Cilley v. Bacon

93 A. 261, 88 Vt. 496, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 6, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 93 A. 261 (Cilley v. Bacon) 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
Cilley v. Bacon, 93 A. 261, 88 Vt. 496, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 261 (Vt. 1915).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

This is an action of trespass for cutting and carrying away certain trees claimed by the plaintiff. The case was tried by jury with verdict and judgment for the defendants. The land in question, a farm, was formerly owned by one George Lackey and was conveyed to the plaintiff by said Lackey and his wife April 25, 1912. The deed thereof contained the following exception, or reservation as it has been termed: “There is reserved on the ridge or hill all of the spruce, hemlock and white birch trees growing for timber or lumber and said grantors have the next three years to cut and remove the trees and lumber from the land. ’ ’ Subsequently, on July 3, 1912, said Lackey sold and conveyed the trees thus excepted or reserved, to one Edson who employed the defendants to cut and remove them. The de[498]*498fendants rely in defence npon Edsoh’s rights under his deed from Lackey.

It appeared that the westerly part of said farm was mostly wood and timber land situated.on the top and both sides of a ridge or hill extending the whole length of the farm; that on the easterly side of said farm were “rolling hills” with some level places and a little timber. On the trial the question arose as to which ridge or hill was intended in the reservation and it was agreed that it related to the one on the westerly side of the farm where the cutting complained of had been done. The printed case discloses but little concerning the evidence and the claims of the parties. The following is all that appears relating to the location of the trees and facts- affecting the description of their location:

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that there was a level piece of land (how extensive does not appear) on the top of said ridge or hill covered with wood and timber; that one Summers, a previous owner of the farm, “had cut off the timber about a rod on top of the ridge and down one or two rods on the westerly side.” The defendants’ evidence tended to show that there was very little level on top of the ridge and that the timber was practically all cut off from that. Plaintiff testified that she went onto the top of the ridge with her son, Fred Cilley and Mr. Lackey, and that Mr. Lackey told her that he wanted to reserve the spruce, hemlock and white birch on the ridge.

Several exceptions were taken to the exclusion of evidence. Of these three are relied upon by plaintiff’s counsel in his brief.

1. Plaintiff called her son, Fred Cilley and after testifying that at the time he was on the ridge with his mother and Mr. Lackey something was said by the latter as to what he wanted to reserve, he was asked to state what Mr. Lackey said. It was objected that there was no legal ambiguity that admitted of explanation except testimony tending to describe the hill. The court ruled that evidence was admissible to give any explanation with reference to the ridge or hill and the timber growing upon it but not as to the contract the parties made before it was put into the form of a deed, and held that talk before the deed was made as to what should be reserved was not admissible “in the present aspect of the ease.” To the exclusion of the question asked the plaintiff excepted. There was no statement of what was expected to be shown in answer to the question. For this [499]*499reason alone the exception would be unavailing. As will appear in connection with the next exception, it could not be sustained if considered on its merits.

2. T. J. Deavitt was called as a witness by the plaintiff and after showing by him that he drew the deed from Lackey and wife to the plaintiff he was asked referring to the reservation of the trees:. “Q. What was said about the place and the thing at the time that was reserved?” Objection being interposed plaintiff’s counsel said: “What we offer to show is that the conversation then and the claim then as to what ridge meant, the words, what sense they were used in and that hill was used m the same sense as ridge and not a side hill. We will offer to show in that connection that the very timber that was cut afterwards was pointed out as what would be left for the grantee, Mrs. Cilley, by Mr. Lackey.” The offer was excluded to which jdaintiff excepted.

The offer was to show the declaration of Mr. Lackey made at the time the deed was being prepared. The offer to show that the timber that was afterwards cut was pointed out as conveyed and not reserved must have related to what Mr. Lackey told the witness concerning it, for they were not upon the land at the time referred to and, so far as appears, the witness had no other source of information. The contention of plaintiff’s counsel is that there is a latent ambiguity in the description of the timber reserved and its location. The case does not show very cléarly what the plaintiff’s claim was in the court below. The claim made here is that the reservation was intended by the parties to the deed to cover only the timber standing on the level tract on the top of the ridge. The defendants’ employer, in whose shoes they stand, was not party to the mistake, if one was made; and in any event a mistake in description cannot be corrected in this proceeding. If the offered evidence was admissible it was only to aid the court in the construction of the deed.

No question is made but that the description is sufficiently definite to give validity to the reservation. The defendants are entitled to have the reservation construed without resort to parol evidence of statements of the intention of the parties to the deed, unless the description is equivocal; for parol evidence is generally not admissible to explain words in a written instrument that have a common and well understood meaning (1 Elliott on Ev. [500]*500§605) and never to support a construction different from what the words themselves imply. To permit this would be to permit a written contract to be controlled by parol testimony. To receive evidence tending to show that words that in their plain and ordinary- acceptation mean one thing were intended to mean another would clearly violate the parol evidence rule. Parol evidence is, however, admissible to give an application of a written contract to its subject matter in eases in which the thing, as expressed, is applicable'indifferently to more than one subject. Hart v. Hammett, 18 Vt. 127. The rule is stated thus by Bowell, C. J., in Grout Bros. v. Moulton, 79 Vt. 122, 138, 64 Atl. 453, 455: "Direct oral statements of intention in respect of the subject of a written contract are admissible only when the language used is equivocal; that is, when it is equally applicable in all its parts to more than one external object.” So far as appears the words "ridge or hill” were not shown to be equivocal in the particular here under consideration. At one stage of the trial it appeared that there was more than one ridge or hill on the farm; but this ambiguity in the description was removed by the concession that the western ridge or hill was the one intended. The claim of the plaintiff is that the words, in the sense used in the reservation, mean "top of the ’ridge or hill,” or are susceptible of that construction. With this we cannot agree. Their plain and ordinary meaning includes both the top and sides of the elevation of land and not the top alone. To be equivocal'they must apply equally to the whole ridge or hill and not to the top alone.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 261, 88 Vt. 496, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cilley-v-bacon-vt-1915.