Schoen v. McComb

9 Del. 213
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Del. 213 (Schoen v. McComb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoen v. McComb, 9 Del. 213 (Del. Ct. App. 1870).

Opinion

By the Court.

It appears by the record in this case that although a description of the locus in quo is set forth by the *216 plaintiff in his declaration, the defendants have in addition to the general issue, entered the plea of liberum teme mentum, and in which they have set forth a description of the premises with the abuttals of the place in which they allege the. acts complained of were committed, and defend and justify them on the ground that it was not on the premises of the plaintiff, but on the premises of Mrs; McOomb, under whose authority they had a lawful right to do all they did there; and to this plea the plaintiff has replied and new assigned in his replication the same identical description set forth in the plea of the defendants, and on that, issue has been taken. But it is all a matter for the consideration of the jury; the plaintiff, however, must prove the material parts of the description last set forth by him with substantial accuracy, or he will not be entitled to recover.

Bates, for the defendants,

offered in evidence the deed to Martha McComb from Henry S. McOomb for the adjoining premises, executed on the 20th day of December 1868, also a deed to Henry 8. McOomb from John McDowell & wife for the same executed on the 6 th day of October 1853, also the will of Benjamin Boulden deceased, duly probated on the 14th day of December 1833, devising the residue of his real estate, of which the adjoining premises of the defendant in question then constituted a part, to be equally divided between nieces of his named in the devise, of whom McDowell’s wife was one, and also the record of a partition in Chancery and decree therein on the 16th day of Uovember 18c>2, of the real estate so devised to them, under and by virtue of which the premises last mentioned were assigned and allotted in severalty to McDowell and wife in her right, as the same had been described in the survey and plat returned in the proceeding in partition, and had been approved by that court. It appeared, however, by the survey and plat so returned into that court, that the premises as so assigned and allotted to them, were in the metes and bounds therein stated, *217 described as bounded by a line of seventy feet and one sixteen hundredth of a foot on the south side of Shipley street, whilst by the deed to H. S. McComb from McDowell and wife, and also by the deed to Boulden, the testator, from the executors of John Ferris deceased, for the same, executed on the 15th day of December 1828, which was likewise put in evidence by the defendants, they were in the metes and bounds therein stated, described as bounded by a line of seventy one' feet and one sixteen hundredths of a foot on the south side of Shipley Street. The defendants also proved that the old fence which existed before the new one was erected in 1856, stood precisely on the line on which the partition wall in question was erected in 1868.

Patterson,

contended that the plaintiff had not only established a good title to the locus in quo by an adverse possession of twenty years, at least, but that the defendants were concluded and estopped by the partition and decree in Chancery from asserting any claim or title to more than seventy feet and one sixteen hundredths of a foot on the south side of Shipley Street, which would not include any portion of the narrow strip of land in dispute between the parties, and upon which the alleged trespass had. been committed, and asked the court to so instruct the jury.

Bates.

Under the plea of liberum tenementum, if the defendant, Mrs. McComb, had proved a legal title to the locus in question,the defendants were entitled to a verdict, unless the plaintiff had clearly established an adverse possession of twenty years, at least, for in such case all the presumptions of law mere in favor of the legal title. Ang. on Lim. 404. And such adverse possession must have been exclusive, hostile to the right of ownership of the owners of the adjoining premises, and of all other persons, and must have been marked by a definite .and distinctly recognized boundary or limit in the meantime. Or if it appeared from the evidence that there was a mixed possession of it in the meanwhile, the law would adjudge *218 the possession to have been in the party who had shown a a legal title to. it. Inskeep v. Shields et al. 4 Harr. 345. If prior to and up to the year 1856, when the new partition fence spoken of by the witnesses w;as erected, the respective holders of the adjoining lots in question were ignorant of the exact location of the line of division between them,and the plaintiff and those under whom he claims title, through inadvertency or ignorance of its true location, had included in his inclosure, or had in their sole and exclusive possession as part of their property or premises, any adjoining ground which in fact belonged to the owners of the adjoining premises during that time, and neither of the respective owners of the two lots were aware of it, such a holding would not constitute an adverse possession of it in contemplation of law, or in the legal sense of that term. Ang. on Lim. 413.

Gordon.

The discrepancy referred to between the deeds of Ferris’ executors to Bóulden and of McDowell and wife to H. S. McComb, and the decree in partition in the Court of Chancery, as to the length or extent of the line of the premises referred to in them, on the south side of Shipley Street, was not material, inasmuch as it was a mere matter of description in the deeds and in the survey and plat returned by the surveyor in the proceeding in Chancery, not essential to be strictly proved as stated in them, but which if erroneous, might be shown to be so, and might be corrected and reconciled like any other immaterial description by the weight and preponderance of the evidence produced in the case; and, therefore, the defendants were not estopped by the decree in that court to deny that the line of the premises in question extended but seventy feet and one sixteen hundredths of a foot, instead of seventy one feet and one sixteen hundredths of a foot on the south side of that street. 1. Greenl. Ev. sec. 26. n. 1. And such was particularly, the rule of law on the subject in this country. Estopplse by deeds or surveys do not apply to matters of description merely, because they are not supposed to have received the particular or deliberate *219 attention of the parties to them, and much less could this matter of discrepancy between the plat and survey returned to that court and the deeds he had mentioned, be supposed to have received any notice or attention whatever from the Court of Chancery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Del. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoen-v-mccomb-delsuperct-1870.