15 A. 144 | N.H. | 1888
In determining what the parties to a deed or other contract intended by words of doubtful meaning, all the material surrounding circumstances are competent to be considered. The interpreter, by looking at the subject-matter of the contract from their standpoint, will the more readily ascertain the sense which they attributed to the language used. Evidence is admissible of all facts that will enable or aid the court to place itself in their situation. Goodhue v. Clark,
The benefit to one party or injury to the other of a particular construction may be of decisive weight in determining whether it was intended. If a parcel of land conveyed is surrounded by the grantor's other land, an intention to grant a right of way is conclusively presumed. On the question whether a granted way is subject to gates and bars, their necessity or convenience to the grantor and inconvenience to the grantee may be considered. In this case there is no explicit provision on the subject, and it being found that gates and bars are reasonably necessary, the plaintiff is entitled to maintain them. Bean v. Coleman,
The location and limits of the reserved way are not specified. It is a reservation of a reasonably convenient and suitable way across the granted land to the place or places mentioned. The defendant is not necessarily entitled to the way which prior to his conveyance had been commonly used. Smith v. Wiggin,
The Point was sometimes used by the defendant as a pasture, and was inaccessible without crossing the land conveyed. He had one other pasture; but to reach it he had no need of a way across the plaintiff's land. He had nearer and more convenient access to it from the highway. It is not probable that he intended to reserve, or that his grantee understood he reserved, a way for which he had no occasion. The reservation shows upon its face that it was penned by a person unskilled in the use of written language. His use of the plural "pastures," instead of the singular, like his use of the word "time" for times in the same sentence, was a mere blunder. The same place was intended by "pastures" and "the Point so-called." The reservation is to be construed as if written "to my pasture or the Point so called." The defendant is entitled to a reasonably convenient and suitable way across the land conveyed to the Point. It should cross no more of the plaintiff's land than is reasonably necessary. As we understand the case, it is found that as matter of fact the way across the defendant's own pasture is reasonably convenient. The convenience of both parties is evidence of the locality of the defendant's way, and the conclusion reached at the trial upon this evidence, that he has no way through the plaintiff's field, necessarily includes a finding of the fact that the way through his pasture is reasonably convenient.
The defendant's right of way through the plaintiff's pasture does not authorize him to pass over all parts of the pasture at his pleasure. Its route through that lot is determined not by the sole interest of either of the parties, but by the reasonable convenience of both. If its location were contested, the controversy might not be settled by the negative result of many actions at law. Both parties, or either of them, might need a decree in equity that *523
would fix the route affirmatively and specifically. A decree could establish one route upon condition that the plaintiff make it passable, or contribute a certain part of the expense of its improvement, and could establish another route if the condition were not complied with. If it had been found that the rights of the parties resulting from and based upon their comparative and combined convenience required the plaintiff to bear a part or all the expense of improving the route through the defendant's pasture, the pleadings could have been amended for the admission of equitable relief. Metcalf v. Gilmore,
Judgment for the plaintiff.
SMITH, J., did not sit: the others concurred.