Rockwell v. Adams

By the Court,

Savage, Ch. J.

This cause was first tried in 1825, when the jury found a verdict for the defendant, upon testimony very similar to what is now presented in the case before us. On that trial the judge charged the jury that if *469the defendant had fixed upon a line, with a full knowledge of his rights, short of that which his deed would give him, such location would limit his grant; but if the jury should find that no line had been agreed upon, they must ascertain the boundary upon other principles. 7 Cowen, 761. A new trial was granted, on the ground that the rule was not correctly stated. Sutherland, J. in delivering the opinion of this court, said, that in order to make an actual practical location control the courses and distances in a deed, it was not necessary that the party should know the effect of such location, nor that there should be an express agreement to abide by such line. Acquiescence for a long time, is evidence of an agreement to the line. The language of Van Ness, J. in Jackson v. Ogden, 7 Johns. R, 245, was cited as stating the rale of law correctly—thus: “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 neighbors have acquiesced in such location for a considerable length of time, the boundary thus established shall remain undisturbed.”

The main question now presented to the court seems to me to be the same as when the cause was here before. The rule of law then laid down must be the law of this case: That the acts and declarations of parties as to location may control the courses and distances in their deeds; and, to give operation to such acts and declarations, it is not necessary that their effect should be known to the parties themselves, and that acquiescence in an erroneous location, for a great length of time, shall be conclusive upon the party making or acquiescing in such location. "This principle will be found in the cases referred to by Mr. Justice Sutherland, 7 Cowen, 761, and it is believed there is no inconsistency between this principle and another referred to by the defendant’s counsel, that a man having title shall not be divested of that title by parol declarations. The one affects the estate itself—the quantity of interest which a party has in certain premises; the other ascertains the location upon the ground where such estate is supposed to exist. Reasons of propriety and policy forbid that a party, having located his premises, and thereby *470induced 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 acts. As I understand the decision of the judge at the circuit, it was in accordance with the rule laid down by this court in this very cause. There was therefore no error on his ¡part. It is necessary, however, to inquire whether the facts in this case are such as to require the application of this principle. [Here the Chief Justice went into a full examination of the evidence, and then proceeded.]

From this brief reference to part of the testimony, it must appear to be a case coming within former decisions, and one proper for the jury to pass upon. The weight of testimony certainly is, that the owners of the 700 acres never claimed south of the line to which the plaintiff now claims. Hoffman first surveyed for them, and he ran no farther south. They all divided upon that basis. The first error consisted probably in locating the south line of the 4100 acre patent about 17 chains too far north. The proprietors of the south part of the 2000 acre patent began at that line, and ran north, and took in their 300 acres. If the fact be that the owners on the north acquiesced in this location, they are bound by it, and their acts are binding upon the defendant. He too, it would seem, was not aware in what the error consisted, until the survey of Webster, though he always said he had not his quantity; but it seems that since that time he has pointed out the line to several of the witnesses, to be, where Hoffman located it.

I am of opinion that there was no error in the judge, or in the jury, the weight of evidence supporting the verdict. The judge was right also in receiving evidence of the possessions of the settlers in the adjacent patent. If they had made an erroneous location, which would be disturbed by extending the defendant’s line, considerations of public policy forbid that such errors should be thus corrected, after so long an acquiescence, where the consequence would be a correspondent change in the possessions of the whole neighborhood. Although there is no improvement upon the l<ne be*471tween the plaintiff and defendant, and of course no fence, the line is not therefore to be considered unsettled. The line north of the Lee lot, and south of the Parish lot, has been recognized, not as the line of those particular lots merely, but as the division line between the 700 acres and the south part of the patent. These lots, (the Lee lot and the Parish lot,) do not meet by several rods; but as that line was considered by all the owners of the 700 acres as their south line, this case does not depend on the question of pedis possession I think a new trial should be denied.

New trial denied.