Smart v. Huckins

134 A. 520, 82 N.H. 342, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 134 A. 520 (Smart v. Huckins) 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
Smart v. Huckins, 134 A. 520, 82 N.H. 342, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 33 (N.H. 1926).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The case involves the construction to be given the words “extending in a straight course” in the Leavitt deed as mean *344 ing at right angles to the check lines of lot 5 or as meaning in the same direction as the course N. 84° W., which forms either all or a part of the northerly boundary line of the land in lot 7 conveyed by the deed.

The submission of the construction to the jury, by the trial court, does not affect the merits of the motion for a directed verdict. What the deed means and its effect are questions of law or are to be treated as such, and they are accordingly presented here by the exception to the denial of the motion. “The interpretation of the deed is a question of law, in that it is reviewable by this court so that the finding of fact by the trial court as to the intention of the parties may be disregarded.” Emery v. Dana, 76 N. H. 483, 486. The rule is no less to be applied because a jury rather than the trial justice made the finding. Derosier v. Company, 81 N. H. 451, 455, 456. It follows that whatever evidence was properly introduced at the trial in connection with the construction is before this court for consideration, whether it be of surrounding circumstances at the time the deed was given or of later acts of the owners in practical construction of the deed.

The deed itself seems equally susceptible of either of the constructions claimed. While the defendant rightly contends 'that a straight line is the shortest distance between two points, a straight course does not require the meaning of the shortest distance between two lines. It may be straight although diagonal. Maintaining the same direction throughout its course, it is a straight course. The boundary line claimed by the plaintiffs is just as straight as that claimed by the defendant. But because of the ordinary meaning of straight as most direct or shortest, the use of the word in the deed gives it a doubtful meaning. The southerly range line of both lots is admittedly continuous; there is nothing in the deed, however, to show whether the line in lot 7 described by the course N. 84° W. is to be extended from its intersection with the easterly line of lot 5-“in a straight course”'across the lot by the most direct way or in continuance of the course. The plaintiffs argue that in the absence ' of altering language, “extending in a straight course” means “continuing in their courses,” but since the words “in a straight course” ordinarily relate to shortest distance, language which may be altering appears. While the extension of a line in the science of mathematics may refer only to its continuance in the same direction, and even conceding this may be its usual meaning, yet a Ghange in direction is not in general meaning inconsistent with extension. If *345 technically so, the deed shows no undertaking of technical description of the area in lot 5. If the words “in a straight course” had been omitted, the plaintiffs’ argument would require adoption, but with them, an intention of shortest distance across the lot is at least as probable as one of extension in the same direction. Words are to be assumed to have a purpose, and since the words “in a straight course” are equally applicable to modify or to support the theory of continuance in the same direction, the deed itself offers no satisfactory solution of the doubt. If the words “in the same course” had been used in place of the phrase employed, their supporting weight would be decisive; and the failure to use them is at least sufficient to create an ambiguity calling for competent extrinsic evidence for such light as it may throw on the situation.

The northerly line in lot 7 described by the course N. 84° W. and about one hundred and eight rods in length is only a part of the northerly boundary of the land in that lot. Two other lines of about eight and thirty-two rods in respective length make up the rest of such boundary. If the reference in the deed to the northerly line of the land in lot 7 were construed to include its entire distance of these three lines, as opposite to the southerly line, a line across lot 5 parallel with its southerly line would require adoption, since the continuation of a line made up of three sections, each having a different direction, would be impossible of application, and extension by making the northerly line across lot 5 parallel with its southerly line would be the only alternative. But there is at best nothing in the deed from which it may be inferred that the entire northerly boundary was meant rather than the part of it which is greatest in distance and which runs to lot 7. There is hence again an ambiguity which the deed on its face does not resolve.

The extrinsic evidence which the record presents points out nothing of value to show what the deed means, unless as to one item. The deed shows that the land in lot 7 had been in part at least improved. It mentions buildings on the land, the boundaries are clearly defined, and the acreage is definitely stated. Lot 5 appears never to have been improved and never to have had much value except for the growth on such parts of it as are capable of sustaining growth. Much of it was heath land, and swampy except in dry periods. Where the land was elevated above the swamp level, the growth had value. A part of the disputed area is thus elevated, but this fact is indeterminative of a purpose to include it in, or exclude it from, the land conveyed. The evidence is not *346 satisfactory to show that any lines were run or bounds set by the parties, or that any agreement was made between them, by or from which the northerly line may be established.

The only evidence of any significance is the statement of acreage in the Leavitt mortgage, which is equivalent to a claim nearly contemporaneous with the deed of 1869 that his southerly boundary ran as the defendant now claims. To give him one hundred and twenty-five acres would limit the plaintiffs’ acreage to about seventy, whereas to give the plaintiffs the disputed area would cut down the one hundred and twenty-five acres to ninety-five. The use of the words “more or less” does not militate against this claim. As meaning about or approximately, they denote Leavitt’s understanding and claim of substantially the acreage stated. The character of the lot, which to this day has made walls or fences on it impractical, and the lack of a survey and defined bounds help to give the statement of variation of acreage its ordinary narrowed scope of limited rather than general indefiniteness. See 3 Words & Phrases, 2d ed., 446, 447. The statement of acreage would have an empty meaning if the qualification of “more or less” were construed to admit a variation of thirty acres either way from the stated number of one hundred and twenty-five. The variation is too disproportionate to be reasonable. When it is considered that lots in Effingham usually overrun their assumed acreage, the argument for a smaller acreage than that stated in the deed becomes still further weakened, since the approximating phrase in the light of that circumstance would more especially refer to increased rather than lessened acreage.

The competency of this evidence as the statement either of an owner or of one familiar with the land, when not available as a witness, to show where a boundary in fact is, is well settled. Keefe v. Railroad, 76 N. H.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 520, 82 N.H. 342, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smart-v-huckins-nh-1926.