Sherman v. Hanno

28 A. 18, 66 N.H. 160
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 A. 18 (Sherman v. Hanno) 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
Sherman v. Hanno, 28 A. 18, 66 N.H. 160 (N.H. 1889).

Opinion

Doe, C. J.

The error in the clause of the mortgage that described the land as “ situated in said Lyman ” was corrected by the accompanying reference to the record of a deed of land situated in Lyman and Lisbon. Colby v. Collins, 41 N. H. 301, 303. The meaning of the mortgage was expressly declared to be, that it conveyed the land that was conveyed to the mortgagors by the recorded deed to which reference was made for a more particular description. The mistake, being corrected in the paper in which it occurred, is immaterial.

Elliot v. Heath, 6 N. H. 426, was a writ of entry in which the demanded promises were described as “ a certain tract of land situated in said Boseawen, being all that part of the homestead farm of the late Nathaniel Gookin of said B., which was conveyed to Joseph Elliot by P. Gookin, administrator of the goods and estate of said Nathaniel, except what has been conveyed by said Joseph Elliot to Joseph Conch by deed dated February 1, 1827, — the tract demanded being the same that was conveyed to me by my father, J. E., by deed dated March 26, 1827.” The case was tried on the general issue, a verdict was returned for the plaintiff, and the defendant moved in arrest of judgment because the land *162 demanded was not sufficiently described in the declaration. This motion did not prevail, and judgment was rendered on the verdict. In the opinion, the court say, — “It does not appear that either of the deeds [mentioned in the declaration] has been recorded. It is laid down by Stearns, as to declarations in writs of entry, ‘that the description should be so certain as. to enable the tenant to understand what is demanded against him, and the sheriff to deliver the seizin without any information from the demandant.’ Stearns on Real Actions 151. . . . The rule that the description of the land must be sufficiently certain to enable the sheriff to deliver the seizin without any information from the demandant, seems to go farther than is essential. In most instances, the sheriff would be obliged to enquire of some one as to the location of the lands described in his writ, and in all instances he might require the demandant to point them out. It is undoubtedly the case that the premises demanded must be described in the count with as much precision as in any common conveyance or assurance of land. Jackson on Real Actions 13. If this be the true rule, the description in this case is sufficient. It is copied from the deed, and is, without doubt, sufficient to pass the title to the land, and we see no reason why a declaration of the same certainty should not be sufficient for the rendition of a judgment.” In Woodman v. Lane, 7 N. H. 241, 242, 250, 251 (decided in 1834, a year after Elliot v. Heath), it was assumed that the sufficiency of such a description in a writ of entry was not an open question.

Atwood v. Atwood, 22 Pick. 283 (decided in 1839), was a writ of dower. In the written demand made by the plaintiff on the defendant for an assignment of dower before suit, the land was described by a reference to a recorded deed in which the defendant was a grantee. The defendant objected to the description, contending that he could not be compelled to go to the registry to ascertain in what land the plaintiff claimed dower. “ This description,” say the court, “ was sufficiently certain. All that is required is, that the description of the land should be such as to give notice to the tenant to what land the demand referred. And as the tenant was a party to the deed referred to, he could be left in no doubt as to the lands in which dower was demanded.” The plaintiff claimed dower in land in lots five and six. After verdict for the plaintiff, the defendant moved in arrest of judgment upon the ground that the declaration described the land in lot five by a reference to a deed and to the place where it was recorded. This objection was sustained. “In the description of the land within that lot,” say the court, “reference is had to Blinn’s deed, and unless the description can be aided by that reference, it is not sufficiently definite and certain. And it is very clear that it cannot be thus aided. Such a reference would be good in a conveyance of the land, or in a demand of dower before action brought. . . . But when lands are demanded, the description of them *163 must be so certain that seizin may be delivered by the sheriff without reference to any description dehors the writ. It is not necessary in every case to describe the land demanded by metes and bounds, but there must be a certain description in the writ itself, and no defect can be cured by a reference to any existing conveyance. As to this part of the demandant’s claim, therefore, she is not entitled to judgment. But as to the lands included in No. 6, those, we think, are described with sufficient certainty. The demandant, however, may amend her declaration, or take judgment for dower in lot No. 6.”

In Flagg v. Bean, 25 N. H. 49, 50, 64, 65, and Colby v. Collins, 41 N. H. 301, 305, tire case of Elliot v. Heath (before cited), in which the law of this state had been settled, was overlooked, and it was held that “ the principle adopted by the courts ” was correctly stated in the Massachusetts case, Atwood v. Atwood.

The question whether land is properly described in pleading by a reference to a deed is not determined by statute or by a special rule relating to this particular question, but by the application of the general rule that procedure may be what justice and convenience require. Boody v. Watson, 64 N. H. 162, 171. It is just and convenient that the declaration in a writ of entry should inform the defendant what land the plaintiff claims, and that, if the defendant is dissatisfied with the information there given, he should object to it at the earliest opportunity. It is not a matter of law, as it is not the fact, that a reference to a deed in a declaration is always sufficient, or always insufficient. It may be enough for the practical purposes of defence; it may be the only description the plaintiff can conveniently furnish; and neither party is unnecessarily and unreasonably harassed by technical rules of procedure. In many instances, the common law regards as sufficiently certain whatever can be made certain.

A count, in a writ of entry describing the demanded premises as bounded northerly by land of A, easterly by land of B, southerly by land of C, and westerly by laud of D, may not be better than a count describing the same premises as laud conveyed by E to F. On the north side there may be wild and unoccupied land, conveyed to A by a deed that is not recorded; on the east may be an abandoned farm, which passed to B by recorded devise or unrecorded descent; on the south, a farm may be occupied by a tenant of C, who took it,by the levy of an execution; on the west, unoccupied land may belong to I) or to G, each claiming a prescriptive title, determinable by a jury trial. When a tract is described by such abuttals in the declaration, judgment, and writ of possession, and objection is first made after judgment, the description cannot be disregarded as immaterial, or because the given boundary cannot be located without a laborious aud expensive investigation of the titles and boundaries of four other tracts.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A. 18, 66 N.H. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-hanno-nh-1889.