Driscoll v. Green

59 N.H. 101
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 N.H. 101 (Driscoll v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driscoll v. Green, 59 N.H. 101 (N.H. 1879).

Opinion

Clark, J.

The description in the deed from Vail to the plaintiff is as follows: “All that certain lot of land situate in said city of Concord, on the north side of Chapel street, bounded southerly by Chapel street, fifty feet; westerly by land of said Vail and late Samuel Frye, ninety feet; northerly by land of the late Samuel Frye, fifty feet; and easterly by land of said Vail, about ninety-eight feet, with the buildings thereon, — intending to include only the land on which said buildings are situated, and the yard enclosed within the fence as now built.” And the question raised is, whether the particular description of the premises conveyed is controlled and limited by the words “ intending to include only the land on which said buildings are situated, and the yard enclosed within the fence as now built.” Omitting this clause from the description, *102 there is no ambiguity or uncertainty as to the extent of ’the premises conveyed. At the time of the conveyance there was a permanent fence, with stone posts, on the westerly line of the lot conveyed to the plaintiff, and this line was a straight line, at a right angle with Chapel street. The lot is described as bounded “ southerly by Chapel street, fifty feet.” By this description, the grantor ■must have understood he was conveying, and the plaintiff understood he was receiving, a lot of land bounded on Chapel street, fifty feet in width; and the westerly boundary on the street being fixed and permanent, the easterly boundary, being fifty feet easterly on the line of the street, is as definite and certain a boundary as a stone post, a tree, or any other boundary would have been. Lincoln v. Edgecomb, 28 Me. 275. So as to the northerly line of the lot: it extends from the permanent fence on the west side of the lot, fifty feet easterly, on land of Frye. So that on the southerly, westerly, and northerly sides of the lot the boundaries are fixed and the exact distance defined. The easterly boundary is described as “ easterly by land of said Yail, about ninety-eight feet.” By the established rules of construction, this line is a straight line from the north-east to the south-east corner of the lot, and the words “ about ninety-eight feet,” showing that the exact distance is not intended to be given in the case of this line, indicate that the grantor intended to be bound by the exact distance stated in the case of the other lines. By this description, therefore, the lot conveyed is fifty feet in width on Chapel street, and, being bounded on the street, all the grantor’s title in the land to the. centre of the street passed to the plaintiff, subject- to the right of the public in the street.

The only line in dispute is the easterly line of the plaintiff’s lot, and the northerly end of this line is not in dispute. The defendant, owning the lot on Chapel street adjoining the plaintiff’s easterly line by a conveyance from Vail subsequent to his deed to the plaintiff, claims a strip of land two feet and nine inches in width on Chapel street, and running to a point at the northerly end of the lot.

■ At the date of the deed, in May, 1864, the buildings on the lot conveyed to the plaintiff were, as now, a dwelling-house, L, wood-house; and stable, connected, and extending from a line eighteen feet and five inches northerly of the northerly line of Chapel street to the north end of the lot, at the north-westerly corner of the stable. The easterly side of the main body of the house and L is on a straight line, parallel with and distant from the westerly line of the lot forty-seven feet and three inches. The stable projects out easterly beyond the.L eleven inches, and the easterly side is on a straight line eleven inches further east than the sides of the house and L, and is -parallel with the westerly line of the lot. The woodshed between the L and stable runs obliquely from a line with the L to a line with the stable. At the time of the conveyance there *103 was no fence between the lot conveyed to tbe plaintiff and tbe lot now owned by the defendant, excepting a fence twelve feet and two inches in length extending southerly, on a line with the easterly side of the house and L, from the south-easterly corner of the house to a point six feet and three inches northerly of the north line of Chapel street. There was also a fence extending westerly from that point to the westerly side of the lot, parallel with, and six feet and three inches northerly of, the north line of Chapel street, leaving a space six feet and three inches in width between the northerly line of the street and the fence, which was used as a sidewalk. On the northerly end of the lot the fence extended from the north-westerly corner of the lot to the north-westerly corner of the stable, there being no fence between the northerly end of the stable and the Frye land. Therefore, if the clause “ intending to include only the land on which the buildings are situated and the yard enclosed within the fence as now built,” following the particular description of the premises in the deed, is to have the effect to control and limit the particular description, and is to be construed literally, then it excludes from the conveyance to the plaintiff not only the'strip of land two feet and nine inches in width on Chapel street, and running to a point at the northerly end, which the defendant claims, but it also excludes a strip of land at the northerly end of the stable, and also the space used as a sidewalk, six feet and three inches in width, between the fence and the northerly line of Chapel street; and the title to the two last-mentioned pieces still remains in the grantor, Vail, by virtue of this limitation. We do not think this is the true construction of the deed, or that such was the intention and understanding of the parties when the deed was executed.

A deed is to be construed according to the intention of the parties as manifested by the entire instrument, although such construction may not comport with the language of a particular part of it. Allen v. Holton, 20 Pick. 458, 463; Worthington v. Hylyer, 4 Mass. 196; White v. Gray, 9 N. H. 126; Johnson v. Simpson, 36 N. H. 91; Lane v. Thompson, 43 N. H. 320, 324; Richardson v. Palmer, 38 N. H. 212. Regarding the two descriptions as equally explicit and unambiguous, being inconsistent with each other, that description must control which best expresses the intention of the parties as manifested by the whole instrument. By the first description, the premises conveyed are bounded southerly -by Chapel street. By the second description, limiting the premises to the land on which the buildings are situated and the yard enclosed within the fence, the plaintiff’s lot, instead of extending to Chapel street, is separated from it by a strip of land six feet and three inches in width, lying between the fence on the southerly side of the yard and the northerly line of Chapel street. This description excludes the plaintiff’s lot and buildings entirely from the street, without even a right of passage way to it. Such could not have been the *104 intention of the parties, and this description is manifestly erroneous as to the southerly line of the lot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.H. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-green-nh-1879.