25 Me. 185 | Me. | 1845
On a later day at the same term the opinion of the Court was given orally by
The Judge first stated the facts and read the descriptive part of the deed; and then remarked, that to aid in giving a construction to a deed, parol evidence might rightly be introduced, to show the location and actual appearance of the land at the time of the conveyance, but was inadmissible, to show the sayings or doings of the parties, or either of them for that purpose.
The levies of the executions were upon a specific portion of the twenty acres, before any location of the acre had been made, or attempted to be made by any one. And the levies were void, and could not affect the rights of either party.
It is said in argument, that the delay of more than four years in making a selection of the acre, shows such laches on the part of the demandant, as destroys any right he might have had to locate his acre. We are inclined to think, that an unreasonable delay on the part of the demandant in making the selection, would amount to a waiver of his right, and leave the parties to settle the controversy in the mode pointed out by law; but on this point we give no opinion.
The decision of this question must be based upon the construction to be given to the deed, on an inspection of the whole of it, with the aid of such facts as are legally before us. True it is, that a conveyance of the twenty acres of land with a pertinent description of the boundaries thereof, would carry the buildings with the land, although not named in the deed. Buildings, however, are not land, but pass as fixtures. That is not the inquiry here, but whether the demandant has a right so to locate his acre of land as to run out and include
According to the agreement of the parties, the demandant must become nonsuit.