Talcott v. Stillman

28 Conn. 193
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 Conn. 193 (Talcott v. Stillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talcott v. Stillman, 28 Conn. 193 (Colo. 1859).

Opinion

Waldo, J.

The statute upon wdiich these proceedings are predicated, provides that whenever adjoining proprietors, whose lands are' otherwise inclosed in severalty, or whenever by distribution, sale or otherwise, a particular inclosure shall be divided between two or more proprietors, and either proprietor shall desire to have a division fence erected, and the parties can not agree, any two of the fence viewers of the town where the land is situated may view said dividing line, after reasonable notice to said proprietors, and if said fence viewers shall deem it reasonable that such fence should be erected at the expense of each of said adjoining proprietors, they shall divide and slake out said line, and assign to each his portion thereof, and limit a time within which the fence shall be erected; and it then becomes the duty of each proprietor to erect a lawful fence on the portion of the line so set to him. And if either of the proprietors shall make his portion of the fence, and the other proprietor shall neglect to build his within the time limited, said [161]*161fence viewers may build the same, or may authorize the proprietor who has erected his portion to build the same, and when said fence is so built, the builder may recover of the party so neglecting, the expense of building and the fees of the fence viewers, in an action of debt.

These provisions were intended to remedy a defect in the old law relating to fences, where adjoining proprietors, holding their lands in severalty by particular inclosures, refused or neglected to build a fence upon the line dividing such inclosures. To justify a proceeding under these provisions, the lands of the adjoining proprietors must be otherwise inclosed in severalty, or they must consist of a particular inclosure divided between the proprietors, without a divisional fence, which one of the proprietors-must desire to have erected. Under these circumstances, two of the fence viewers of the town in which the land is situated, may view said dividing line, and if they shall be of opinion that it is reasonable that a fence should be ^erected upon said line at the expense of each of said [ *197 ] adjoining proprietors, they are to divide and stake out said iine, and assign to each his portion thereof. The fence viewers are r.ot to make a division of the land between the proprietors, for the land must consist of particular inclosures occupied in severalty by adjoining proprietors. Nor are they to settle a disputed line, or erect or establish lost or uncertain boundaries, for these duties are, by another statute, committed to another tribunal. Rev. Stat., tit. 29, § 22. But they are “ to view said dividing line,” language clearly implying that the line is settled and known, and if they deem it reasonable that such fence should be erected at the expense of each of said adjoining proprietors, they shall divide and stake out said line.” Upon viewing the line between the proprietors, they are first to determine whether the fence upon it should be erected at the expense of both of said proprietors, and if so, they are then to divide the line between them, and the portion allotted to each is to be by them staked out. If the line between the proprietors be unknown, or the boundaries lost or uncertain, the fence viewers have not jurisdiction of the subject matter, and, unless they chance to locate the fence on the true line, their acts will be void. Gallup v. Mulvah, 4 Foster, 204. Shaw v. Gilfillan, 22 Verm., 565.

Upon the trial of this case it was agreed that the land in question was formerly owned in fee by William Talcott, who died intestate; that the plaintiff and the grantor of the defendant were children of the said William and heirs at law to his estate; that, by a parol agreement between the children of William, his [162]*162lands were divided between thém in the year 1838, and that since that time said children and their assigns have occupied their respective share's under said division a's their own, and that the share of the plaintiff and the defendant’s grantor* adjoined each other. But it was not agreed that there was any known •or established line or boundaries between these two shares, and the parties were at issue upon that question. The plaintiff claimed to have occupied up to the line oh which the fence was built, and in this way to have acquired a title to that [ *198 ]' line. ' The defendant *denied this claim of the plaintiff. The court has found that the plaintiff’ has not had exclusive possession up to the line of the fence, and has not acquired a title by occupancy up to th'at line, and that, at the time of the proceedings of the fence viewers relating to said-fence, the plaintiff was not in' the exclusive and actual possession up to that line.

The plaintiff objected to the admission of any. evidence on the part of the defendant tending to show that this fence was not built upon the true line, but the court overruled’ the objection and received the evidence. We think the court was right in receiving this evidence. It certainly was competent for the defendant to show that the fence viewers had no jurisdiction of-the subject matter, for in such case their action would be void. And evidence that tended to show that there was no known or recognized line between these parties, tended to show a want of jurisdiction in the fence viewers, for they can only view and decide upon a'known line. ’ The evidence offered by the defendant had this tendency and was therefore admissible. Nor do we perceive that the aspect of the case is in any manner changed by the facts claimed by the plaintiff; such as that she acted in good faith under the direction of the fence viewers, and built the fence to their acceptance, and that the defendant did not appear before said fence viewers, and neglected to build the fence as required by them. The plaintiff, in good faith, may have supposed she was the owner of more land than of right belonged to her, and she might have desired to have all she claimed included within her separate inclosure. But. if her claims were not recognized by the adjoining proprietor, and there was no settled and known line between them, the fence viewers had no authority to undertake to pass upon the validity of her claims. These should 'have been submitted to another tribunal, authorized to settle questions of this character, and whose determination would have been obligatory upon the parties. As the action of the fence viewers in attempting to locate an uncertain line between these parties was unauthorized, [163]*163it was not obligatory, nor could it be *made so by the honesty and bona fides of the transaction on the part of the plaintiff.

Nor do we yield our assent to the claim of the plaintiff, that the only object of the legislature in adopting the provisions under consideration, was-to provide for a temporary fence while the line between the proprietors was in controversy; or, that» the fence viewers had authority to settle the line temporarily, and direct a fence to be built on land belonging to the defendant, and charge him with a portion of the expense. If the fence was not erected on the true line but upon the land of the defendant, as claimed by him and found by the court, the building of the fence was not only a trespass upon the property of the defendant, but it also actually ousted him of the possession of a portion of his land- and inflicted upon him a positive injury. Under these circumstances we do not believe the legislature intended to make him pay for the injury he had received, or to aid in the erection of a nuisance upon his own land.

The plaintiff relies upon the case of

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Bluebook (online)
28 Conn. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talcott-v-stillman-conn-1859.