Durant v. Bacot
Durant v. Bacot
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The object of the bill in this case is to reform and correct an alleged mistake in the description of a lot of land, situate in Jersey City, on the north side of New'afk avenue, and on the west side of Warren street, at or near the intersection of the two streets. The description is contained in a deed from John Van Vorst to William Duraht, dhted the twelfth day of October, 1830, which lot of land is now owned by the complainant.
The complainant alleges, in his bill, that, in the year 182V, the said John Van Vorst, for the consideration of $100, sold an’d conveyed to the said William Durant a lot, fifty feet front and one hundred feet deep, on the north side of said Newark avenue and on the westerly side of said Warren street, and in the corner formed by the intersection of the two streets; that, at the time Warren street, although laid out, had no visible existence, and that the precise place of its location was unknown, but that it was believed it crossed Newark avenue at right angles.
That the said William Durant took possession of the said lot, and built thereon two frame buildings, occupying the
That to remedy this difficulty, and with intent to make the lot of Durant square on the turnpike road, and his westerly line perpendicular thereto, he, on the twelfth of October, 1830, for the consideration of $25, purchased of said John Van Vorst sufficient land on the westerly side of said lot to make the land of said Durant square with the said turnpike road, and the westerly line thereof perpendicular thereto; that the land so purchased was a certain gore piece of land, and was particularly described in the deed of conveyance for the same, as “ all that certain half lot, gore, piece, or parcel of land, situate, lying, and being in the town of Jersey, in the township, county, and state aforesaid, and lying on the north side of the turnpike road leading from and through the town of Jersey aforesaid to the town of Bergen, butted and bounded on the northwesterly line of Charles E. Durant’s lot, fronting on the said turnpike road twenty-six feet from the line of said Charles’ lot, and thence running diagonally to the rear of said Charles’ lot, forming a triangle, the base of which, lying along the line of said Charles’ lot, is one hundred feet deep from said turnpike road, and the perpendicular along said road twenty-six feet;” that the object, intention, and agreement of the parties to such canvqyance was to give Durant a lot fronting square on said turnpike road, and to make his westerly line thereof perpendicular thereto, and that the distance of twenty-si? feet along the turnpike road was inserted in the deed upon the supposition that the same would reach a point that would make said lot square as aforesaid, and the westerly line perpendicular to said road, but that, in point of fact, it requires a distance of fiftyfiye feet along said road to make the lot square as aforesaid,
It- may be observed here that evidence to sustain such a claim should be of the most satisfactory kind. A deed for lands, after it has been deliberately reduced to writing, deliberately signed and sealed, and acknowledged and placed upon the public record of the county, and when such deed has remained unquestioned for a long period of years, should not be disturbed and altered, and made different from what the parties made it on any feeble or inconclusive evidence. It should be so clear and certain as to leave little, if anything, for doubt. Title to land by bargain and sale can only take place by writing and seal, and it may well be doubted whether a court should ever attempt to reform a deed upon verbal testimony alone when the alleged mistake is denied; but assuming that this may be done, what has the complainant proved in this case to justify the court in exercising this important but somwhat dangerous power ?
The only evidence that can be considered as bearing upon the case at all is that of Jonathan I. Durant and Samuel Cassedy. According to the evidence of Mr. Durant, the object
The testimony of Mr. Oassedy is very much to the same purport; their object, according to him, seemed to have been to square the lot, and this was to have been done by adding more land on the westerly side. Nothing seems to have been said or done about giving up any land on the east side in compensation for what was added on the west by way of squaring the lot, and nothing appears to have been contemplated — certainly nothing was done, except to purchase additional land on the westerly side. Durant fixed the quantity which he would need to accomplish his purpose at twenty-six feet in front, and nothing in the rear. Mr. Van Vorst agreed to sell him the quantity thus named for twenty-five dollars, which he did, and made the deed acordingly. This was the whole of the transaction in substance. It may be true that all parties at the time were under the impression that the quantity thus added would make the westerly line at right angles with the road, or nearly so; but no pains were taken to see whether it were so or not, and there is not a particle of evidence to show that Van Vorst had the slightest intention of selling or conveying any more land than he did then convey, or that he would have sold a foot more of land than he did sell, unless he had been paid an additional compensation therefor, Durant got the whole length that he asked for and all that he bargained for, and he paid for nothing that he did not get. On what principle it is, then, that he now claims that which he never asked for, that which ho never bargained for, and that which he never paid for, it is difficult to perceive.
I cannot see, from the evidence, that any deception was
It may also be remarked of this evidence, that if it were much more clear and explicit in its terms than it is, it would still be dangerous in the last degree to rely upon in so important a matter. However intelligent and upright the witnesses may have been, they are called on, after a lapse of nearly thirty years, to detail not so much the acts of the parties, for their acts are all the other way, but to repeat the conversations they had, as well as the casual remarks of the parties. That such accounts of such conversations should be allowed to prevail over the solemn deed actually made and executed by the parties at the time would seem to be strange indeed. It would be substituting memory, in its frailest form, for the highest and most reliable evidence known to the law.
But the complainant insists that his claim is sustained by the description in the deed itself. If this were so, it would scarcely be necessary to ask to have it changed. The word “perpendicular,” which is the only one relied on, as introduced into this description, is wholly meaningless and of no significance at all. We are informed, by the description, that the lines, courses, and distances given form a triangle, the base of which, that is the base of the triangle, is along the northwesterly line of Charles F. Durant’s lot one hundred feet, and the perpendicular, that is the perpendicular of the triangle, is along the said road twenty-six feet, but what the road, which is made the perpendicular of the triangle, is perpendicular to we are in no way informed. The
But what must entirely overthrow the construction contended for by the complainant, if the deed be appealed to, is that, in describing the westerly line, it is not only not termed a perpendicular, but it is in express language called a diagonal line, running “ diagonally” from the turnpike. Why the parties and their scriveners should have used the word diagonally, if they all understood it to be perpendicularly, it is difficult to see. The claim, then, is weakened much more than strengthened by an appeal to the deed itself. But if it were expressed in unmistakable terms that the westerly line was perpendicular to the road, it would not and could not prove that Durant did not get every inch for which he bargained and for which he paid, nor would it prove that the parties, or either of them, intended to include any more land in the deed than what is therein clearly enough expressed.
The complainant, in the argument of his own case, which he did in the most learned, scientific, and artistic manner, seems to think that he has discovered in the defendant’s answer, in their evidence, and also in the opinion of the Chancellor, something that is not accordant with his views of the innumerable angles and triangles, and every other kind of angles which he exhibited, and to which he referred, something that is not exactly perpendicular, some departure from the radius vector or disregard of Kepler’s second law. This may all be so. I shall not question it — for I do not think that either ordinary or extraordinary skill and attainments can
I think, therefore, that the evidence wholly fails to sustain the claim that .the complainant has made, and that the Chancellor’s decision dismissing the bill is right.
For affirmance — Brown, Combs, CorNelison, Elmer, Kennedy, Van Dyke, Whelpley, Wood — 8.
For reversal — None.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charles F. Durant, and Charles B. F. Bacot and others
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published