45 Vt. 46 | Vt. | 1872
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only question made in the case is in reference to the construction of the deed, Amasa Knapp to Wm. C. Morgan, dated February 15, 1850, as to the location of the last line described in that deed, and through which the plaintiff clairAs title to the land in dispute. The solution of the question must depend on the language of the deed, in connection with such facts found by the county court as may legally be resorted to in aid of the in
It appears that the land of Wm. C. Morgan, which was contiguous to the land conveyed to him by Knapp by the deed in question, and on the line of which this disputed line is described as running, extended only to the brook. On the opposite side of the brook the land was situated which was owned and occupied by Simon Colton at the time of the execution of the deed in question from Knapp to Morgan, and extending several rods further northeastwardly along the brook, than the point where “ said Morgan’s line” terminated at the brook. Therefore, if the line in question in Knapp’s deed to Morgan, be continued in the same course north, 34 degrees west, across the brook, to the place of beginning, the deed would include a portion of the land which, at the date of that deed, was owned and occupied by Simon Colton, lying south
It is not claimed by plaintiff’s counsel, that Knapp owned the land in dispute at the time he executed the deed-to Wm. C. Morgan ; but it seems to be conceded by counsel, that Wm. C. Morgan’s mortgage to Bronson, of even date with Knapp’s deed to Wm. C. Morgan, conveyed the same land which Knapp’s deed conveyed to Wm. C. Morgan, and by the same description; and that the plaintiff, by assignment from Bronson, has the title conveyed by that mortgage. The plaintiff then claims that when Simon Colton, by his dee ! of Sept. 26, 1850, conveyed the premises ■ in dispute to Wm. O. Morgan, the title thus acquired enured to the benefit of the plaintiff. However this might be if Knapp’s deed to Wm. O. Morgan, and Win. C. Morgan’s mortgage to Bronson, had embraced the land in dispute, it'not being embraced in that deed, the plaintiff takes no benefit by Colton’s deed to Morgan.
We have not been furnished with all the papers referred to in the exceptions; and the plaintiff’s counsel has urged some other grounds of claim which we have not considered, because based rather on what is assumed to have appeared at the trial below,' than upon what legitimately is before this court.
Judgment affirmed-