People v. Hall

43 Misc. 117, 88 N.Y.S. 276
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 Misc. 117 (People v. Hall) 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
People v. Hall, 43 Misc. 117, 88 N.Y.S. 276 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Kellogg, John M., J.

The parties hereto own the nonresident land in the northeast quarter of Township 24, Ma-[118]*118comb’s Purchase, in the county of Franklin, being the whole of said quarter township, except 400 acres of resident land in the northeast corner, the plaintiff owning the westerly half and the defendant the easterly half. The question here is as to the ownership of a disputed strip between the Mc-Clintock line, which mathematically divides said township into the east and west half, and the GHlcrist or Colvin line, which is the line of an old survey made over fifty years ago, the defendant contending that this latter line, under the conveyances by which the property is held, is the true dividing line. The Colvin line places 3,539 acres, all nonresident land, in the westerly half, and 3,953 acres, nonresident land, and 400 acres, resident land, in the easterly half. The Averell line, so called, was run by a surveyor of that name in 1889, and is east of the other two lines. The McClintock line was recently run by direction of the State Engineer to divide the quarter township into two equal parts, and the map upon which such line is shown, fixes the true acreage at 7,892 acres, a larger amount of land than was ever before supposed to be contained in it. This line and map is only important as a suggestion as to an equal mathematical division and as illustrating the situation. The Averell line was supposed to result from a survey of the township, but like the Colvin line does not make an equal number of acres in the two halves, giving 4,006 .acres to the westerly half and 3,886 acres, including the nonresident land, to the easterly half. In 1877 all the nonresident land in said quarter was sold for taxes, and the State derives its title to the westerly half from that sale, by deed dated Juné 9, 1881, and by another tax sale of 1881, by deed dated October 31, 1884, and by another tax sale of 1885, by deed dated February 15, 1890. The predecessors in title of the defendant, on October 17, 1879, redeemed from the tax sale of 1877 the following part of said quarter section: The easterly one-half, excepting 400 acres northeast corner, resident, 3,550 acres,” and the deed to the plaintiff thereafter upon the same tax sale describes the premises granted: The Northeast quarter of Township 24, west one-half, containing 3,750 [119]*119acres.” The other deeds to the plaintiff contain the same description. All of the tax sales seem to have sold the whole quarter, but the westerly half belonging to the State was not then subject to further tax sale though the easterly half was. Wells v. Johnston, 171 N. Y. 324.

Upon this second tax sale the description included all the quarter township except 400 acres of resident land in the northeast corner thereof. It then describes particularly the resident land and shows that the westerly boundary of the westerly parcel is two miles distant from the east boundary of said township. ¡November 21, 1883, the easterly half was redeemed from said tax sale under the description “ Township 24, ¡Northeast quarter, east one-half, except 400 acres in the northeast corner, resident land, 3,550 acres.” It is clear that under the deed to the State it could only get title to the land which had not been redeemed from the tax sale, and the same is true as to the other conveyances. So that if we determine what was redeemed it is evident that the nonresident land in the remainder of the quarter township belongs to the State, for the State could not get title to the redeemed land, as no tax was then due upon it, and no authority existed for a deed thereof, as the sale had been canceled.

We have seen that the westerly boundary of the resident land is two miles distant from the easterly corner of the township, and at this westerly boundary of the resident land we find the Gilcrist or Colvin1 line coinciding with that westerly boundary and continuing in a straight line to the south bounds of the quarter. It' consists of a well-marked and known line of blazed trees. The blazes are apparently upward of fifty years old and mark an old survey, and in 1897 this line was recognized and reblazed by the superintendent of the Adirondack survey, a State official, as the well-marked line separating the easterly and the westerly half of the township. And such officer, in his report to the Legislature, which by law he was required to make, states that it is such line. It will be noticed that if the McClintock line, or any other line east of the Colvin line, is recognized as the [120]*120division, line, it will necessarily divide the resident land, leaving the greater part of it in the easterly half and another part in the westerly half. The deed to the State of the westerly half does not except or refer to any resident land, raising the fair inference that there was no such land in that half, and that the entire half passes by deed as nonresident land. The easterly half, however, by the redemption certificates, is stated as containing the 400 acres of resident land. This resident land is not stated to be excepted from the quarter but from the east half of the quarter, and it is well understood that an exception in a deed means that by the exception something is prevented from passing which would otherwise pass. In other words, the thing excepted is included in the general description, but the exception removes it. So that a conveyance of the east half of the quarter township, excepting the 400 acres, is an unequivocal declaration that the 400 acres is a part thereof. The fact that the Colvin or Gilcrist line coincides with the westerly boundary of the resident land, and that the resident land is excepted from the east half, tend strongly to show that this line was an old survey and was made and recognized as the dividing line between the east and west half, and the redemption taking place when there was no other line known or claimed to exist the words easterly half ” in the certificate and westerly half ” in the plaintiff’s deed mean the land east and west of that line, respectively, and not the mathematical east and west half. The deeds and redemption certificates make the halves unequal, the westerly 3,750 acres, the easterly 3,950 acres, showing that mathematical halves were not contemplated.

But it is urged that the old deeds and certificates recognize that there are 7,100 acres of nonresident land in this quarter of the township, which, with the resident land, make 7,500 acres in all, and that the redemption certificate only redeems 3,550 acres, thus showing, as it is claimed, that the expression in the certificate, “ except 400 acres in the northeast comer of resident land,” excepts it from the quarter township rather than from the east half of the quarter township. At [121]*121this time, and at all times since until the McClintock survey, the nonresident acreage was unknown and wrong figures were adopted, and, therefore, the figures adopted are but little aid in determining the questions here. But the tendency of the figures is not that way, for if the 400 acres are excepted from the quarter township before the division, the defendant’s half of the nonresident land would be 3,550 acres, the am omit mentioned in the certificate, which added to the 400 acres would make 3,950 acres in the east half and leave ■ 3,550 acres in the west half, while the deed to the plaintiff calls for 3,750 acres. If the division into halves refers to the nonresident land in the quarter section rather than all the land in the section, it must necessarily move the dividing line about 400 acres toward the west from the mathematical center.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Misc. 117, 88 N.Y.S. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hall-nysupct-1904.