-yard-njch-1891.