Smallwood v. Hatton

4 Md. Ch. 95
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 95 (Smallwood v. Hatton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smallwood v. Hatton, 4 Md. Ch. 95 (Md. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The main point in controversy in this case depends upon the true construction of the bond of conveyance, executed by Hat-ton to the complainant, on the 26th of March, 1825, for it must be conceded that parol proof cannot be allowed upon the pleadings to contradict or vary the terms of the agreement embodied in that instrument. The complainant is entitled to the land, and no more than the land which the proper location of the bond will give him.

He contracted to pay for it the round sum of fifteen hundred dollars, and though it is described as containing one hundred acres, the words “be the same more or less,” must so far qualify the representation of quantity as to preclude either party from any just claim to relief on account of a deficiency or surplus. This case is stronger against the complainant’s title to relief ihan that of Jones vs. Plater, 2 Gill, 125, because in the latter '-the land was to be paid for by the acre, and yet the representation of quantity being qualified by the words “more or less,” •the number of acres was not regarded as of the essence of the contract, and a deficiency, unless of such a character as to induce belief of fraud or mistake, furnished no ground for relief.

In this case to be sure the deficiency is much larger, but the land was not sold by the acre but for a sum in solido, and the circumstances are not such as to excite a suspicion of fraud. The proof shows that as early as the year 1826, the complainant had been warned not to cut wood upon or cultivate the land lying between Piney Branch and the straight line from B. to A., as located upon the plat, and that for many years it was in the possession and use of a third person, claiming under Hatton, and no complaint appears to have been made by the complainant, or any attempt to vindicate his title to that strip of land, until the year 1837, when he filed his bill in this case to stay execution on a judgment rendered against him for a portion of the purchase money at August term, 1836, of Charles County Court.

The plaintiff then having acquiesced for upwards of ten years in the defendant’s construction of this contract, cannot now be [99]*99permitted to say he was defrauded. In point of fact he does not allege fraud in his bill, but insists that according to the true construction of this contract his purchase embraced the piece of land in question. The language of the bill is, that “the said Hatton has always refused and prohibited your orator from possessing, using or occupying a part of said land, much the most fertile and valuable, contained between the last given line and Pinoy Branch mentioned in said contract, but which he has used and possessed himself.”

It is, therefore, simply a question of construction and location, and that of course depends upon the terms of the bond of conveyance. These terms are,

“That if the above bound Peter D. Hatton, his heirs or assigns, shall well and truly make to the said Richard L. Smallwood, his heirs or assigns, a good and sufficient warranty deed, to a certain tract or parcel of land lying in Charles county, and called by the name of Friendship, beginning from Piney Branch, where the road crosses to George Boswell’s mill, thence with said road to the first branch of Mattawoman Swamp, thence up said branch to a ditch leading from the outer line of Friendship to Mattawoman, thence up the said ditch, to the line of Friendship, thonco with the said line to Piney Branch, thence down said branch to the beginning, containing one hundred acres of land, be the same more or less.” And the sole question upon this part of the case is whether this last line described as running “thence down said branch to the beginning,” shall pursue the meanderings of the branch or shall be a straight line to the beginning on Pinoy Branch.

A question, not unlike the present, came up in the Court of Appeals, in the case of Thomas’ Lessee vs. Godfrey et al, 3 Gill & Johns., 142. There the third line of the patent had a call to the main falls of the Patapsco, and from that point the description was “with the main falls by a direct line to the first bound tree.” And the question was whether this last line should be run with the meanders of the stream or directly from the termination of the third line on the falls to the beginning tree. Upon this question the judgment of the court was, that^the ex[100]*100pressions “with the main falls” were so qualified by the other expressions, “by a direct line,” as to show that the latter were intended as the controlling expressions, and consequently that the given line should be run directly from the place of departure to the beginning tree, the object imperatively called for, and that by the words “with the main falls,” the general course of the stream was meant, the meanders of which could not be pursued by a single direct line. But it is manifest from the reasoning of the court, that the survey would have been closed by pursuing the meanders of the stream but for the introduction of the words uby a direct line,” which demonstrated that the meanders of the stream were not intended.

The expressions in this bond of conveyance are “thence with the said line to Piney Branch, thence down said branch to the beginning,” not by a direct line to the beginning, and my opinion is, that “down the branch” and “with the branch” are equivalent terms, and not being qualified by any other terms, the given or home line must pursue the meanders of the branch, by which the survey can be as well closed as by a straight line, as is apparent upon the face of the plat.

But the complainants5 counsel insists that this point, and indeed his title to relief, sought by his bill, has been adjudicated in his favor by Charles County Court, by the order of the 19th of June, 1844, referring the cause to the Auditor.

I do not so understand that order. It instructs the Auditor to report the amount of loss sustained annually by the complainant, in consequence of the defendant’s withholding from him the use of the land lying between the meanders of the stream and a straight line as laid down on the plat, and it is very probable when that order was passed, the court thought the complainant would be entitled to relief to the extent of such loss. But surely it is not a final adjudication to that effect. It does not so settle the right of the parties that an appeal would lie from it. The order of the Chancellor in the case of Hogthorp vs. Hook, 1 Gill & Johns., 271, was far more precise and specific, and yet the Court of Appeals refused to entertain an appeal from it, saying, that however clearly the Chancellor may have [101]*101intimated Ms opinion, or declared Ms intention, the rights of the parties were unaffected by such declaration, it being competent to the Chancellor, in any subsequent stage of the cause, to change or abandon Ms opinion at his pleasure, or according to the dictates of his judgment upon further consideration.

The order, therefore, of the County Court of June, 1844, was no adjudication. It settled nothing, however plain the inference may be that in the opinion of the court at that time the complainant was entitled to a credit for the loss he may have sustained by the act complained of.

The purchase money of the land was fifteen hundred dollars, and the bill speaks only of payments amounting to eight hundred dollars, leaving of course seven hundred of the principal to be accounted for.

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Related

Waters v. Smith
342 A.2d 8 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1975)
Tyson v. Hardesty
29 Md. 305 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smallwood-v-hatton-mdch-1853.