Wood v. . Lafayette

68 N.Y. 181, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 703
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 N.Y. 181 (Wood v. . Lafayette) 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
Wood v. . Lafayette, 68 N.Y. 181, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 703 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

When this ease was before us on the first appeal, two points were decided, viz.: That the court erred, first, in excluding evidence of the revocation of the power given by the agreement of January 24, 1867, to James Mann, to_ designate the northern boundary line of the. defendant’s farm as it existed when James Mann, senior, occupied the farm, and secondly, in excluding evidence offered by the defendant to show where such boundary line was. As these two erroneous rulings were sufficient to require a reversal of the judgment, the points which arise on the present appeal were "not then passed upon by the court.

On the second trial the question of the location of the line, as it existed during Mann’s ownership, was submitted to the jury on conflicting evidence, and they found in favor of the plaintiff.

The points mainly relied upon by the appellant on the present appeal are, that at the time of the commission of the alleged trespass the plaintiff was not in possession of the locus in quo, and has not been in possession at any time since, but that the defendant was and still is in possession, claiming title thereto. That the court excluded evidence on that point and also excluded the deeds under which the defendant claimed title, although the offer of such deeds was accompanied by an offer to show that they embraced the locus in quo. These deeds are claimed to be material on the question of possession, and it is also claimed that it appears from them that the boundaries are so definite that there could be no uncertainty about the northern boundary of defendant’s farm, and conse *185 quently, a parol agreement fixing a different boundary is invalid.

The plaintiff claimed title under a deed to himself from A. E. Lindsley and wife, dated April 1, 1858, conveying a lot of seven acres, the southerly line of the lot, as described in the deed, running east fifteen chains along the north side of land formerly owned by James Mann, to the highway. This is the line in dispute, and the northerly line of James Mann’s former ownership is the only data by which the plaintiff’s southerly line can be located. To locate this line and thus prove his title to the place where the defendant is alleged to have committed the trespass, the plaintiff put in evidence an agreement dated January 24, 1867. The parties to this agreement were the plaintiff and defendant and Jonathan Whiting and James Conner. Whiting had conveyed to defendant the farm formerly owned by Mann, with warranty. Conner owned the farm adjoining defendant’s on the west, and there was a litigation pending between defendant and Conner, as to the line between them. The agreement purports to have been made for the purpose of settling this litigation as well as the line between plaintiff and defendant, and provided, so far as this line is concerned, that Whiting should procure a competent surveyor to go upon the land oc&wpied by the defendant in this action and make a survey thereof. The land thus to be surveyed is particularly described in the agreement, as a perfectly rectangular piece of forty acres, the courses running due east and west and north and south, the northerly and southerly lines being fifteen chains, and the easterly and westerly lines, twenty-six chains and sixty-seven links in length, bounded on the east by a highway. The southerly line is fixed by reference to marked trees and a stake and stones, and there appears to be no dispute about that line, and nothing but accurate measurement from the south line was required to locate with exactness the boundary line on the north. The agreement then provided that after such survey, James Mann (who was the son of the James Mann who had formerly owned the farm) should go on the land and designate the line between *186 the present plaintiff and defendant on the north end of defendant’s lot, as the same existed, when has father ocav/pied the defendant's lot, and that so much of the land first described as the line so designated by Mann, should cut or take off therefrom, Whiting should pay defendant for at the rate of thirty dollars per acre. Wood agreed that defendant should have the privilege of removing the fence then standing between his land and defendant’s lot on to the line to be designated by Mann, and it was mutually agreed that the boundaries so ascertained by said survey and modified by Mann, as above provided, should be and remain the boundaries of defendant’s lot.

This agreement it will be observed shows that there was at the time a fence standing between the lot of the plaintiff and defendant, and that the agreement contemplated the removal of such fence and the cutting off thereby of a portion of the northerly end of defendant’s lot, for which he was to receive compensation from Whiting, but conceded at the time of the making of the agreement the entire lot, as described in the agreement, was occupied by the defendant.

The existing fence referred to in the agreement was proved to have been erected by the defendant. The plaintiff testified that it was begun before the agreement, but completed after-wards, and it does not clearly appear in the evidence on the part of the plaintiff whether it was completed before or after the trespass. The plaintiff introduced evidence to the effect that while James Mann owned the lot, he erected a fence across the northerly end, which was about twenty-four links south of the fence subsequently erected by the defendant as before mentioned, and that the remains of this old fence were on the land when defendant erected the new one, and that the old fence was the limit of Mann’s occupation. The plaintiff testified that the trespass by felling trees was committed in 1867, after the making of the agreement of January 24, 1867, but before the survey had been made under that agreement. The loans in quo was the strip of land twenty-four links wide lying southerly of defendant’s new fence.

*187 On or about the 20th of May, 1867, and before action had been taken under the agreement, the defendant by an instrument in writing revoked the agreement that James Mann, the younger, might designate the division line, and all authority given to him to act as arbitrator or otherwise in settling the boundary. On or about the 20th of August, 1867, Whiting employed a surveyor who professes to have made a survey in accordance with the agreement. He ascertained the southerly and westerly lines of defendant’s lot as therein described, and after having run those lines, Mann pointed out to him the place where there had been an old fence, and he ran the northerly line thus designated by Mann as the line where the old fence had been. He testified on his cross-examination that the distance from the south line to the north line thus run by him was only twenty-six chains and twenty-four links; that north of this line there was a fence standing, and that the distance between that fence and the line run by him was twenty-four links, and that space was the place where the trees were cut. He calculated how much was cut off by the line he ran from the land as described in the agreement, and found that at thirty dollars per acre it amounted to nineteen dollars and twenty cents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 N.Y. 181, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-lafayette-ny-1877.