59 Me. 105 | Me. | 1871
There seems to be no conflict between the title of the plaintiff and that of the defendant. Each holds what is conveyed to him.
The plaintiff can recover only on the strength of his own title. The only question is whether the plaintiff is bounded by the center of the road leading from Sidney to Wintlirop, and that depends upon the true construction of the deeds under which his title is derived.
The deed from George Snell to the plaintiff, dated Sept. 8,1865, describes the premises conveyed as follows': “ A certain piece of and situate in said town of Manchester, and bounded as follows: on the east by the road leading frem Sidney to Winthrop, on the north by the road leading from the first-named road to the Cottle house, and known as the Cottle road, on the west -by the land of Henry A. Caldwell, and on the south by other land of mine, the ■south line to be a straight line from a certain hemlock in or near the line between me and Henry A. Caldwell, to the southerly post jn a pair of bars in the south-easterly corner of the piece hereby conveyed; this pair of bars being on the.road first named, containing twenty acres more or less.”
The deed from Caleb Packard to the plaintiff, dated Sept. 25, 1866, conveys “ a certain pieqc or parcel of land, with the buildings thereon, situate in said Manchester, and bounded and described as follows: “ Beginning on the west side of the road leading from Manchester Center to Sidney, at the south-east corner of land of George W. Cottle; thence running westerly, on Cottle’s south line, about seventy-five rods, to land of H. A. Caldwell; thence southerly, on Caldwell’s easterly line, fifty rods more or less, to a stake and stones for a corner; thence westerly, on said Caldwell’s south line, to the road leading from Augusta to Belgrade; thence southerly, on the eastern line of said last-mentioned road, one hundred rods more or less to said Caldwell’s land; thence easterly, on said Caldwell’s northerly line one hundred rods more or less to land of William Thomas; thence northerly on said Thomas’ rvest line to the first-named road, and crossing said road and running on the westerly line thereof to the first-mentioned bounds,, containing eighty acres more or less, being part of the Bernsly Caldwell farm, so called, excepting and reserving to the public the road crossing said premises.”
The road leading from Manchester Center to Sidney is the same road which in some of the deeds is described as leading from Sidney to Winthrop.
It is undoubtedly true that where land is sold bounded by, upon, or along a highway, the thread or center line of the same is to be presumed to be the limit and boundary of such land. But it is equally true that the grantor, by apt and fitting words, may exclude this presumption and reserve the entire road to himself, subject to the easement of the public. He may bound his grantee by the line of the road and not by the road itself.
The grantor, in the deed last referred to, has very clearly excluded the road leading from Manchester Center to Sidney from his grant. He begins on the west side of the road at the southeast corner of the plaintiff’s land. The deed, after various courses and distances, gives a “line to the first-named road,” but it does not stop there. It crosses the road and runs on “ the westerly line thereof to the first-mentioned bounds.” The easterly line of the land conveyed is bounded not by the road, but by the westerly line of the road, after having crossed the road to reach that line. Both temiini on the "road are on the westerly side thereof, and the line is its westerly line. The description given manifestly excludes the road by the westerly side of which, the plaintiff is bounded. Smith v. Slocomb, 9 Gray, 36 ; Tyler v. Hammond, 11 Pick. 193.
The distinction between the two deeds under which the plaintiff derives his title is, that b}' the first deed he is bounded on the road which clearly goes to its center, and in the second his boundary is the westerly line of the road, thereby excluding the road.
. The offer of the defendant to show that he had the undisputed privilege of cutting the grass in dispute for thirty years is not an offer to show the acquisition of a right by prescription or by adverse possession. It would rather exclude the idea of any cutting by rightful title. It implies that it was the result of a privilege granted, the
Defendant defaulted, and damages are to be assessed only for the hay cut on the road leading from Sidney to Winthrop, east of the land conveyed by Creorge Snell to the plaintiff, by deed dated Sept. 8,1865, or on the portion of the said road included in the deed given by Packard to the plaintiff, if any, and if none, then the plaintiff to become nonsuit.