The defendants, Sterling and Norma Campbell, seasonably appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court, Lincoln County, entered following acceptance of a referee’s report pursuant to M.R.Civ.P. 53 (e)(2). This report upheld the position of the plaintiff, Richard Hodgdon, Jr., who sought by way of declaratory judgment to quiet title to a parcel of land contiguous to the property of the defendants. The defendants argue that the Superior Court erred in accepting the report and in entering judgment thereon because the referee incorreсtly interpreted language in a deed and because his finding as to the location of the disputed boundary was against the weight of the evidence. We affirm the judgment.
Beginning on the southerly side of the town road leading northerly from so-called Sawyer’s Island bridge in a stone wall at a point where it intersects said road, said wall marking the easterly line of land formerly of Albert Lewis, but now of Mrs. Vis; thence southerly by said wall to the shore opрosite Indiantown Island; thence easterly by the shore one hundred fifty feet to an iron bolt in the ledge; thence northerly parallel with said wall to a bolt in a rock on the southerly side of said road; thence northerly and westerly by said road to point begun at, including the shore adjoining the lot as described . . . . (Emphasis added).
The property owned by the plaintiff was part of a parcel of land conveyed in 1952 by Linekin’s successor-in-title, Everett Freeman Linekin, to Richard Swett, who subsequently conveyed the bulk of this property to the plaintiff by successive warranty deeds in 1972. The dеscription of the property in the Linekin-Swett deed relevant to this litigation is as follows:
Beginning at an iron pipe on the west side of said Town Road and being on the south side of a private road leading to the dwelling of Fred A. Higgins; thence South 10° West by land of said Higgins 950 feet, more or less to an iron pipe on the shore opposite Indian Town Island; thence southeasterly along said shore 231 feet to a stake on the shore; thence North 25° East 370 feet to another stake near the western edge of an oak grove . . (Emphasis added).
Stipulating that these deeds principally control the resolution of the controversy, the adjacent lot owners disputed the location of their common boundary — the third call in the Linekin-Higgins deed and the first call in the Linekin-Swett deed. Specifically, the parties contested the locus of the southern terminus of this bоundary line, which forms the southwestern corner of the plaintiff’s property and the southeastern corner of the defendants’ lot. This disagreement extended to the correct course of the defendants’ southerly lot line — the second call in the Linekin-Higgins deed.
On October 28, 1976, the plaintiff filеd a complaint in the Superior Court, seeking a declaration as to the location of the disputed boundary line and that title to his property be quieted. The case was referred by agreement of the parties. Following hearing, the referee found for the plaintiff and thе Superior Court accepted the referee’s report and entered judgment thereon.
At the outset, we call attention to the form of action used in this case. An action for declaratory judgment is an appropriate vehicle for establishing rights in real propеrty. The Declaratory Judgments Act, 14 M.R.S.A. §§ 5951-63, is remedial in nature and should be liberally construed to provide a simple and effective means by which parties may secure a binding judicial determination of their legal rights, status or relations under statutes and written instruments where a justiciable controversy has arisen.
See Berry v. Daigle,
Me.,
Noting that a split of authority exists on the issue, this Court, in
American Motorists Insurance Co. v. LaCourse,
Me.,
Nevertheless, situations can arise under the declaratory judgment statute in which the normal position of the plaintiff and the defendant is reversed. For example, an insurer, who would be the defendant in an orthodox lawsuit by an insured suing on the policy, can anticipate the litigation by bringing an action seeking a declaration of non-coverage. Reasoning that the plaintiff in such cases should not be saddled with the burden of proving non-liability merely because he invokеd his statutory right to a declaratory remedy or that the allocation of the burden of proof should not be controlled by the form of the action, many courts place the burden of showing liability on the defendant insured on the theory that the risk of non-persuasion as to the ultimate issues in the case remains upon the party who would bear the burden had the issues arisen in an ordinary action to enforce the policy.
E. g., Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co. v. Videfreeze Corp.,
We believe that both fairness and the nature of declaratory relief dictate that the allocation of the burden of proof in declaratory judgment actions must be determined by reference to the substantive gravamen of the complaint. The party who asserts the affirmative of the controlling
At the hearing before the referee, both parties produced expert testimony by surveyors in support of their positions. The plaintiff contended that the southern terminus of the disputed boundary was a drill hole located in the ledge on the shoreline 150 feet, measured along the contour of the high-water mark, from the southwestern corner of the defendants’ lot. The location of the disputed boundary, the plaintiff argued, was a straight line running northerly from this drill hole to a bolt located at the side of the town road. The defendants maintained that the southern end point of the disputed boundary was a large rock 215 feet along the shore from their southwestern corner, arguing that the 150-foot distance call in their deed must be measured in a straight line between the two points on the shore because a 150-foot measurement аlong the high-water mark was repugnant both to the parallel-to-the-stone-wall direction contained in the third call of their deed and to the direction call of the westerly and distance call of the southerly boundaries of the plaintiff’s lot as described in the Linekin-Swett deed.
The rеferee found that the drill hole once contained an iron stub and that this drill hole was the “iron bolt in the ledge” referred to in the defendants’ source deed as the monument establishing the southern end point of the common boundary. As a matter of law, the referee concluded that the 150-foot distance “by the shore” contained in the second call of the defendants’ source deed was to be measured along the shore rather than in a straight line and that in the context of deed descriptions the word parallel meant “with like direction or tendency” or “running sidе by side” rather than geometrically or mathematically equidistant.
The referee apparently concluded that as between the -Linekin-Higgins deed in 1919 and the Linekin-Swett deed in 1952 he would look to the earlier deed in resolving the dispute. By this source deed of the defendants, Lydia Linekin initially еstablished the boundary line between the two lots. The location of the easterly sideline described in the 1919 deed, which is duplicated in every deed in the defendants’ chain of title, necessarily determines the westerly sideline of the plaintiff’s lot. Because the 1952 deed referred to thе easterly boundary of the defendants’ property, that boundary, when and if established, is a monument vis-a-vis the plaintiff’s deed and would control any inconsistent courses, distances or quantity contained therein.
Kinney v. Central Maine Power Co.,
Me.,
Although in construing deeds the law attempts to ascertain the intention of the parties, this Court has repeatedly stated that “ ‘to secure the certainty, precision and permanency of muniments of title, certain positive rules of law have evolved which are made to control and parties to real estate transactions must heed the same, if they would effectuate their intent, or avoid consequences they did not intend.’ ”
Rusha v. Little, supra,
The factual finding of the referee as to the location of the disputed boundary will not be disturbed unless clearly erroneous. M.R.Civ.P. 53(e)(2);
see, e. g., Sargent v. Coolidge,
Me.,
Because the referee correctly interpreted the controlling deed and because his location of the disputed boundary is supported by competent evidence of record, the Superior Court did not err in accepting the report and in entering judgment thereon.
The entry is:
Appeal denied.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The allocation of the burden of proof in declaratory judgment actions has been the subject of pointed commentary and debаte.
See generally
E. Borchard, Declaratory Judgments 404-09 (2d ed. 1941); 6A Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 57.31 (2d ed. 1979); 10 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2770 (1973); 22 Am.Jur.2d
Declaratory Judgments
§§ 97-98 (1965); 26 C.J.S.
Declaratory Judgments
§ 148 (1956); Annot.,
