Smith v. State

23 N.J.L. 130
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 N.J.L. 130 (Smith v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State, 23 N.J.L. 130 (N.J. 1851).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

The defendant below, who is the plaintiff in error, was convicted in the Passaic Oyer and Terminer of a nuisance for obstructing a public highway, being one of the streets in the town of Paterson. Having, in 1849, become by purchase the owner of a lot of ground at the southeast corner of Broadway and Main streets, fifty feet on Broadway by twenty-eight feet on Main street, he erected a building, which it is alleged projects four feet four inches beyond the line of the street first named.

The lot in question is part of a larger lot of ground, fifty feet on Broadway by oue hundred feet in depth on Main street, which, with other lots on Broadway of corresponding depth, was laid off and sold by one Abraham Van Honten. The larger lot spoken of was conveyed, May 1, 1807, by Peter Wilson, then the owner, to one Simeon Van ilouten. It subsequently became the property of one Garrabrant Van Honten, who, March 5, 1821, conveyed it, together with a lot of fifty-five feet front on Main street immediately adjoining, to Andrew Parsons. Parsons had previously bought a lot of forty feet front on Main street, immediately south of the last mentioned lot, so that his whole front on Main street, running south from the corner of Broadway, was 195 feet. He held to this extent from 1821 until December 14, 1835, a period of more than fourteen years, when he sold the whole premises, comprising the three lots aforesaid, for a large price, to Messrs. Pennington, Collet, and others. This property was subsequently divided and sold, the defendant becoming the owner of the corner lot already mentioned.

Broadway, formerly called the old York road, upon which the encroachment was made, had been laid out as a public highway, four rods or sixty-six feet in width, in the mode then provided by statute, as long ago as 1761 ; but there seems to have been some doubt where the true line of the street [138]*138should be placed according to the original survey. It appeared, however in evidence, that many years ago, more than forty, according to the testimony, a fence stood on the south side of Broadway, where it is now crossed by Main street, which extended a considerable distance eastwardly, in front of and beyond the lot now owned by the defendant. Buildings were subsequently placed on the street in the line of that fence, which was for many years, and until the action of the defendant, treated as the line of the street. Indeed the street was built up in conformity with the line so indicated, and many conveyances by the owners of the adjoining lands were made accordingly. The measurements called for in the deeds referred to, and made by successive owners, were all satisfied by running to the corner of Broadway and Main street, indicated by the fence, and subsequently by the buildings placed in conformity with the same line.

The defendant in this indictment having purchased the lot at the corner of Broadway and Main street, caused the former street to be surveyed. Assuming certain points to be roonu- , ments from which the true line of the street, as originally laid out, could be ascertained, and claiming it to be in a straight line, he carried forward the front of his lot from what had been previously treated as the line of the street, and which was sufficient to satisfy the measurement of his own deed, to a point four feet four inches in advance, and erected a brick -building accordingly. The present indictment was the result of this encroachment.

Upon the trial, the court charged that a public highway in New Jersey might be established, not only by surveyors under the statute, but by dedication, and by an uninterrupted use by the public for more than twenty years. It was submitted to the jury, supposing the encroachment not to be within the original line of the street according to the survey, whether in this case there had not been such use for a long period, with a recognition on the part of the owners of the adjoining land, as would establish the public right. After a recapitulation of the evidence on this point, the court added, that it was shown that the public had used the land where the defendant’s build[139]*139ing is erected, with the assent of the owners, for more than twenty years, and that, if the witnesses were believed, this established the public right. One of the exceptions to the charge is, that the judge assumed the dedication as a matter of fact.

The opinion of the court upon the weight of evidence, declared incidentally in the course of a charge to the jury, is not strictly the subject of an assignment of error. But whatever may be the rule on this point, which it is not intended to discuss, certainly such remarks can furnish no ground of error where no mistake is made to appear, the charge being supported by the evidence detailed in the bill of exceptions and the directions have led to a proper result. Whether there was any error in the view expressed by the court in the charge on this point, will be better understood after considering the subsequent exceptions taken on the part of the defendant. I think it will be found that the court, in what it actually did say, made no attempt to decide any questionable matter of fact. The court expressed merely the conclusions of the law upon facts proved, and in this it in no way interfered with the province of the jury.

The second exception upon which error has been assigned, is the construction of the deed from Parsons to Pennington and his associates. Parsons held the entire lot, being 195 feet on Main street, from March 5, 1821, to December 14, 1835, when he made the deed referred to. He bought of Van limiten 155 feet on Main street, which, added to 40 before purchased of Winans, made in the whole 195 feet on that street, from the corner of Broadway, as already stated. The court said, “ he bought liis entire front for 195 feet. This is the measurement called for in his deeds. He held that quantity. That, according to his own testimony, was all he claimed or occupied. He measured it repeatedly. Beyond the 195 feet was the street. He never claimed where the street was open and used by the public. On the 14th December, 1835, he conveyed to Pennington and four others for $25,500. The deed describes the laud thus: ‘Beginning on the easterly side of the Paterson and Hamburg turnpike, at the southeast corner of its [140]*140intersection with Broadway or the old York road, then running south along the turnpike 195 feet to the line of Van Blarcom/” “ Parsons ” (said the court) “ sold for a high price every foot of the land on Main street, it being of great value. The description in his deed to Pennington and others manifestly calls for the course of the street as it actually was at the time. He testifies that he only held to that corner.”

This instruction was correct. It cannot be doubted, upon the evidence in the case, that the measurement given in the description referred to in the charge was made in reference to the corner as it then actually existed at the time of giving the deed, which had always been treated as the line of Broadway, rather than to an imaginary corner, not then known but supposed to be discovered by the subsequent surveying done under the instructions of the-defendant. Wherever the line of the original survey may have been, the corner called for in the deed was in that line which had been located by the adjoining landholders at a point reached by 195 feet from the corner of the lot on Main street, and by 100 feet from the rear of the lots laid off'aud sold by Abraham Van Houten. Parsons, called as a witness, said he had always understood that point to be the line of the street, and had treated it accordingly.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.J.L. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-nj-1851.