Graves v. Mattison

67 Vt. 630
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 67 Vt. 630 (Graves v. Mattison) 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
Graves v. Mattison, 67 Vt. 630 (Vt. 1895).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

I. January 28, 1870, Ezra Edson was the owner of a tract of land embracing the lands of the orators and defendant, described in the master’s report. By deed of that date, he conveyed from the westerly end of this tract, a piece of land to D. P. Walker, described as follows :

“Beginning forty-five feet east of the northeast corner of Geo. W. Smith’s brick store in the village of Factory Point, at a stake and stones standing in the junction of the road' leading to Beech & Lee’s shop with the main highway; thence easterly on the south side oí said highway forty-seven feet to a stake and stones standing eighteen inches east of the northeast corner of the meat market; thence southerly-parallel with the east side of said meat market forty-six feet to a stake and stones standing on the north side of said road leading to Beech & Lee’s shop ; thence northeasterly on the north side oí said road sixty feet to the place of beginning.”

By successive conveyances the title to this piece of land conveyed to Walker, came to the defendant Feb. 27, 1894.

April 1, 1873, Edson conveyed from the tract of land, so owned by him, another piece of land on the east of and adjoining the piece previously conveyed to Walker, to one Omar M. Howe, by the following description :

“Beginning on the south line of the highway leading through the village of Factory Point, ninety-one feet east of the northeast corner of the brick store of Burton & Co., and at the northeast corner of the drug store lot of D. P. Walker ; thence easterly on the line of said highway thirty-five and one-half feet; thence southerly parallel with the east line of said drug store sixty-three feet to the north side of the road leading to Beech’s wagon shop ; thence on said last mentioned road westerly to the southeast corner of said drug store lot; thence northerly on the east line of said drug store lot to the-place of beginning.”

By successive conveyances, the title to this piece of land conveyed to Howe, came to the orators, Allen M. Graves [633]*633and Helen M. Colburn, and at the commencement of this suit, they were, and now are, the owners of the same.

The brick store of George W. Smith, and of Burton & Co., are identical, and it still stands .where it stood when said deeds were given, and is the only monument now standing which is referred to in the deed from Edson to Walker, and in the successive conveyances of that lot. The master finds that the easterly line of the Walker lot was at right angles with Main street and parallel with the east line of the brick store.

January i, 1880, Edson conveyed to Emerson Estabrook the land lying easterly of and adjoining the lot conveyed to Howe, and by successive conveyances the title to the same came to the defendant July 17, 1882, and he is now the owner thereof. This is the lot upon which he is erecting a brick block, the northwest corner of which extends over upon the orators’ lot ten inches, covering a strip of land ten inches wide at that point, and running to a point about seven feet southerly from the corner, if the orators’ lot is located as they claim.

The main question in dispute is as to the true location of the westerly line of the defendant’s land last mentioned, and the easterly line of the orators’ land, which lines are identical.

The master finds and reports that it was conceded by both parties, that the orators’ lot is thirty-five and one-half feet wide. It does not appear that either the orators or the defendant, in respect to each other, have gained or lost any land by adverse possession.

.The northeast corner of the Walker lot is ninety-two feet east of the northeast corner of the brick store. The northwest corner of the orators’ lot as described in Edson’s deed to Howe is ninety-one feet east of the northeast corner of the brick store and at the northeast corner of the Walker lot. The defendant contends that the distance of “ninety-one [634]*634feet” must prevail, while the orators insist that the northeast corner of the Walker lot is so certain and definite that it must prevail as the orators’ northwest corner, and the “ninety-one feet,” be rejected as repugnant to the clearly expressed intention of the grantor, Edson.

Among the rules that obtain in the construction of deeds, perhaps none is more important than the rule that the intention of the grantor, if not unlawful, shall be given effect, especially when it can be ascertained from the deed itself. There are numerous cases to this effect, among which are Flagg v. Eames, 40 Vt. 16, and Clement v. Bank of Rutland, 61 Vt. 298.

When Edson conveyed the lot to Howe, it is not to be presumed that he undertook to convey land that he did not •own. He then owned sufficient land easterly of and adjoining the Walker lot, to make the Howe lot thirty-five and •one-half feet wide. If the stake and stones once marking the site of the northeast corner of the Walker lot could now be found, that monument would dominate over all other evidence and determine the location of that corner, because that would be fixed and certain. In the absence of a fixed monument, the next most certain data by which the location of a corner can be determined, is distance from a fixed and certain object. Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Dyer, 49 Vt. 74. The northeast corner of the brick store is a certain and fixed object, from which the distance, ninety-two feet, is to be measured east, to determine the location of the northeast corner of the Walker lot. As the easterly line of. this lot was at right angles to Main street, which we take to be the prain highway referred to in the deed to Walker, and parallel with the east line of the brick store, the site of its northeast corner is fixed with certainty. Indeed, no question is made by the defendant either as to its location, or as to its being readily found from the data available for that purpose, but on the contrary, he admits that it is located ninety-two [635]*635feet east from the brick store as described in the deed to Walker. In the deed to Howe, the grantor specifically makes the northeast and southeast corners, and the east line of the Walker lot, the westerly boundary of the Howe lot. The last course of the description in that deed is from the southeast corner of .the Walker lot, northerly on the east line of that lot, to the place of beginning. This course, if followed , must locate the point of begining ninety-two feet, instead of ninety-one feet, east of the northeast corner of the brick store.

The master correctly found the easterly line of the Walker lot to be ninety-two feet easterly from the easterly line of the brick store. These lines are parallel with each other. •Thus it is apparent that it was the purpose of Edson to convey to Howe a piece of land thirty-five and one-half feet wide on the highway, beginning at the northeast corner of the Walker lot, and out of land east of and adjoining that lot, and this intention must prevail and the ninety-one feet must be rejected as repugnant to the other bounds, and the expressed intention of the grantor. It follows from this that the orators’ northwest corner is the northeast corner of the Walker lot, and their easterly line is the line claimed by them.

A portion of the defendant’s building and the foundation thereof, are erected upon the orators’ lot, and in respect to them, they are entitled to the relief prayed for.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Vt. 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-mattison-vt-1895.