Ratcliffe v. Gray

3 Keyes 510, 3 Trans. App. 117
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Keyes 510 (Ratcliffe v. Gray) 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
Ratcliffe v. Gray, 3 Keyes 510, 3 Trans. App. 117 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This is an action of trespass upon land, arising out of a dispute between the parties, in reference to the location of the division line between them. Both parties derive title from James Cary, who conveyed simultaneously, and on oi’ about March 11,1807, to Samuel Gary together with other lands, the fifty acre piece now owned by the plaintiff, and to Bela Cary the one hundred and thirty-one acre piece, now owned by the defendant. These two pieces adjoin each other, the fifty acre piece lying east of the one hundred and thirty-one acre piece, and it is the line between them that is in dispute. The place of beginning described in the deed • of the fifty acre piece, is a stake and stones standing in a hemlock stump, “ east 39 and a half degrees south from the center of the highway.” The description then proceeds: “from [511]*511thence north 36 degrees 45 minutes east 64 rods, from thence north 34 degrees east, 133 rods to a stake and stones, from thence at right angles, 32 rods westerly, from thence south 40 degrees west, 189 rods, to a stake and stones, from thence at right angles 51 rods, 15 perches, to the place of beginning, containing fifty acres of land. H. B. It is hereby understood' that the line running northerly from the stake and stones in said hemlock stump, at the distance of 64 rods, shall be 40 rods to the east line of-said great lot Ho. 4, in said Sadaquada patent, at right angles with aforementioned line from said stump.”

It will be seen that the north line of the fifty acres, is, by the deed, only 32 rods in length, and that running this line from the east, westwardly, the deed gives no monument for its termination, the course and distance only being given. The defendant, therefore, claims that the north-west corner of the fifty acre piece, is fixed by the termination of the line 32 rods in length; and, consequently, that the plaintiff’s west line, is a line drawn from that point to the south-west corner, respecting which, there is no essential disagreement; while the plaintiff claims for his west line, a line commencing at a point on the north, 3 rods and 11 links farther west than the termination of the 32 rods, and running thence to the south-west corner. The triangular strip thus formed, is the land in controversy, within the north-west half of which is the locus in quo.

The ground of the plaintiff’s claim to go beyond the 32 rods,' is, that upon the line to which he claims, there is a well defined line of marked trees, which, he insists, was made upon a survey of the lots at the time of the conveyances, and at which time the parties to the two conveyances located the respective lots upon that line as the boundary line between them, and that such location has been acquiesced in by them, and the subsequent owners from the time it was made, up to the commencement of this suit, being a period of more than fifty years.

The trespass complained of, consists of the cutting, by defendant, of wood and timber upon this disputed territory; [512]*512the drawing away of wood cut there by the plaintiff; and the marking of a line upon the trees where the defendant claims the true line to be.

The action was tried at the Circuit by the court and a jury, and the plaintiff had a verdict, upon which judgment was entered: which judgment was affirmed by the. General Term.

Upon the trial the defendant moved for a nonsuit, on the ground that the plaintiff had not shown a proper title to the premises, that he could not claim to hold by a practical location of, and acquiescence in the line claimed by him, but should be confined to, and controlled by his deed. The motion was denied, and defendant excepted, and this raises the principal question in the case.

The evidence showed, or tended to show, that the land along the northerly half of the disputed line, has never been cleared upon either side; that upon the line claimed by the plaintiff, through the uncleared portion of it, is a distinctly marked surveyor’s line, shown, by boxing a portion of the marked trees upon the line, to have been made at or about the time when the above mentioned deeds were given, and that the pieces conveyed to Samuel and Bela Cary, respectively, were surveyed out to them, at the time of the conveyances ; that the south part of the fifty acres had been cleared before the making of the deeds, and the west line fenced along the clearing, and that this fence was in line with the marked trees, and formed with them, a continuous straight line; that it has ever since been maintained as a line forever by the adjoining proprietors, and that the plaintiff and those .under whom he claims, have ever claimed to own up to this line; that the plaintiff’s grantors had, for a number of years after the giving of the deeds, made sugar along and up to this line, and had cut out the timber and underbrush, except the maple trees, along the line for that purpose; and had applied to and obtained the consent of Bela Cary to tap trees on the west side of this line; that defendant’s tenants, when plaintiff took possession of the fifty acre lot, showed him the line of marked trees as the west line of the lot.

[513]*513It also appeared that.the hemlock stump described in the deed of the fifty acres, as the starting point, was gone, and the respective surveyors disagreed in their location of it, and that, from the description in the deed, wherever the starting point might be, the premises could not be plotted, the northings and southings failing, to balance by 38 links, and the eastings and westings by 1 chain and 4 links. By whichever line the fifty acres is bounded, it overruns in quantity, and so with the one hundred and thirty-one acre piece.

Were there in these facts the elements of a practical location, and such acquiescence in it, as to bind the parties ?

It was held, in Baldwin v. Brown (16 N. Y. 359), that practical location and long acquiescence in a boundary line, are conclusive, not upon the notion that they are evidence of a parol agreement establishing the line, but because they are of themselves proof that the location is correct, that the rule seems to have been adopted as a rule of repose, with a view to the quieting of titles; and rests upon the same reason as our statute prohibiting- the disturbance of an adverse possession which has continued for twenty years.”

Actual and continued possession of the premises adjoining the located line, is not essential to the existence of a practical location. It does not depend upon a pedis possessio pf the land adjoining, but its existence may be established by any competent evidence of the fact. When adjacent owners unite in surveying their respective lots and in marking a line upon the ground between them, such survey would, doubtless, constitute and be evidence of a practical location, and the line thus fixed, after a sufficient length of acquiescence, would, it seems, control the courses and distances in the deeds. But especially would this be so, when the grant "is, from its terms,.or becomes from destruction of monuments, uncertain and ambiguous as to location. (Jackson v. Ogden, 4 Johns, 140; S. C., 7 id. 238; Jackson v. Freer, 17 id. 29; Jackson v. Smith, 9 id. 100; McCormick v. Barnum, 10 Wend. 104; Jackson v. McConnell, 12 id. 421; Adams v. Rockwell, 16 id. 285; Reed v. Farr, 35 N. Y. 113; Clark v. Wethey, 19 Wend. 320.) 1

[514]*514In Adams

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Bluebook (online)
3 Keyes 510, 3 Trans. App. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratcliffe-v-gray-ny-1867.