Cobban Realty Co. v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co.
This text of 190 P. 988 (Cobban Realty Co. v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon a former appeal the judgment in favor of the defendants was reversed and a new trial ordered (52 Mont. 256, 157 Pac. 173). A statement of the case with illustrating maps will be found in our former opinion and need not be repeated here. Upon the second trial the court found the issues in favor of plaintiff, and defendants appealed from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial.
There was not any new evidence presented, and only a portion of the evidence employed in the first trial was introduced upon the second trial. The same stipulation used upon the first trial was renewed for the purpose of the second trial, and this stipulation, the Weirick deed, and the defendants’ right of way map were introduced by plaintiff.
[190]*190At the instance of the defendants, the deposition of C.. F. Healy, used' at the first trial, was received in evidence, and in rebuttal the witness Jones testified to substantially the same facts as upon the first trial. A more specific reference to this evidence will be, found in our former opinion. Upon the second trial the defendants abandoned each of the affirmative defenses pleaded in their answer—estoppel in pais and mutual mistake—and relied altogether upon the conveyance evidenced by the Weirick deed. In our former opinion we construed the stipulation above, and determined that it “relieves the plaintiff of the necessity of deraigning its title and shifts the burden of proof to the defendants.” Under the terms of this stipulation (omitting any reference to the defense of estoppel, which was abandoned), plaintiff was entitled to judgment unless the defendants could show that the ground in controversy was conveyed to the railway company by the Weirick deed. If the terms .of the deed be considered independently of the circumstances surrounding their preparation, the meaning of the instrument is not open to serious controversy. It conveys that portion of the S. E. 14 of the N. W. 14 of section 20,’ township 13 north, range 19 west, hereinafter referred to as the 40-acre tract, described as follows: “Beginning at a point of intersection of the E. side line of said above-described tract of land, and the center line of the said right of way of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company of Montana, as the same is now surveyed, located, and staked out upon the ground over and across the said S. E. 14 of the N. W. 14; thence running south on and along said E. side line of said tract of land a distance of 50 feet to the S. E. corner thereof; thence running west on „.and along the S. side line of said tract of land to an intersection with the E. side line of lot No. 15 in Cobban & Dissmore Orchard Homes addition to Missoula, Mont.; thence north on and along the E. side line of said lot No. 15 a distance of 100 feet; thence running east on a line parallel to and 50 feet north of the said center line of the railway of the party of the second part to a point on the [191]*191E. side line of the said S. E. 44 of the N. W. 44 of said section No. 20; thence running south 50 feet to place of beginning.”
Under the familiar rule of construction known as the doctrine of the last antecedent, relative and qualifying words,
It is elementary that the object in construing a deed is to
If it is a fact that the ground occupied by the right of way is the identical strip shown upon the right of way map, then defendants should have disclaimed, for they have no interest whatever in the ground claimed by plaintiff; but, from the fact that they are before this court defending this action and insisting upon a construction of the deed'which will give to them the strip of ground illustrated by Figure 2 (52 Mont. 258, 157 Pac. 173), it is fairly deducible that they are making •some claim to the ground in controversy.
By the terms of the stipulation the burden was imposed
If any officer or agent of defendants knows where its right of way is located upon the 40-acre tract above, he refrained from furnishing the information to the court. The engineer, Healy, whose testimony constitutes all the evidence offered by defendants, declined to fix its location and professed to be unable to do so. Healy’s testimony merely establishes the fact that the center line of the right way was surveyed and staked out before the deed was prepared or executed; that the roadbed was constructed and the road has since been operated upon that line, but where that line is situated with reference to the ground claimed by plaintiff no one seems to know. There is [193]*193a failure of proof, and, since the burden of proof was imposed upon defendants, the failure is theirs.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
190 P. 988, 58 Mont. 188, 1920 Mont. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobban-realty-co-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-ry-co-mont-1920.