United States v. 13,255.53 Acres of Land in Burlington & Ocean Counties

53 F. Supp. 305, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1891
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
DocketNo. M-135a
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 F. Supp. 305 (United States v. 13,255.53 Acres of Land in Burlington & Ocean Counties) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 13,255.53 Acres of Land in Burlington & Ocean Counties, 53 F. Supp. 305, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1891 (D.N.J. 1943).

Opinion

FORMAN, District Judge.

This controversy involves the ownership of a tract of land, consisting of about ten acres described as parcels 67 and 111, situated in the Township of New Hanover, County of Burlington, State of New Jersey, which was taken and condemned for the use of the United States of America in a condemnation proceeding. An award of $1,100 for the land designated as parcel 67, and $14,150 for the land designated as parcel 111, was made upon which judgment was entered and the money deposited with the court. An order was issued to show cause why it should not be determined that the petitioners, William Grant and Charles H. Atkinson, hold good and valid title to the land and are entitled to the money deposited with the court. Upon return of the show cause order, Gertrude Brown, Lloyd Davis, Stanley Davis, Leon A. Davis, Elvin H. Davis, Myrtle Haines, Viola Townsend, Gladys Billetdoux and Marion Thoburn claimed that each of them has an interest in the land and is entitled to his proportionate share of the proceeds as a result of the condemnation.

George C. Davis died in 1866 seized of the property and by his last will and testament devised his residuary estate, which included this property, to his seven children, of whom Levi Davis was one. Levi Davis died intestate leaving as his only child and heir at law, Robert Jones Davis, who deeded the entire property to Melanie Crammer on October 14, 1903. The latter conveyed the entire property to James Grant, father of the petitioner, William Grant, by deed dated February 6, 1906. William Grant conveyed a part of the property to Charles H. Atkinson, the other petitioner.

The claimant, Gladys Billetdoux, claims through Elisha P. Davis, one of the seven children of George C. Davis. The claimants, Lloyd Davis, Leon A. Davis, Elvin H. Davis and Gertrude Brown claim through their father, George C. Davis (the second), one of two children of Joseph Davis, who was one of the seven children of George C. Davis. The claimant, Marion Thoburn, claims through Raymond Davis, one of eight children of George C. Davis (the second), and the claimants, Myrtle Haines, Viola Townsend and Stanley Davis claim through Harvey Davis, another of the eight children of George C. Davis (the second).

Uncontradicted evidence shows that the petitioners and their predecessors in title have been in continuous, uninterrupted, undisputed and .peaceful possession of the entire property from 1903 until 1940, in which latter year the lands were taken by the United States of America as aforesaid. The petitioners contend that such posses-» sion of the property for approximately thirty-six years entitles them to claim ownership of the entire property by virtue of adverse possession.

The claimants base their claim to the money deposited by the United States on the theory that, notwithstanding possession by the petitioners and their predecessors as aforesaid, petitioners are cotenants with the other heirs at law of George C. Davis; that the aforesaid possession was for the benefit of all the cotenants and that cotenants cannot be ousted under a claim of adverse possession for the Statute of Limitations would not start to run against them. The claimants argue that Melanie Crammer, James Grant and the petitioners, William Grant and Charles H. Atkinson, knew or should have known that Robert Jones Davis, the grantor in the deed to Melanie Crammer, owned only an undivided interest in the property by reason of the recital in such deed as follows: “And the said George C. Davis by will devised the same to Levi Davis”.

The facts in the case of Foulke v. Bond, 41 N.J.L. 527, which is the leading case in New Jersey, are in substance the same facts presented in the instant case. In that case Lott and Earl were tenants in common of a tract of land. Earl died in 1831 and by will devised his undivided interest to his brother, Franklin Earl, who in 1833 conveyed the undivided interest to Ivins. After the death of Ivins, his administrator in 1842 sold and conveyed the land in two parcels, one to Jones and the other to Pharo. In 1851 both Jones and Pharo conveyed the land to the defendant. The undivided interest of Lott was conveyed to the plaintiff by Lott’s executors in 1876, whereupon an action of ejectment was commenced in 1877. The verdict of the lower court for the defendant, who claimed title by adverse possession, was affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals. In its opinion the court recognized that possession of the joint estate by one tenant in common is presumed to be the possession of all, but ruled that a tenant in common may acquire title to the joint estate in entirety by adverse possession, pointing out that the degree of evi[307]*307deuce necessary to prove adverse possession is greater in the case of a tenant in common than in the case of a stranger. The court distinguished between cases in which title by adverse possession is founded on entry which is hostile in its .inception and cases in which entry became hostile by subsequent acts, stating that while the latter is presumed to be in accordance with the title of the possessor, the former is a disseizin of the other cotenants. It follows that the degree of evidence necessary to prove adverse possession in the case of entry, hostile in its inception, is much less than that necessary to prove adverse possession in the case of entry which became hostile by subsequent acts. An example of entry, hostile in its inception, is stated by the court to be a conveyance of the whole estate by one of the cotenants which operates as a disseizin of the other cotenants, while a conveyance of an undivided interest would constitute an entry which became hostile by subsequent acts.

In the case at bar the entire estate was conveyed to Melanie Crammer by Robert Jones Davis on October 14, 1903, at which time a disseizin of the other cotenants took place. Since that time petitioners and their predecessors have held the property in uninterrupted, undisputed, continuous and peaceable possession to the exclusion of the other cotenants, or for a period of approximately thirty-six years. The testimony revealed that when James Grant became seized of the entire property on February 6, 1906, he immediately planted and cultivated cranberry vines and created bogs. He lived on the portion of the land which was devoted to farming. He occupied a frame dwelling surrounded by outbuildings. William. Grant continued the cultivation and harvesting of cranberries until the portion of the land designated as parcel 111 was sold to Charles H. Atkinson, who further cultivated that portion and planted blueberry bushes. The cultivation of the land continued up to the time the land was condemned. As evidence of the cultivated state of the property, approximately 3,614 blueberry plants from seven to nine years of age, approximately 654 blueberry plants about six years of age, approximately 307 blueberry plants about five years of age, approximately 378 blueberry plants about four years of age, approximately 3,389 blueberry plants about three years of age, approximately 1,393 blueberry plants about two years of age, approximately 8,558 blueberry plants about one year of age and approximately 9,000 root cuttings were found on the land. The land is situated in a section of the state wherein the growing of cultivated blueberries was originated comparatively recently.

It is difficult to perceive the contention of the claimants that the petitioners and their predecessors knew or should have known of the existence of the other cotenants from an examination of the aforesaid recital in the deed from Robert Jones Davis to Melanie Crammer, which only refers to the devise of the property from George C. Davis to Levi Davis.

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Related

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95 A.2d 23 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
53 F. Supp. 305, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-1325553-acres-of-land-in-burlington-ocean-counties-njd-1943.