This is trespass qua. clau. No error appears in excluding the testimony of the witness Rosseau as to declarations of Weeks concerning the location of the lines of the locus, because, if for no other reason, the examiner did not disclose what answer he expected to elicit. This has been often decided, and counsel would do well to keep the rule in mind when examining witnesses.
The count on which the plaintiff elected to rely, describes the locus as “being gore lot No. 4 in that part of Canaan formerly called Norfolk, and bounded north by Canada line; southwesterly by land owned by Emma J. Heath; and southeasterly by land of Heman Nichols’s estate and Mrs. J. P. Moore.”
The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that at the time in question he owned the lot described in said count, and that the defendant, in cutting timber he had bought on land adjoining said lot, cut over the line onto the same, and destroyed a large number of trees. The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show two lines ‘ ‘ extending along on the southeasterly side of said lot. ’ ’
The defendant denied that he had cut over the line onto said lot, and introduced testimony tending to show that the true line of said lot was farther to the northwest than either of the lines claimed by the plaintiff, and no claim was made that he had cut over that line.
The plaintiff claims that the court, in its charge, limited him for recovery to the original line of said lot as it was located when the town was divided and the gore established as one of its divisions; and he excepted to the charge on that ground, claiming that as the locus was described, he was not limited to that line, but only to the line between him and the Nichols estate, where-ever that was.
But if there was error in this respect, which we do not decide, it was cured by the special findings, for by the submission of the questions to which they were answers, the plaintiff had the full benefit of every controverted phase of his case presented by the
Judgment affirmed.
