Saunders v. Publishers' Paper Co.

208 F. 441, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1235
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 17, 1913
DocketNo. 580
StatusPublished

This text of 208 F. 441 (Saunders v. Publishers' Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Publishers' Paper Co., 208 F. 441, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1235 (D.N.H. 1913).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit. The writ is dated December 3, 1908. The question involved is the title to a strip of land situated in Grafton county, N. H., which sheds its waters into the Swift river, a tributary of the Saco. It is bounded oh the south Fy the north line of Waterville, on the east by the west line of Albany, on the north by a line running due west from a tree known in the case as the “hemlock corner” and now recognized as the jurisdictional northwest corner of Albany, and on the west by the height of land that sheds its waters into the Swift river.

[1] One source of title on which the plaintiff relies is a grant made in 1830 by the state to Jasper Elkins and his five associates. The plaintiff’s contention with reference to this grant is that it extends to the north line of Waterville for its southern boundary and therefore includes the territory here in question. The defendants deny this and say that the southern boundary of the grant is a line running due west from the hemlock tree. A solution of the problem necessitates a construction of the deed and the resolution authorizing the grant. Their construction, like that of any written instrument, is the ascertainment of the intention of the parties, as expressed in the writings, and in the process of construction it is the province and duty of the court to place itself as nearly as possible in the situation in which the parties were at the time the writings were made, so that it may see the application of the language employed to the subject-matter about which the parties were dealing. Weed v. Woods, 71 N. H. 581, 583, 53 Atl. 1024. If, when this is done, the intention of the parties can be ascertained, the court should proceed and declare it; and parol or extraneous evidence of intention would not be admissible; but if, in attempting to apply the language to the subject-matter, an ambiguity should arise (that is, if two situations should be presented, either one of which would answer the terms of the writings with equal certainty), then parol evidence would be admissible to prove which of the two situations the parties had in mind. Clough v. Bowman, 15 N. H. 504; Drew v. Drew, 28 N. H. 489, 494; Heywood v. Lumber Co., 70 N. H. 24, 31, 47 S. W. 294; Kendall v. Green, 67 N. H. 557, 561, 42 Atl. 178; Corwin v. Hood, 58 N. H. 401.

[2] Let us see what the situation was that surrounded the parties at the time they entered into this transaction. It appears that in 1829 the state owned a tract of land lying north of the Gillis and Foss grant, now the town of Waterville, and that Jasper Elkins and his five as-[443]*443sociales petitioned the Legislature requesting that the land be granted to them, which they described as follows:

“Beginning at the southeast corner of land granted to Hatch and Cleaves, thence on the east and north lines of said land to the east line of Thornton (lore, thence to the northeast corner of Lincoln, thence east 10 miles, thence south to the north line of land granted to Gillis and B’oss, thence on said line to the first-mentioned bound.”

At the same session of the Legislature a resolution was adopted authorizing a grant to the petitioners of all the state’s right and title to the land, describing it in the same terms as were employed in the petition. It does not appear that any deed was issued under this resolution, but in 1830 the Legislature passed a second resolution in favor of the same grantees, and it is found that this was probably done to rectify the 10-mile course in the resolution of 1829, which was found to extend into Hart’s location.

In the resolution of 1830 the description starts at the northeast corner of Lincoln and runs east on the north line in which the defect was in the resolution of 1829 and defines the limits of the grant as follows :

“Beginning at tlie northeast corner of the town of Lincoln and running east 7 miles and 117 rods to Hart’s location, thence southerly by the western boundary of said location to a point so far south that a line drawn thence due south shall strike the northwest corner of the town of Burton, thence south to said northwest corner of Burton, thence westerly along the northern line of AVaferrille to the eastern boundary of Hatch and Cleaves grant, thence northerly and westerly by said grant to the east Une of Thornton, thence by said, line of Thornton northerly to the line of Lincoln and along that line to the point first mentioned.”

The deed to Elkins and his associates follows the language of the resolution of 1830 in its description of the property.

Waterville was incorporated as a town in 1829 and embraced the same territory that was granted by the state to Gillis and Foss in 1818. It is the north line of this town that is referred to as the south bound of tlie grant in the deed to Elkins and his associates. In the charter of Waterville this north line is described as beginning at a “spruce tree marked’’ and situated 418 chains north of the & 13.” corner on Burton’s west line, “thence west 790 chains 50 links to the northeast corner of a piece of land granted by the state of New Hampshire to John Raymond, which corner is on the southerly line of a piece of land granted by said state to Hatch and Cleaves.”

In 1815 South Raymond was granted. Its north line is described as being “on said south line of the Hatch and Cleaves grant.”

It will be recalled that in the petition of Elkins and his associates to the Legislature in 1829, which is apparently the basis of the grant of 1830, tlie north line of the Gillis and Foss grant, or Waterville, is described as striking the Hatch and Cleaves grant at its southeast corner. It is thus apparent, when the language of the deed of 1830 to Elkins and his associates is read in connection with these records, which were kept in the possession of the state, that the state intended to bound its grant on tlie south by the north line of Waterville, a line coincident with the south line of Hatch and Cleaves grant and striking [444]*444that grant at its southeast corner bound, and that the southeast corner of the Hatch and Cleaves grant should be the southwest corner of the grant to Elkins.

In 1830 the hemlock corner, above spoken of, was in existence and was marked as the northwest corner of Burton. It was situated about a mile north of the northeast corner of Waterville, as called for by its charter. A plan introduced in the case shows that this corner of Wa-terville is situated a short distance north of where the Swift river crosses the north and south division line' between Burton and Water-ville.

Burton was granted in 1766. It is matter of general history in New Hampshire that in 1803 the Legislature, with a view to making a map of the state, enacted a law making it the duty of the several towns within the state to cause an accurate survey of the same to be made and transmit a map thereof to the Secretary of State, containing the exact limits of said towns by careful admeasurement, together with a description of all public roads passing through the same, also the rivers, falls and principal streams, ponds, lakes, and mountains, and the names of adjoining towns, with the extent said towns adjoin on their own towns; the whole to be protracted by a scale of 200 rods to the inch and all disputed lines distinctly marked; and that in 1818 such a map was published by the state.

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Bluebook (online)
208 F. 441, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-publishers-paper-co-nhd-1913.