Perrior v. Peck

Spring, J.:

The plaintiff was the unqualified owner of the premises in controversy ; he was pressed by a creditor for an apparently insignificant demand which he regarded as unjust, and, for the purpose of evading its payment, he endeavored to convey the lands' to his friend • Goodwin. In this conveyance the lands first purported to be conveyed are the east half of the lands covered by a partition wall, and then the dower right and interest of the widow of Samuel Earned in and to the premises conveyed to him by the Earned heirs, reciting the description seriaPbm. Perrior conceded it was intended by this conveyance to transfer the title of all the premises to Goodwin, and his subsequent conduct clearly confirms this concession. The conveyance itself bears intrinsic testimony in support of the claim that there was a mistake of the scrivener who drew the deed. The-conveyance of one-lialf of the partition wall, with no other right passing to the grantee, is an absurdity, and, as the widow of Samuel Earned had been dead for ten years, of course her dower right expired with her. The reference to her title, supplemented by an accurate description of the land intended to be conveyed, must convince any one that the words referring to her dower right were inserted inadvertently and may well be regarded as surplusage. Eater, said conveyance is made subject to a mortgage of $3,500, which was given by the plaintiff to the Huntington sisters, and which covered all the premises designed to be conveyed. The only thing that can be spelled out of this conveyance is, that the title of the premises described, following the allusion to the dower right, was absolutely vested in the grantee.

Goodwin paid nothing for these premises; he held them for his friend, not claiming to own them, and he never assumed possession nor asserted ownership. In July of the same year Goodwin deeded them to Maggie Clark, with the same misdescription, and this transaction was clearly that of the plaintiff, and in consummation of it Mrs. Clark conveyed 800 acres of land in Missouri to the plaintiff. Again, all parties agree that the design was to make an absolute conveyance to the grantee of all the premises Perrior owned. In the conveyance to Day, January 21, 1818, the description was corrected, and his title was recognized by plaintiff, as for nearly two years he paid rent to Day’s agent. Each subsequent grantee has *394been in undisputed possession of these premises, so there has been an open, notorious assertion of title by the various owners in paying incumbrances, in making improvements and in actual occupancy. All of this has been known to the plaintiff, and yet no claim has been made that he owned said premises during all these years. He now claims he was defrauded by Mrs. Clark, as she had no title to the swamp lands in Missouri; and seeks at this late day to divest the title of defendant, and also, in effect, to impeach the various warranty deeds intervening that of Maggie Clark to Day by reason of this alleged failure of the Clark conveyance to vest him with the title. Although he has waited in this quiescent condition until the title has nearly ripened in defendant by lapse of time; and although he concedes the conveyance made to Goodwin and the one to Maggie Clark were intended to pass the title of all the lands he acquired from the Lamed heirs, and although he has unmistakably recognized this fact, he is now endeavoring to prevent any correction of this conveyance to conform to the undisputed intention of the parties, because that right is barred by the Statute of Limitations; he certainly presents himself a suitor in an unenviable light, and any court seeking to mete out justice to litigants will scrutinize carefully his legal rights before reinvesting him with the title he sought to part with more than twenty years ago. But his counsel has presented his case with consummate ability, and it becomes necessary to examine the various legal questions involved.

It is urged that equity will not reform this conveyance, as the sale to Maggie Clark was without consideration, and she, therefore, obtained no title and could transfer none to her grantee. This proposition assumes too much. At the time Maggie Clark conveyed to the plaintiff she held the apparent legal title of the land in Missouri, and her conveyance has never been adjudged invalid, and no attack has been made upon the deed to the plaintiff, nor to recover damages for the fraud charged, although, apparently, both parties have been within the jurisdiction of the courts of this State, and, in fact, residents of Syracuse.

The claim of the plaintiff is that the Missouri lands were represented to be “ first-class black walnut timber lands,” which was untrue in fact; that Rathbun, the commissioner who executed the conveyance of these lands, possessed no power to convey, as his *395authority had been revoked; that the minimum price at which the lands could be sold was one dollar per acre, and these were sold very much below that price. Proof was taken on this trial as to these facts; and, on the subject of authority, a former county judge, not a lawyer, testified the records of the county had been burned, and he testified from recollection to the revocation of Rathbun’s authority, and proof was given in verification of the claim the lands did not conform to the representations made to plaintiff. The deed from Rathbun, as commissioner, to Cutler, bore date December 13, 1870, and the title, through mesne conveyances, to a part of the land, became vested in Mrs. Clark August 15, 1876, and, so far as the testimony shows, no attempt was made by any of the interested parties to assail any of these conveyances during that period, and plaintiff, with undue caution, refrained from any vindication of his position since the conveyance to him. It is obvious that this collateral attack upon this conveyance, twenty years after its delivery, as against vendees in good faith and for value, cannot succeed. It cannot be said, as matter of law, after this long lapse of time, that Maggie Clark was not the owner unqualifiedly of the lands she conveyed to the plaintiff.

It is insisted by the plaintiff’s counsel that the defendant is not entitled to a reformation of the conveyance, as more than ten years have elapsed since the conveyance was made. Where a grantee is in possession by virtue of his deed, claiming to own the lands he occupies, I seriously doubt whether the Statute of Limitations would ever run against his right to seek a reformation of his conveyance to make effective his title; if so, assuredly it would not begin to run until he knew of the distinct flaw in his title deed, or was cognizant of the adverse claim. (Bartlett v. Judd, 21 N. Y. 200 ; De Forest, v. Walters, 153 id. 229 ; Varick v. Edwards, 11 Paige, 289.)

The defendant had only the most vague information of plaintiff’s assertion of title. While plaintiff did claim to be the owner, the precise nature of his title he did not disclose, and defendant made all the examination that could be reasonably asked before completing his purchase; he did not pay $13,000 for his premises without expecting he was to be vested with an indefeasible title. It is claimed he should have examined the records, and, in that way, he would have ascertained the alleged defect in the early conveyances. *396Had he made that inspection, he would have discovered a judgment in an action of foreclosure with a correct description of the premises, to which action plaintiff was a party; that would have satisfied him that if plaintiff ever possessed any claim it was extinguished by the-judgment in that action. Had he pursued his inquiries in regard to-plaintiff’s claim of title, he would have learned that, after the conveyance to Day, the plaintiff openly recognized this title coming directly from his own conveyance to Clark by paying rent monthly for the period of two years and then surrendering the actual possession to Day. He would further have ascertained that, for nearly twenty years, plaintiff, with full knowledge of the asserted ownership of defendant’s predecessors in title, had acquiesced in these titles without a lisp or murmur of dissent. It is well settled by authority that the defendant in possession, in defense of an action of ejectment attacking his title, may seek a correction of his com veyance to make his ownership effective. (Hoppough v. Struble, 60 N. Y. 430 ; Dobson v. Pearce, 12 id. 156 ; Mandeville v. Reynolds, 68 id. 528; Gallup v. Bernd, 132 id. 370.)

But I am clearly satisfied that the conveyance from Perrior to Goodwin and that from Goodwin to Clark conveyed the absolute title. In determining what is to be conveyed by a deed, the intention of the parties, as in every other instrument, is controlling. (Clapp v. Byrnes, 3 App. Div. 284; Groat v. Moak, 26 Hun, 381 affd., 94 N. Y. 115; Peck v. Mallams, 10 id. 509.)

In the case last cited Judge Johnson (at p. 532) explains the doctrine as follows: The general rule in regard to the construction of the description of the premises in a deed is one of the utmost liberality. The intent of the parties, if it can by any possibility be-gathered from the language "employed, will be effectuated. To this end parts of the description may be rejected, though upon the face of the deed they seem as material as the parts which are left. This only is requisite, that, after subjecting the description to every modification which the actual condition of the premises may require, there must be left some substantial designation of the thing to be conveyed, so that the court can see, looking at the property in the condition in which it was at the time of the deed, that the description can be fitted to it, and was intended by the parties to relate to it.”

An analysis of this conveyance shows, therefore, first, a convey*397anee of one-half of a partition wall. This insignificant 'strip of land the parties ndVer intended to be conveyed in and of itself and alone, as it would be wholly useless to the grantee; second, the conveyance then assumes to transfer “ all the dower right and interest of the party of the first part, as widow of the late Samuel Earned, deceased, of, in and to the following described premises, viz.: ” then reciting the lands conveyed by the Earned heirs to plaintiff.

Again, the deed conveys the premises, subject to a mortgage of $3,500, which covers all these lands. Without ascertaining by extraneous proof the intention of the parties (except that Mrs. Earned died ten years prior to this conveyance), the simple facts to which I have called attention clearly establish that this conveyance Avas intended to vest the absolute title in the grantee.

While parol proof in contradiction of a deed cannot be given, yet testimony ali'imde in explanation of the intent of the parties is competent. (Wilson v. Carrico, 140 Ind. 533; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Aitkin, 125 N. Y. 660, 673; Taylor Ev. §§ 1218, 1221; Foley v. Ruley, 43 W. Va. 513.)

These cases and this principle are not in conflict Avith 94 New York, 233, 108 New York, 397, and kindred cases holding that nothing will pass except lands described in the conveyance, as in this case it is not sought to enlarge a desci’iption, only to eliminate unmeaning words as surplusage. It, therefore, can be gathered from the conveyance itself that the words referring to the dower right are meaningless; and with their eradication, we have a complete conveyance of all the premises described therein, which tallies with the conceded intention of the parties.

■While the testimony fully Avarranted the referee in directing a reformation of the conveyance, and while it was entirely proper for him to do so as a matter of prudence, yet, from the view I take of the case, it was unnecessary.

I have not seen fit to consider the question of the effect to be given to the tax deeds, as they are simply, if of any significance, in confirmation of defendant’s title.

The judgment is affirmed, with costs.

All concurred.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.