Haring v. Van Houten
Haring v. Van Houten
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought to recover a strip of land, ten feet in width by one hundred feet deep, in the town
The controversy related entirely to the boundary line between the two lots, and that depended upon the true location of the lot of the plaintiff.
The plaintiff, in support of his title, showed a conveyance from Mark W. Collet and A. S. Pennington to Peter D. Weight, on the 17th December, 1835; and through Weight, a title vesting in himself, on the 1st of June, 1842. He also gave in evidence a certified copy of the return of six surveyors of the highways, bearing date on 16th June, 1821, laying out High street as a public highway, three rods wide and twenty-one chains in length. He further proved the precise location of the western line of the street as laid out by the surveyors, and that, allowing the full width of three rods to High street, at its intersection with Willis street, and fixing the plaintiff’s beginning corner at that point, his length of chain (69 feet) on Willis street would carry his line ten feet beyond the line, as claimed by the defendant, and include the premises in <3is-
It further appeared in evidence, that High street along the Collet and Pennington lot, had never been open to its full width; that the fence, from the time the street was .opened, liad always stood where it now does ; that the successive owners of the plaintiff’s lot, Van Ryper, Collet and Pennington, and Haring himself, had claimed and possessed the land to the extent of the alleged encroachment; that some years prior to the commencement of the suit, the plaintiff had built a house on the rear of his lot, fronting on High street, which projected about five feet beyond the true line of the street, having a court yard in front, which encroached eleven feet five inches on the street.
The dwelling house of the plaintiff, at the corner of High and Willis streets, was built by Francis Van Blarcoin, about the year 1823, and the fence on High street set by him about where it now stands. The house itself is not within the line of the street. At the time of the conveyance to Collet and Pennington, in 1831, this was the only house on the lot east of High street. A large number of lots have since been sold, making the fence, as it stood, the line of High street. The lots on Willis street have all been sold, as far as the title of Collet and Pennington extended, and several, of them built upon.
The judge charged the jury, that if the fence on High street had been standing in the same place twenty-five years, the public having acquiesced during that period, and the parties having bought in reference to that as the line, the fence should now be considered the easterly line of the street, and that both the public and the owners of the land were concluded by it. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant asks a new trial, upon the grounds, among others, that the verdict is against the law, against the evidence, and against the charge of the court.
Upon the trial the plaintiff showed an undoubted title to a lot of land at the corner of High and Willis streets, and extending from the corner sixty-nine feet, easterly, upon Willis street. The defendant showed title to the lot on Willis street, adjoining the plaintiff on the east. The only question between them related to the true location of the boundary line between them. The plaintiff has within his enclosure sixty-nine feet, his length of line upon Willis street. But it was insisted, and attempted to be proved upon the trial, that the lot is located ten feet too far west, encroaching that distance upon High street, and if the street is opened to its proper width, it will take ten feet from his front. He sought, therefore, to fix the location of his land ten feet farther east, and to encroach thus far upon the possession of the defendant. The only question then was, what was the true location of the plaintiff’s lot? The only monument referred to, to ascertain the location, is the beginning corner, which is described as “ the northeast corner of High or Strait street and Willis street. That language may refer either to the point of intersection of the lines of the street, as laid out, or to the actual corner of the street, as actually
The language of the deed being doubtful as to the begin
To conclude the parties’ rights, it is not necessary that there should have been an actual agreement between the adverse claimants, or that the practical location should have existed over • twenty years. It does not rest either upon agreement or upon the doctrine of prescription or legal limitation. In Jackson v. Ogden, 7 John. 246, Wanness, J., said, “The extent to which we have hitherto gone is, that when two persons, already having a title, have settled the line of division between them, or when one having title has made an actual location, according to what he supposed to be his true line, and his neighbor's have acquiesced in such location for a considerable length of time, that the boundary thus established shall remain undisturbed.” This was a dissenting opinion, because be supposed the majority of the court went beyond the rule thus laid down; but the doctrine thus declared was subsequently approved in Rockwell v. Adams, 7 Cowen 761 ; 6 Wend. 467. In the latter case the court said, “ Reasons of propriety and policy forbid that a party having located his premises, and thereby induced others to purchase and improve accordingly, should afterwards be permitted to allege mistake, and extend his possessions so as, perhaps, to take away those very improvements which were made upon the faith of his previous act.” Rockwell v. Adams, 6 Wend. 469.
But if there were doubts upon the point, nay if it were clear that the plaintiff’s lot was located erroneously and against the intention of the parties to the conveyance, I am of opinion
Nor, in my judgment, is the case altered if the judge erred in his opinion, that the right of the public to open the street to its full width was barred by lapse of time and the adverse enjoyment of the plaintiff and of those under whom he claims. Admitting the right of the public to open the street, (upon which it is unnecessary here to express any opinion), nay, admitting that the street be actually opened to its entire width, and a part of the plaintiff’s.lot to be thereby appropriated to public use, it surely can confer upon the plaintiff no right to redress his own loss at the expense of his neighbor, or to attempt to change the location of his lot, which by his own act he had determined. In such case, indeed, his claim would have the semblance of justice, however, destitute of law it might be to support it. But it is worthy of notice in the present case, that
It is proper to add, that the state of the ease which has been furnished the court is quite imperfect. There are obviously chasms and imperfections in the testimony. It mav^therefore, be that the facts as stated are not in entire consistency with the evidence, as it appeared upon the (rial. Enough, however, appears to warrant the conclusion that the jury erred, and that the verdict must be set aside.
Concurring Opinion
concurred.
Carpenter, J. There was no question made but that the lots of the respective parties were sold, and intended to be located in conformity to the map of Collet and Pennington. • The deeds of the lessor of the plaintiff and of the defendant, for their respective lots, refer to this map, or at least the descriptions in those deeds were made in conformity thereto. The map calls for the easterly side of High street, which it makes the westerly boundary of the lot now held by the plaintiff and the basis of the whole range of adjoining lots, including that of the defendant. How, as I understand the testimony in the ease, whatever may be the true line of High street, upon an extension of that street with mathematical exactness from its commencement to its termination, yet in locating these lots the fence was treated as the line of the street and as the westerly boundary of the plaintiff’s lot. The lot's were laid out by Col-let and Pennington on this supposition, as appears from the
The rights of the plaintiff and of the public respectively, in reference to the line of the street, are not drawn in question, and need not now be considered. The verdict., according to my judgment, was clearly against the weight of evidence as well as contrary to charge of the judge. I concur in the opinion that the rule should be made absolute.
New trial granted.
Cited in Smith v. State, 3 Zab. 140-142 ; Jackson v. Perrine, 6 Vr. 142-143-148; De Veney v. Gallagher, 5 C. E. Gr. 38.
Reference
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- DEN D. HARING v. VAN HOUTEN
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