Tymason v. Bates

14 Wend. 671
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Wend. 671 (Tymason v. Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tymason v. Bates, 14 Wend. 671 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1835).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered:

By the Chancellor.

The question to be determined in this case is, not what land Tymason intended to convey to Calvin May by his deed of November, 1812, but what land is actually covered by the description and boundaries contained in the. deed itself. The land conveyed by Tymason was deeded to him by the same description, word for word, by the deeds of John Jay and others, in March, 1808 ; and it was afterwards conveyed, by the same description, in the deed from May to Hammond, and in the subsequent conveyances to Phenis and Bates. As Bates claims the right to recover, [674]*674through those deeds, as the assignee of a covenant running with the land which was covered by the deed to himself, it is evident he cannot recover in this suit, unless the land of which/he has been evicted in the Cherry Valley patent is actually embraced within the description in the deed to himself, and in all the intermediate conveyances through which he claims ; and if it is embraced in the descriptions in those deeds, it is also embraced in the deeds from Jay and others to Tymason—as it is not pretended that there are two different parcels of land to which the description is applicable. In this view of the case, it is impossible for me to discover upon what principle May’s testimony could be received as legal evidence to support the plaintiff’s action. If Tymason pointed out to him a particular piece of land as that which he was about to sell to him, and took a price for it accordingly, and afterwards conveyed to him by a description which did not embrace the land thus pointed out, it might be a sufficient ground for reforming the deed in the court of chancery, if he was the Owner and had the right to convey the land thus pointed out, so that the legal title to it might pass to the purchaser under the reformed conveyance ; and if he was not the owner, the court of chancery might decree the money to be refunded, or at least so much of it as would compensate for the difference in value between the land contracted for and that which was conveyed by the deed. But no action of covenant could be maintained in a court of law', even as between the immediate parties to the conveyance, for a failure of title to land not actually embraced therein. Much less could a subsequent grantee of the purchaser maintain an action upon a covenant of warranty in the conveyance; for, to enable a subsequent grantee to maintain an action upon the warranty in a previous conveyance, as a covenant running .with the land, the description of the premises in the deed to himself, as well as in the deed in which such covenant of warranty is contained, must be such that it would have conveyed to him the legal title to the land of which he has been evicted, if the grantors in the several conveyances through and under which he claims, had been the owners thereof; and if Calvin May, at [675]*675the time of his conveyance to Hammond, had been the owner of the whole of the Cherry Valley patent, is it possible to suppose that any thing south of the north line of that patent would have passed by the description contained in the deed to his grantee ? Our recording acts would afford no protection whatever to subsequent purchasers, if the abuttals and boundaries contained in written conveyances should be considered as referring merely to what was supposed by the immediate parties to be the land described in the deed. If this were the case, the purchaser of lot No. 1 in a particular tract, who had searched the records and found that the grantor had only conveyed No. 2 in that tract, would lose his farm upon parol proof that, at the time the deed for No. 2 was given, lot No. 1 was pointed out to the purchaser as the land which he was about to convey, and that both parties to that conveyance at that time actually supposed it was the lot described in the deed as lot No. 2. The description in a deed refers to matters which are supposed to be well known to others; so that any other person, as well as the immediate parties to the conveyance, can, by proper inquiries, locate the premises from the description in the deed, with reference to matters of public notoriety—as to deeds, or maps, or marks upon the land. If lot No. 1 is conveyed in a particular tract, it is only necessary to inquire and ascertain from residents in the neighborhood, or other authentic sources of information, where lot No. 1 is, and how it is bounded ; and it is not necessary to look any further, unless it is found that there are two lots of that name, or there are other boundaries contained in the deed, which apply to some other lot, and not to No. 1. But if such a latent ambiguity exists, the person who wishes to locate the premises described in the conveyance, or to ascertain whether a piece of land which he is about to purchase has already been conveyed or encumbered, must refer to certain legal rules of construction, or make further inquiries, for the purpose of ascertaining which of the two pieces to which the different descriptions in the deed relate, was the one actually conveyed. That was the case in Jackson v. Loomis, 18 Johns. R. 81, where the mortgage was for lot No. 51; but the cour[676]*676ses and distances and fixed monuments which were given in mortgage were in fact the known boundaries of lot No. 50. In that case the number of the lot was rejected as a false and mistaken call, and the fixed monuments, together • with the courses and distances, were of themselves sufficient to enable a person to locate the land intended to be conveyed by the mortgage. But in this case, if the calls in the deed, by which the land would be located as Tymason’s counsel contended it should be, are rejected as false and mistaken, there is no land described in the deed which could ever be located. The first call that must be rejected is, “ subdivision No. 1 of lot No. 60, in the division of Livingston’s patent, which lot No. 60 was subdivided in the year 1794,” as the premises of which the plaintiff was evicted are no part of lot No. 60 in Livingston’s patent; and no person testifies that he ever heard it called by that name. This call, therefore, agrees with the defendant’s location, but not with the plaintiff’s. The residue of the description is a statement of the boundaries of the subdivision No. I, in lot No. 60, in Livingston’s patent, which actually extended to the true line of Lindsey and Roseboom’s tract, as described in the deed: but neither- the south-east corner of lot No. 60, nor the line of Lindsey and lioseboom’s tract, is at the oak tree which some of the witnesses supposed to be the line of the Cherry Talley patent; but they are both at the point where the defendant insists the first line and course in his deed commences. I do not understand that any of the witnesses ever heard the oak tree called the south-east corner of lot No. 60, or the line running therefrom the line of Lindsey and Roseboom’s tract; but it turns out that the Cherry Valley patent and that .tract were the same. . And we shall certainly be going full far enough, if we retain the description of the line, and- reject the south-east corner of lot No. 60 as a false or mistaken boundary. We must also reject the crooked beach marked 1, 2, at the termination of the first course, and the ironwood sapling and basswood tree marked 1, 2, at the termination of the second course, which never did correspond with the plaintiff’s location, and which his counsel now insist cannot be found. [677]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Violette v. Rice
53 N.E. 144 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1899)
Andreu v. Watkins
26 Fla. 390 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1890)
Armstrong v. . Dubois
90 N.Y. 95 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Wend. 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tymason-v-bates-nycterr-1835.