Amey v. Hall

181 A.2d 69, 123 Vt. 62, 1962 Vt. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 1, 1962
Docket487
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 181 A.2d 69 (Amey v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amey v. Hall, 181 A.2d 69, 123 Vt. 62, 1962 Vt. LEXIS 193 (Vt. 1962).

Opinion

Holden, J.

The main controversy in this action of trespass is the location of the boundary dividing adjoining timber lands contained in one of the original lots in the town of Guildhall. The parcel in question is designated as Lot 14 in Range 1. The plaintiff has a deed to the southeast half of Lot 14, referred to as the south lot. The defendant holds title to the northwest half.comprising the remaining area to the north of the plaintiff’s holding.’ No courses, metes nor bounds are given for Lot 14 or any of its subdivisions.

The boundary claimed by the plaintiff was identified by old blaze lines and old corners which the court below located and found marked on the land. The line claimed by the defendant is constituted from a survey made at the instance of the defendant after the alleged trespass had been committed. The action was instituted under the provisions of 13 V.S.A. §3606. Trial by the court, sitting without a jury, included a view of the premises and resulted in judgment for the plaintiff in the amount of seventeen hundred fifty dollars.' Both parties have appealed. The defendant challenges the sufficiency of the findings to support the judgment. The plaintiff questions the adequacy of the damages.

In reporting its findings the court detailed at length the claims of the respective parties and the substance of the evidence offered in *64 support of the different locations of the boundaries advocated. These are the important facts.

The east and west boundaries of Lot 14 are well marked on the ground and have been accepted as such by both parties. The location of the south boundary of the main lot is not marked on the ground but is ascertainable by reference to the south range line of the adjoining lot No. 15 and extending that line a distance of one hundred yards on the general bearing' of the range lines of the town.

From the southwest corner of Lot 14, as indicated by the intersection of the range line with the west boundary of the lot, measuring north along this lot line, a distance of 1,758 feet (approximately 100 rods) the court located a well marked maple tree with old witnesses surrounding it. At this point the court found what it described as a “very old blazed line consisting of four sets of blazes ranging from 12 to 70 years of age. This line runs on a general bearing of north 52° 15' E which is the general bearing of the range lines of the lots in the town of Guildhall.” In the vicinity of this line there is a road known as the Old County Road which turns westerly near an old lumber camp. The blazed line referred to is located directly south of the buildings which remain on the site of the old lumber camp. The division line claimed by the plaintiff does not divide Lot 14 into equal halves. It gives the plaintiff a parcel of approximately one hundred rods at each dimension, with the defendant’s area being one hundred rods by sixty rods.

The lumber camp was established by the defendant’s predecessor in title, the Colby Lumber Corporation. This corporation owned the northern half of Lot 14 in the nineteen twenties and conducted logging operations on this holding in the fall of 1929 and the winter of 1930. The Colby Corporation treated the marked blazed line just south of its camp as the dividing line between its ownership of the northern portion and the lands held by the owner of the southern portion of Lot 14.

The boundary claimed by the defendant was surveyed by reference to the range and lot lines located on the ground as the boundaries of adjacent and neighboring lots in accordance with the uniform bearings and dimensions common to the lot divisions of the original plan of the town. The location of the northeast corner of Lot 14 was accomplished by extending the marked north range line of Lot 16 on the *65 common bearing of north 52° 15' east to a point where it intersects the known west line of Lot 14. This point was assumed by the defendant to be the northwest corner of Lot 14 although the corner thus established was not marked on the ground. The findings report that the defendant’s surveyor, “believing the lots to be 160 rods long, surveyed south on the west lot line of Lot No. 14 range one as a division line between the north half and the south half of that lot.”

The court found that the defendant cut over twenty-five acres of woodland south of the boundary line claimed by the plaintiff, designated by the court as the Amey line. Of the total acreage harvested it was determined, and the defendant concedes, his operation extended to five acres that are located south of the line claimed by the defendant, referred to as the Hall line.

Acting on the statute, the court awarded the plaintiff single damages for the cutting done on the twenty acre area lying between the Amey and Hall lines. Treble damages were assessed against the defendant for the timber cut south of the Hall line which would divide the main lot into equal parcels.

The defendant questions the sufficiency of the findings for the reason that the court failed to specifically locate the line determined tó be the actual dividing boundary. The defendant further assigns error to the omission in the findings of a declarative statement of the plaintiff’s ownership and title to the timber cut by the defendant.

It is the duty of the court, in making findings, to sift the evidence and state the facts. Raithel v. Hall, 99 Vt. 65, 70, 130 Atl. 749; Francis v. London Guaranty & Accident Co., 100 Vt. 425, 428, 138 Atl. 780. There is no requirement to relate the opposing claims of the litigants nor to detail the evidence advanced in support of the respective claims. If the evidence is disputed or in conflict, its mere recitation is insufficient. Hammonds, Inc. v. Flanders, 109 Vt. 78, 81, 191 Atl. 925.

But from the record certified in the instant case it appears the essential facts are settled. The deficiencies of which the defendant complains are legal in nature rather than factual. If these omissions were supplied they would merely state the court’s ultimate conclusions of law from the subordinate facts previously expressed.

The defendant does not question the existence of the ancient blazed line and its terminal monuments'; Nor is it denied that the defendant’s *66 predecessor observed and respected this line as the division between the two properties. By the same token, it does not appear that the plaintiff refutes the method nor the accuracy of the defendant’s survey in dividing Lot 14 into equal parcels. In this situation it was not inappropriate for the court to report the opposing claims and the constituent elements of each in order to demonstrate all of the factors which make up the pending controversy.

It is obvious that this was the method employed by the trier to report the subordinate facts. Under our practice there is no obligation on the fact finder to state in the findings the legal conclusion of title to the disputed land nor to express, in so many words, which boundary prevails on the subordinate findings. See Deavitt v. Hooker, 73 Vt. 143, 146, 50 Atl. 800; Thompson v. Smith, 119 Vt. 488, 496,

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Bluebook (online)
181 A.2d 69, 123 Vt. 62, 1962 Vt. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amey-v-hall-vt-1962.