Keefe v. Sullivan County Railroad

71 A. 379, 75 N.H. 116, 1908 N.H. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 4, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 71 A. 379 (Keefe v. Sullivan County Railroad) 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
Keefe v. Sullivan County Railroad, 71 A. 379, 75 N.H. 116, 1908 N.H. LEXIS 49 (N.H. 1908).

Opinion

Binghajm, J.

Tbe plaintiff and tbe defendants are adjoining-owners of land. Tbe location of tbe easterly line of tbe plaintiff’s lot and tbe westerly line of tbe defendants’ right of way is in dispute. Tbe plaintiff claims it is located some four to six feet east of tbe line where tbe defendants built a high fence in 1904, and tbe defendants claim that tbe high fence is on tbe true line. *117 The right of way was surveyed and laid out in 1847. Its westerly line as then surveyed is the plaintiff’s true east line. There was evidence that in 1870 the defendants built a fence some six feet east of the one which they erected in 1904; that they were maintaining it at that place when the plaintiff purchased his lot in 1882; that they continued to do so down to 1888, when they double-tracked their road and put in a side track and two switches opposite the plaintiff’s property; and that it was then broken down or buried in the process of raising the tracks and widening the road-bed.

In 1874, one Torpey was foreman in charge of the fences and tracks on the section which passes the plaintiff’s land. He was then about sixty years of age and had been foreman for some five years. At that time he owned the premises now owned by the plaintiff, and in the presence of one Wessul, a witness for the plaintiff, stated that the fence (meaning the one put up in 1870) was the west line of the right of way. At the time of the trial Torpey was dead, and the plaintiff offered his declaration in evidence as that of a person who was familiar with things pertaining to the defendants’ property and likely to know where the boundary line was, and as an admission; but upon the suggestion of the defendants’ counsel, that the statement concerned the declarant’s own land and that the Central Vermont Railroad was then operating the defendants’ road as lessee, the court excluded the testijnony until it should be shown that the party making the declaration had authority to make it.

It also appeared that for a series of years just before and after the plaintiff purchased his land, one Powers was foreman in charge of the fences and road-bed on this section, and at the time of trial was dead; and the plaintiff offered to show that before he purchased his land, Powers, when upon the premises of the defendants, pointed out to him the fence erected in 187 0 as the west line of the right of way. This evidence was offered upon the ground that the declaration was that of a person having knowledge of the boundary, made while upon the property and in charge of it. It was excluded and the plaintiff excepted.

The defendants now contend that the evidence above referred to was properly excluded, and for the following reasons: (1) Because the declarations were offered solely as admissions, and could not be received as such for the reason that neither Torpey nor Powers was shown to be an agent of the defendants, and if they were, that it did not appear they possessed authority to bind the defendants; (2) because neither of them was shown to be an owner of land as to the boundaries of which their declarations related and were material evidence — that the declarations of ■deceased owners only were admissible.

*118 But the first position, that the declarations were offered solely as admissions, cannot be sustained. It clearly appears that the offers were made upon two distinct grounds: (1) as declarations of deceased persons who presumably knew where the division line between the plaintiff’s and defendants’ property was, and (2) as admissions binding upon the defendants. As admissions, the plaintiff does not now contend but that they were properly excluded, and such is undoubtedly the law. Clough v. Company, ante, 84. But as declarations of deceased persons, he contends that both were admissible: that proof of ownership of land by the declarant is material only as bearing upon the question-whether the person making the declaration presumably knew the location of the boundary in regard to which he undertook to speak and which was material to the issue; that such proof is but a species of evidence bearing upon the question of knowledge, the want of which may be supplied by other evidence of equal weight; that as to Torpey, the defendants’ counsel admitted at the trial that he was the owner of the land now owned by the plaintiff, from which it would follow that he presumably knew its bounds, independently of the proof that he was the person in charge of the defendants’ road-bed and fences; and that as to Powers, proof of ownership was unnecessary, it appearing that he had for many years had charge as foreman of the defendants’ road-bed and fences on their right of way past the plaintiff’s premises, and therefore presumably knew its bounds.

In Adams v. Stanyan, 24 N. H. 405, 417, the law upon this question is ■ stated as follows: “ The declarations of deceased persons who were so situated as to have the means of knowledge, and had no interest to misrepresent, are competent evidence upon a question of boundary, whether the same pertains to public tracts or private rights.” It is true that in that case the declarant was the owner of land, and that the location of one of its bounds was material evidence upon the question of the location of the line between tbe parties to the suit. But it is apparent that the court regarded the fact of ownership merely as evidence disclosing that the declarant was “ so situated as to have the means of knowledge.” The same view is presented in Lawrence v. Tennant, 64 N. H. 532, 541, where Judge Blodgett says: “The interests of F. Sanborn and B. M. Towle, as the respective owners of adjacent lots, the Common boundary of which was unquestioned, showed a strong probability that they had knowledge of that boundary.” And in Lane v. Hill, 68 N. H. 275, it was held that the declarations of a testator as to the contents of a lost will were admissible to prove its contents, clearly recognizing that proof of probable knowledge on the part of a declarant may be satisfied by other evidence than the ownership of land. Judge Parsons there says (p. 281) : “ The *119 objection to tbe evidence is tbat it is hearsay, not open to cross-examination, and not given under the sanction of an oath. The declaration, however, is that of a person now deceased, having the means of knowledge without interest to misrepresent, and is the best evidence of which the case is capable. Betts v. Jackson, 6 Wend. 173. It is difficult to see on what ground the reason of the admission of the evidence of declarations of deceased persons in cases of disputed boundary, which is put upon the ground that it is the best evidence of which the case is capable, does not apply to cases like the present. Lawrence v. Tennant, 64 N. H. 532; Nutter v. Tucker, 67 N. H. 185. To admit the declaration of a deceased person in one class of eases because it is the best evidence of which the case is capable, permitting the jury to judge of the interest of the declarant as bearing upon the weight of his testimony (Lawrence v. Tennant, supra),

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 379, 75 N.H. 116, 1908 N.H. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keefe-v-sullivan-county-railroad-nh-1908.