Pettee v. Omega Chapter of Alpha Gamma Rho

170 A. 1, 86 N.H. 419, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 2, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 A. 1 (Pettee v. Omega Chapter of Alpha Gamma Rho) 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
Pettee v. Omega Chapter of Alpha Gamma Rho, 170 A. 1, 86 N.H. 419, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 79 (N.H. 1934).

Opinions

*422 Peaslee, C. J.

The controversy is over the meaning of a deed given by the plaintiff to the defendant’s grantor in 1915. The description in the deed is as follows:

“A certain tract of land situate in Durham, N. H., bounded and described as follows, to wit: Bordering on and situated East of land conveyed March 23, 1915, to Frances L. Hewett by heirs of Horace Pettee. Commencing at the southeast corner of said Hewett land thence northerly along said Hewett land about 127 feet to land of Horace Pettee Estate; thence easterly along the prolongation of the northerly side of said Hewett land about 37 ft. to a point 175 ft. from private way, west of said Hewett land; thence southerly about 129 ft. in a straight line to a point in the prolongation of the South line of said Hewett land 145 ft. from said private way, thence westerly about 20 ft. to the point begun at.

“Reserving the right for myself, my heirs and assigns to enter upon said land when necessary to repair or replace all water and sewer pipes now situated on said land doing no unnecessary damage.”

The private way above referred to is Strafford avenue.

The' description is plain upon its face. It delineates a four-sided tract, lying easterly of and adjoining other land of the grantee and about 20 feet wide at its southerly end. This interpretation is disputed, because upon an attempt to apply the deed to the land an inconsistency in the description becomes apparent. The Scott corner, which is the admitted starting point and the southwesterly corner of the granted premises is 145 feet from Strafford avenue. Hence, it is argued, as the deed calls for a southeasterly bound 145 feet from that avenue, the easterly line runs southerly to that point; and since it appears that this point is also the Scott corner, that part of the deed reading “to a point in the prolongation of the south line of said Hewett land” and “thence westerly about 20 ft. to the point begun at” is to be rejected as surplusage.

Manifestly, the deed contains inconsistent matter relating to the location of the southeasterly corner of the granted premises. If it is only 145 feet from the avenue it is not on a “prolongation of the south line” of other land of the grantee. Neither is it “about 20 ft.,” or any other distance, from the point of .beginning. If it answers either of the last mentioned calls of the deed it is more than 145 feet from the street.

The problem for solution is, which of these inconsistent descriptions is to prevail. As an aid to a correct interpretation the surrounding circumstances are to be taken into consideration. The grantor *423 is a civil engineer and surveyor of long experience. Much has been made in argument of the mental processes and physical acts which entered into his formulation of the description in this deed. But all that is immaterial upon the issue here. Neither the thoughts nor the acts of one party, preceding the execution of a written contract and not known to the other party thereto, can be used to explain the meaning of the writing. Smart v. Huchins, 82 N. H. 342, and cases there reviewed.

It is evident that there is error in the description. But the origin of that error, so far as it lay exclusively in the mind of one party, is immaterial. Any surrounding fact, open to observation, or any thought expressed by one party to the other is to be considered for what it may be worth. There is but little that comes within this limitation which can be used in the present instance.

As to whether the parties went upon the premises and there determined the points to which the proposed purchase would extend, the evidence was conflicting, and the presiding justice made no definite finding. It is argued that the testimony upon this topic is now before this court for use in ascertaining the intention of the parties. This claim arises from the constant reiteration in many cases that a writing is to be interpreted with the aid of all the competent evidence. But this expression, competent evidence, has a definite limitation. It refers to facts which either are admitted, or when denied have been found to exist. Such facts, and such facts only, are the competent external evidence which may be used to aid in ascertaining the meaning of the writing. Upon the issue of their existence, the finding by the trier of the facts is conclusive. Sandford v. Boss, 76 N. H. 476; Bell v. Woodward, 48 N. H. 437.

Although this court ascertains the meaning of a document upon what is called all the competent evidence, its function does not extend to the determination of disputes as to the existence of explanatory facts which would be material if proved. No case has been cited or found in which this court has undertaken such a duty. So too, as far as has been ascertained, we have no reported case which was sent to the law court with a statement of the circumstances found at the trial, wherein such statement was not accepted as final, except instances where there was a question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings.

It is true that there are cases, usually those involving the interpretation of wills, wherein testimony introduced in the trial court has been reported and considered here. In these, the truth of the testi *424 mony has been assumed, and no issue has been made of the propriety of such procedure.

The only statement which has been found that could be thought to express a rule contrary to the foregoing conclusions is in Borchers v. Taylor, 83 N. H. 564, 567. The rule stated in Emery v. Dana, 76 N. H. 483, 486, that “the finding of fact by the trial court as to the intention of the parties may be disregarded,” was there quoted with approval, and the following deduction therefrom was stated: “Hence whatever evidence was properly introduced at the trial in connection with the construction of the will is before us now for consideration,” citing Smart v. Huckins, 82 N. H. 342, 344 as authority.

The conclusion there stated was correct as applied to the situation there involved, for not only was no issue made as to the propriety of considering testimony here, but the testimony reported had also, in effect, been found to be true by the presiding justice. Exception to the admission of the evidence was taken, and in transferring the case the presiding justice found alternatively on the issue of intent, according as the evidence should be held admissible or not. Of course the inevitable inference is that he believed what the witnesses testified to. And the interpretation of the will was finally based upon the language which it contained, the facts testified to being deemed of insufficient weight to affect the result.

In the Smart case it was said that all the evidence introduced at the trial was before this court for consideration. But that case was here upon exception to a refusal to grant a motion for a directed verdict. That depended upon the interpretation of a deed. That in turn depended in part upon surrounding circumstances, and proof of those depended upon evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 1, 86 N.H. 419, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettee-v-omega-chapter-of-alpha-gamma-rho-nh-1934.