Harmon v. Kennett Co.

168 A.2d 482, 103 N.H. 219, 1961 N.H. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 20, 1961
DocketNo. 4896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 168 A.2d 482 (Harmon v. Kennett Co.) 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
Harmon v. Kennett Co., 168 A.2d 482, 103 N.H. 219, 1961 N.H. LEXIS 19 (N.H. 1961).

Opinion

Duncan, J.

Unless errors in evidentiary rulings require that the findings and recommendations by the master be set aside, or unless, as the plaintiffs maintain, the findings contain fatal inconsistencies, the master’s recommendation of the dividing line to be established between the lands of the parties is sustainable upon the record. The matter of locating upon the ground the various bounds and boundaries given in the numerous deeds and abstracts received in evidence, with the aid of other competent but conflicting evidence presented at the trial, called for determination by the master of questions of fact peculiarly within his province.

The issues between the parties were related in large measure to the description contained in the only deed purporting to describe the Kennett land by metes, bounds, and courses, a deed from Clark to Nason given in 1812. It appears not to be disputed that the westerly boundary of the Kennett land was an old road running southwesterly and capable of location upon the ground with reasonable certainty, although replaced long before trial by the “Leadmine Road” which cuts across the westerly side of the property along a more southerly course diverging from the “old road” a few hundred [223]*223feet south of the northerly Kennett boundary. The northerly boundary, dividing the Kennett land from the McNair land on the north, and marked principally by a wire fence, was established by a survey made for the defendants. (Def’s Ex. N). By reference to deeds to the McNair property, and monuments upon the ground, this survey indicated that the northeast corner was at or near the white birch tree referred to in the master’s findings. Around this tree the wire fence extended northerly to mark the division line between McNair on the west, and the Harmons on the east. There was also evidence of a wire fence extending southerly from the tree, toward the ancient stone wall extending north and south which the master found marked the easterly Kennett boundary. One issue regarding the location of the northeast corner arose out of the plaintiffs’ evidence tending to show that the McNair lot had been purchased in 1883 for one Durgin in the name of Murray, at which time Durgin insisted upon conveyance of certain standing trees which resulted in an easterly boundary 500 feet east of the original easterly line. This was said to explain recitals in deeds of the McNairs’ predecessors in 1883 and 1906 of an acreage 120 acres more or less, as compared to 100 acres more or less, as recited in earlier deeds.

The southeast corner of the Kennett land was unmarked by monuments upon the ground. The length of the southerly boundary from the old road to the southeast corner given by the deed from Clark to Nason as 332 rods, fell some 40 rods short of the .southeast corner as found by the master, and 10 rods short of the line marked by Hurley in 1939 claimed by the plaintiffs to be the easterly Kennett line. This discrepancy the defendants explained by the failure of the draftsman of the deed to allow for a conveyance, made before 1797 by Jonathan Mason to Joseph Ham, of a 10-acre lot out of the southerly side of the Kennett land later mentioned as part of the southerly bound in a deed of part of the Kennett land from John Nason to John Kennett in 1829.

Both sides presented evidence bearing upon the probable location of the southeast corner. The plaintiffs relied heavily upon the locus of a hemlock post placed in the ground in 1925 by the surveyor Hurley, to mark the point where a division line between the Stacy farm and the Burke pasture, both owned by Ira Ward, intersected the southerly Kennett line. It was their claim that this point also marked the easterly end of the Kennett south boundary, and hence the southerly end of the division line between the lands [224]*224of the parties to the action. An extension of the line surveyed in 1925 to the northerly Kennett boundary constituted the so-called Hurley line of 1939 which the plaintiffs assert to be the proper division line between their property and the defendants’.

In making this claim the plaintiffs relied upon evidence regarding the location of range lines upon the ground, contained in a written statement by Ira Ward and in the testimony of other witnesses. These lines the plaintiffs sought to identify as the range lines shown by the Hersey plan of 1781, which was received in evidence. The evidence however, hardly required acceptance as conclusive. Early deeds in the plaintiffs’ chain of title referred to lot numbers corresponding to numbers appearing in the twelfth range as shown by the Hersey plan, but early deeds in the defendants’ chain of title referred to lots numbered differently from those in the thirteenth range on the same plan, apparently because related to a survey by Thompson, no plan of which could be produced in evidence.

Testimony of a surveyor named Bissett indicated that a range line coming off Stacy Mountain south of the properties of the parties if extended upon the ground would bisect the disputed area rather than strike the division line claimed by either side. Reliance upon extension of a supposed range line north of the Madison Hill Road would have produced no more conclusive results.

Against these considerations the defendants’ evidence tended to establish that the easterly Kennett boundary was marked by the section of stone wall which the master found did mark it. This wall was in line with “a clump of two pines” on the west side of the division line between the Chick and Harmon lands and also with a wire fence extending northerly from these pines. According to one survey this fence ran along the same course for a distance of some 400 feet or to within two hundred feet of the white birch tree found by the master to mark the northeast corner of the Kennett tract. According to another survey a wire fence extended the entire distance between the two pines and the white birch.

These monuments, coupled with the evidence that the ancient stone wall bordering the Chick land was understood by William C. Kennett, the defendants’ uncle, to mark the easterly boundary of the Kennett land warranted the master’s acceptance of the defendants’ contentions in preference to those advanced by the plaintiffs in support of the Hurley line which was unmarked on the ground before it was run in 1939.

[225]*225The well-established principle of law that monuments upon the ground are controlling over measurements, references to adjoining lands, and estimates of acreage may well be considered to substantiate the conclusion reached by the master upon the general issue. Hoban v. Bucklin, 88 N. H. 73; Hall v. Davis, 36 N. H. 569, 571. See also, Richardson v. Chickering, 41 N. H. 380; Tuftonboro v. Willard, 89 N. H. 253. The findings cannot be held to be contrary to the weight of the evidence received.

We turn therefore to consideration of the plaintiffs’ exceptions to the ruling admitting in evidence the statements of William C. Kennett, to specific findings by the master which are asserted to be erroneous or inconsistent, and to the denial of requested findings claimed to have been compelled by the evidence.

The plaintiffs excepted to the receipt in evidence of two sworn statements by William C. Kennett, the first dated February 1, 1951, and the second, supplementary thereto, dated February 8, 1951. The statements were received “as against [the plaintiff] Chick,” and thereafter a like statement by Ira Ward, dated February 1, 1951, offered by the plaintiffs, was received in evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 A.2d 482, 103 N.H. 219, 1961 N.H. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-kennett-co-nh-1961.