Cilley v. Childs

73 Me. 130, 1882 Me. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 6, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Me. 130 (Cilley v. Childs) 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
Cilley v. Childs, 73 Me. 130, 1882 Me. LEXIS 6 (Me. 1882).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

These cases are reported together, this court to make such disposition of both, as shall be found proper upon the admitted facts.

The first is an action at law, to recover possession of a parcel of land containing about thirty acres, and constituting the northerly and north westerly part of an island called Merchants’ [132]*132Island, situated in Deer Isle Thoroughfare. It was conveyed by one Matthews, by deed dated November 21,1865, duly recorded, to one Monteith, and was therein described as "beginning at the head of the cove on the northeast side of the island, thence west northerly by land of Anthony Merchant, to a blue rock at the head of the field; thence southerly, by land of said Merchant, to a marked tree on the shore on the southwest side of the island; thence northerly, easterly, and southerly, by the shore to the bound begun at, containing about twenty-five acres.”

Cilley has the legal title to it by deeds dated December 11, '1878, from creditors of Monteith, who levied on it as his property .April 12, 1869, unless it passed from Monteith to Childs by his ' deed December 26, 1866, recorded January 1, 1867, in which the description runs thus: " a parcel of land on Merchants’ Island . . . butts and bounds as follows : commencing at the head of the cove at the north side of said island, running to a blue rock in the stone wall; thence from said blue rock southwest, ; southerly, to a marked spruce tree, said lot containing thirty •acres, more or less.”

It is admitted that Childs, before receiving this deed, bargained with Monteith for the same parcel of land which Monteith had of Matthews;" that both of them supposed the deed given by Monteith to Childs, was a valid conveyance thereof; that it would Ihave been so if it had contained the following additional words which were in the deed from Matthews to Monteith, "thence ^northerly, easterly, and southerly, by the shore, to the bounds ibegun atthat the line laid down in Monteith’s deed to Childs, •cuts the island into two parts, one containing about thirty acres, the other about one hundred and ninety; that Childs owned the land adjoining this parcel when he received this deed, and thereupon forthwith went into the occupation of the locus, and has lived on it ever since; that the levying creditors at the date of their levies, and Cilley, at the date of his deed from them, respectively knew of the existence of the deed to Childs, and that he was in possession of the land claiming it under said deed. Cilley’s writ of entry is dated July 21, 1879.

On October 21, 1880, Childs brought the other suit, which is a bill in equity against Cilley and. Monteith, based on the same [133]*133facts, asking that Gilley may be restrained from prosecuting his action at law, and that the deed may be reformed so as to declare more completely the intention of the parties to it, and for general relief. We are to deal with the admitted facts which the parties present, and are not called upon to consider questions as to their admissibility if any such could have been raised.

Moreover it is well settled law, that a deed shall not be held void for uncertainty, but shall be so construed wherever it is possible as to give effect to the intention of the parties and not defeat it; and that this» may be done whenever the court placing itself in the situation of the grantor at the date of the transaction, with knowledge of the surrounding circumstances and of the force and import of the words used, can ascertain his meaning and hitention from the language of 'the conveyance thus illustrated. Greenleaf’s Cruise, vol. iv, p. 306; ed. of 1850, tit. xxxh, chap, xx, note to § 24. And this, even where it becomes necessary to reject parts of the description given as false and inconsistent. Vose v. Handy, 2 Maine, 322, 330, citing Worthington v. Hylyer, 4 Mass. 196; Jackson v. Clark, 7 Johns. 217. To the same effect are Wing v. Burgis, 13 Maine, 111, and Vose v. Bradstreet, 27 Maine, 156, 171.

In the deed of Monteith to Childs, there is nothing inconsistent or contradictory. Whatever ambiguity there is in the description of the lot intended to be conveyed, arises from incompleteness, and not from any false call. It must be supposed that Monteith intended to convey something that he himself owned, and the only questions that could, possibly arise are, on which side of the lines given does it lie ? What lines are to be supplied to get back to the bounds begun at ? Does the language of the deed sufficiently indicate them ?

We answer the last question first, affirmatively.

We think that standing in the place of the grantor and reading the deed in the light of the surrounding circumstances, we see-with reasonable certainty that the only land answering to the description given, is that portion of the island which lses northerly and westerly of the lines specified in the deed, which divide the island from shore to shore, and that the waters of Deer Isle [134]*134Thoroughfare, the natural boundaries,.are intended upon those lines where, but for them, the description would be incomplete. If one who owned the whole of Merchants’ Island intended to convey it, he could grant it by that name without more, and it cannot be doubted that the island would pass, and the natural boundaries would suffice to define the extent of the grant. Monteith owned a part only of the island, less than one. seventh, separated from the rest by well defined lines extending from shore to shore on opposite sides with undisputed monuments'. By these lines the island is divided into two parcels, of about thirty, and one hundred and ninety acres, respectively.

His deed to Childs describes the parcel as " oraMerchants’Island,” bounded by these lines and containing "thirty acres more or less.” We think that by a fair intendment this language applies to that part of the island which, when separated from the remainder by the lines specified, is found to contain the quantity mentioned as conveyed, rather than to any .undefined portion of the larger tract, and that the natural boundaries (which may fairly be reckoned among the "surrounding circumstances,”) supply all that is wanting to make the description complete. Tile remarks of Shaw, C. J., in Com. v. Roxbury, 9 Gray, 490, are fairly applicable here. "A deed is not to be held void for uncertainty, because the boundaries are not fully expressed, when by reasonable intendment it can be ascertained what was considered and understood by both parties to be embraced and intended to be embraced in the description.” The mode which he suggests of perfecting the defective description by laying down a plan on the land according to ascertained abuttals and monuments, and giving their proper reasonable effect to natural (or otherwise well established) boundaries, where anything is wanting, would leave nothing uncertain here.

The parties in agreeing upon the facts here seem to have recognized the principle that is thus stated in Stone v. Clark, 1 Met. 380, — " When the construction of a deed is doubtful, great weight is to- be given to the construction put upon it by the parties, especially in doubtful questions of boundaries which must [135]*135be presumed to be within their knowledge.” See Crafts v. Hibbard, 4 Met. 452, and cases there cited.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Me. 130, 1882 Me. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cilley-v-childs-me-1882.