61 N.H. 31 | N.H. | 1881
When real estate is set off on execution, the statute requires that it shall be "by metes and bounds, or other distinct description." G. L., c. 237, s. 6. And as the right to take land on execution did not exist at common law, and is derived solely from the statute, a substantial compliance with its requirements is always necessary; — in other wolds, every fact essential by the statute to a good title must be expressly stated, or necessarily implied in what is stated, in a return. Mead v. Harvey,
In the present case almost everything is left to conjecture, and the description in the return is manifestly insufficient to make the levy effectual to pass the title to that parcel of the land about which a controversy has arisen. The inquiry then is, Can the officer be permitted to amend his return, and make the boundaries definite and explicit? And we think he may, if the justice and truth of the case require it; for the established principle in this state is, in cases like this, where, as it is understood, no rights of third persons have intervened, that the court will permit an amendment when it is necessary to perfect the title, if the evidence is satisfactory that the requisitions of the statute were actually complied with. Whittier v. Varney and Avery v. Bowman, supra. And, even as against third persons, an extent may be amended if it contain in itself sufficient matter to indicate that, in making it, the statute provisions were probably complied with. See cases last cited; Bank v. Webster,
Case discharged.
STANLEY, J., did not sit: the others concurred.