Thompson v. . Burhans

79 N.Y. 93, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 997
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 79 N.Y. 93 (Thompson v. . Burhans) 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
Thompson v. . Burhans, 79 N.Y. 93, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 997 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This was an action of ejectment brought to recover an undivided five-sixteenth part of 4,000 acres of land described in the complaint as situated in the town of ¡Newcomb, Essex county, in township number forty-seven, in Totten & Crossfield’s purchase. The only title claimed by the plaintiff is under a tax deed from the comptroller of the State executed in 1836. It was held by the Commission of Appeals, upon a prior appeal in this case (61 N. Y., 52), that that title was, "on account qf certain defects in the proceedings prior to the execution of the deed by the comptroller, invalid, and hence the plaintiff cannot recover upon the strength of any title to the land claimed

The defendants claim the same land under a patent from the State of a gore of land lying between Totten & Cross-field’s purchase and McComb’s purchase. The claim of the plaintiff is that the south lino of 'McComb’s purchase is the north line of Totten & Crossfiekl’s purchase, and that there is no gore there. The claim of the defendant is that there is a gore there, and that the land claimed is in such gore north of township forty-seven and between that and McComb’s purchase.

The defendants claim no other title than the patent from the State, and their title depends entirely upon the existence of the gore. Most of the evidence at the trial was directed to the question of the gore, and after a studious effort to comprehend the full force of the evidence given, I am of opinion that it presented a question of fact for the determination of the court at Special Term, and that its finding, like that of the referee, upon substantially the same evidence upon the fdrmer trial against the existence of the gore, is conclusive upon us.

We have, therefore, to deal with a case where neither party has any title to the land in controversy. The complaint alleges that the defendants are in possession of the *97 lands, and. that they withhold the possession from the plaintiff ; and the defendants in their answer admit that they are in possession, but claim that the land thus possessed, instead of being in township forty-seven is in the gore north of the township. For the purposes of this action, therefore, it must bo taken as a fact that the defendants were at and prior to the commencement of this action in the possession of the land claimed. The plaintiff, therefore, in order to succeed in his action and deprive the defendants of their possession, having no title to the land, must show a prior possession of the land which was wrongfully invaded by the defendants. Prior possession is sufficient to sustain a recovery in ejectment against a person who intrudes upon that possession without any right.

The comptroller’s tax deed in form conveyed the northwest, the north-cast, and the south-east quarters of the township, each quarter containing 6,300 acres of land. The lands claimed are 4,000 acres across the northerly ends of the north-west and north-east quarters. Upon the other trial it did not appear that the plaintiff had ever been in the actual possession of either of those two quarters ; but it was admitted at that trial that the north half of township forty-seven is wild and in a state of nature and covered with timber, and was never any of it cleared up or cultivated.” So far as the plaintiff sought, upon the prior appeal, to sustain his recovery upon prior possession, it was upon a possession of a small portion of the south-east quarter, and for reasons stated in the opinions pronounced in the Commission of Appeals, that possession was held insufficient. It was not then held, as has been erroneously supposed, that that possession was sufficient to give constructive possession of the whole of the south-east quarter. It was simply held that it was not sufficient, with the deeds under which plaintiff claimed, to give constructive possession of the land in controversy.

Upon the last trial, besides the proof of payment of taxes, claim of title and surveys given upon the former trial, the plaintiff gave further proof of acts done upon the north-west quarter *98 of the township, as follows: In 1852 opl853, the plaintiff caused some lots to be surveyed in the north-west corner of the northwest quarter of the township. The first lot on the westerly side of the quarter, as thus surveyed, contained 940 acres. - In 1858, one Ralph, by arrangement with the plaintiff, cut from this lot from 500 to 1,000 pine logs and paid him for them. Nothing more was done upon the lot until December, 1864. Then the plaintiff, hearing that the defendants meant to enter upon the land under their claim, made an arrangement with Ralph, whereby he was to go upon the land and cut some logs there and build a shanty, for the purpose of thus gaining possession of the land. The avowed intention of the plaintiff was to have just enough done to get the possession. That winter accordingly Ralph went upon that portion of the northwest quarter called lot number one and cut logs for a shanty, and constructed one without any roof. He cut over less than a quarter of au acre that winter, and was there in all not over three or four weeks. During the summer of 1865, a roof was put upon the shanty by Ralph and a barn was built. This was all that was done upon the lot, as I understand the evidence, before the commencement of the suit. After the suit was commenced in the winter of 1865-1866, Ralph again went upon the lot under the plaintiff, and cut out some roads and cut between 3,000 and 4,000 logs.

Upon these acts of possession the court at Special Term gave plaintiff judgment for five-sixteenths of 2,000 acres, being so much of the land claimed as was in the northwest quarter of the township. The land thus recovered is a strip across that quarter, nearly one mile wide and nearly three and one-half miles long. The main question, now to be determined is whether the plaintiff showed such possession as entitled him to this recovery. I think he did not.

■ That there was any actual possession of the land recovered cannot be'well claimed. It was not inclosed. No part of it had ever been cultivated or improved. Whatever was done upon it was to take value from it, not to put value into it. It docs not even appear that any one ever lived in the *99 shanty, and no one representing the plaintiff was upon the land at the time of the alleged entry of the defendants or for some months before. Payment of taxes, surveying and assertion of right, do not constitute possession. They merely show a claim of title, and whenever it is important to show that, they are material. Going upon land from time to time and cutting logs thereon, does not give possession. Such acts are merely trespasses upon the land against the true owner, whoever he may be. Any other intruder may commit similar trespasses, without liability to any other trespasser. Such acts do not constitute a disseizin of the true owner. One may gain actual possession of land by fencing it, or by cultivating and improving it or by building upon it; and then he will have possession of as much as he has fenced, or cultivated and improved, or built upon with some laud around and necessary for the buildings. Actual possession, —possessio pedis—can mean no more. So in the early stages of society, before there was any exclusive appropriation of lands, the shepherd had the possession of the lands upon which he was feeding his flocks, and the farmer of the lands which he inclosed or tilled.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y. 93, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-burhans-ny-1879.