Borneman v. Milliken

124 A. 200, 123 Me. 488, 1924 Me. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 11, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 124 A. 200 (Borneman v. Milliken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borneman v. Milliken, 124 A. 200, 123 Me. 488, 1924 Me. LEXIS 36 (Me. 1924).

Opinion

Cornish, C. J.

This is a question of disputed boundary, that is, of the dividing line marking the westerly boundary of the plaintiffs’ land, and the coincident eastern boundary of the land of Scott, one of the defendants. The other defendants purchased from Scott the timber and wood standing on the disputed tract and cut and removed the same. For the sake of convenience the Scott land will be spoken of as the land of the defendants. The action is trespass quare clausum and is before the Law Court for the third time. At the first trial a verdict was ordered by the court in favor of defendant Scott and a verdict was rendered by the jury in favor of the plaintiffs against the other defendants in the sum of $553.25. This verdict was set aside by the Law Court as being clearly wrong under the evidence then presented. 116 Maine, 76.

At the second trial the presiding Justice directed a verdict for the defendants and on exception this ruling was reversed, on the ground that much new' and important evidence had been introduced by the plaintiffs and the case should therefore have been submitted to the jury. 118 Maine, 168.

At the third trial the jury again found for the plaintiffs, assessing damages in the sum of $1,295.03, and again the case is brought to this court on defendants’ motion and on exceptions.

[490]*4901. Motion.

The deed which is the foundation of the plaintiffs’ title was given by Waterman Thomas to Godfrey Hoffses on December 30, 1779, and conveyed: “All that certain tract or parcel of land lying in Waldoborough bounded as followeth: beginning at a stake and stones in Waldoborough town line at the southeast corner of Vollentine Mink’s land on,e mile to a birch tree marked on four sides, from thence south fifteen degrees east to a stake and stones in John Labe’s line, from thence east by land of John Labe one mile to a stake and stones at the town line, from thence north fifteen degrees west as the town of Waldoborough line runs, to the bounds first mentioned, containing one hundred acres.”

Through various mesne conveyances the plaintiffs have succeeded to the ownership of a portion of the property covered by this deed, their immediate predecessor in title being George W. Studley who owned the premises from 1868 to 1913, when he conveyed to them.

At the first trial the battleground was the original and true line between the towns of Waldoborough and Warren, Waldoborough having been incorporated as a town by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on June 29, 1773. The description in the Waterman Thomas deed of 1779 starts in the Waldoborough town line and runs westerly one mile to a birch tree marked on four sides. That birch tree marked the western boundary of the plaintiffs’ and the eastern boundary of the defendants’ land, but it long since disappeared. Therefore, the parties at the first trial sought to establish the location on the face of the earth of the original town line, to measure westerly one mile therefrom and fix that point as the plaintiffs’ westerly bound.. The town line as claimed by them was commonly known as the “old town line” and also as the fine of 1812. The defendants sought to establish a line farther east, run by Commissioners appointed by the Supreme Judicial Court in 1836, and spoken of in the case as the “Court line” or line of 1836, as the true town line.

If the town line was located as claimed by the plaintiffs, the disputed tract belonged to them and they were entitled to recover in this action. If, however, the town line was as claimed by the defendants the disputed land belonged to Scott, and this action could not be maintained.

[491]*491At the second trial the issue was somewhat broadened, as is well stated in the opinion, 118 Maine, 170, viz.: “Considerable new evidence at the second trial was introduced by the plaintiffs and the contention of the plaintiffs now is in effect, not that the so called 'old town line’ between Waldoboro and Warren is the true town line, but that it was the point of starting when the deed was given by Waterman Thomas to Godfrey Hoffses in 1779, and that by long acquiescence at least of the abutting owners the so called 'old town line’ has ever since been regarded and is the easterly boundary of this property; that the westerly line of this property, which is the real issue in this case, was originally fixed by a birch tree and though said birch tree has disappeared through the ravages of time, the western boundary has continued certain and fixed by long occupation and acquiescence of the owners on each side.”

The jury were not permitted to pass upon this issue at the second trial as a verdict for the defendants was ordered by the presiding Justice, but the same issue was before the jury at the third trial and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiffs. At this third or last trial the fact that the “old town line” so called was regarded as the easterly boundary of this property and was the starting-point from which the westerly measurement was taken, together with the consequent recognition of and acquiescence in the westerly boundary thereby fixed and the occupation by the contiguous owners up to that time on either side for a very long period of years, was emphasized even more strongly than at the second trial. The court brought this sharply to the attention of the jury in his charge as follows: “Now the real issue in this case, as 1 am going to put it to you, is whether the east line of the plaintiffs’ land began upon what on this plan is denominated the 'old town line’ which is admitted to have been located as early as 1812, or whether it is1 on the court line which was surveyed and located in 1836. Now the rule of law is, with reference to the construction of deeds, that you shall find out what the parties intended to do,—not what they intend to do now, what they have intended to do in the last fifty years,—but what did these parties intend when these early deeds were made. Where did that 1779 deed start from, actually on the face of the earth? What line did they have in mind? What place did they have in mind? .... What line, away back there, when they were [492]*492deeding these properties, did they intend to deed them from? Because that is the rule that will control in this case. The true town line, actual town line, is not controlling nor binding. Nor is the 1812 line controlling or binding. It is only evidence for you to consider in connection with the other evidence in the case, to determine whether the 1836 line, the Court line is meant or the 1812 line.”

The court then went on to say that when it appears from all the evidence that a doubt exists as to the starting-point, the contemporaneous and subsequent acts of the parties in establishing or recognizing a line as the line intended by the deed, are admissible and of probative force. This is sound law. This is not the case of a clear and unambiguous deed as in Ames v. Hilton, 70 Maine, 36, and May v. Labbe, 114 Maine, 374, but even under those circumstances a conventional line is held in this State to be the fixed boundary line although it varies from the course given in the deed, Knowles v. Toothaker, 58 Maine, 172, cited with approval in May v. Labbe, supra. Here the facts when produced reveal a latent ambiguity, an uncertainty as to which of two claimed town lines was the actual starting-point in the contemplation of the parties, and as bearing on that question the acts of the parties are of compelling force in determining the trae construction. Gove v. Richardson, 4 Maine, 327; Whitcomb

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 A. 200, 123 Me. 488, 1924 Me. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borneman-v-milliken-me-1924.