85 Me. 429 | Me. | 1893
This is an action of trespass for cutting timber on the plaintiff's land. At the trial in the court below the defendant obtained a verdict, and the case is brought into this court on motion of the plaintiff for a new trial.
We think the motion must be sustained. No one can read the evidence and for a moment doubt that the defendant cut timber in considerable quantities on the plaintiff’s land. The defendant denies the fact but feebly, while his counsel in his brief furnished to this court, does not deny it at all. He rests his client’s case on an allegation that during a negotiation between the defendant and the plaintiff for the sale of a lot of land, the latter pointed out to the former certain clumps of timber as being on the lot, and that after the purchase, the defendant cut this and other timber in the vicinity, believing it was on the lot which he had bought of the plaintiff. The defendant’s counsel claims that such a representation, if made by the plaintiff, estops him from the maintenance of this suit.
We do not so understand the law. Such a representation, if fraudulently made, might have that effect; but, if innocently made, it would have no such effect. A party is not estopped to prove a legal title to his land by any misrepresentation of its locality made by mistake, without fraud or intentional decep
In a recent case in West Virginia, the court held that where the owners of adjoining lots actually surveyed and marked a line between their lots, but, by mistake, included a considerable portion of one of the lots within the supposed limits of the other, neither was bound by the line so run ; nor could it be construed as a license from the one party to the other to cut timber between the true line and the mistaken boundary. Hatfield v. Workman, 35 W. Va. 538, S. C. 14 S. E. Rep. 153; Buker v. Bowden, 83 Maine, 67.
In Evans v. Miller, 58 Miss. 120 (38 Am. Rep. 313), A pointed out to B, an adjoining owner, what he supposed to be the boundary line between their lands, and forbade his cutting trees beyond that line. B cut trees within that line. It was subsequently discovered that A was mistaken in that line, and that the trees cut were on A’s land; and- the court held that A might recover their value. Appended to this case is a very full note on the subject of estoppel in this class of cases, by Mr. Irving Browne.
In Copeland v. Copeland, 28 Maine, 525, it was said by Chief Justice Whitman, that, to defeat one’s title to real estate by an equitable estoppel, or estoppel in pads, the act or declaration of the party must be wilful, that is, with knowledge of the facts upon which any right he may have must depend, or with an intention to deceive the other party; that he must, at least, be aware that he is giving countenance to the alteration of the conduct of the other, whereby he will be injured if the representation is not true. And Titus v. Morse, 40 Maine, 348, is to the same effect.
We do not wish to be understood as holding that in no case can a divsion line between the adjoining owners of land be established by an oral agreement. There are numerous decisions in other states to the effect that when the boundary line between adjacent lands is in dispute, or uncertain, the owners
In the case now before us, it appears that the defendant bought of the plaintiff a hundred acre lot of land numbered 13. It has been run out to him by a surveyor appointed by the court; and it is of full size and a fraction over. The proof is that he has cut largely upon the adjoining lot numbered 14. He justifies the cutting upon the ground that while negotiating for lot 13, the plaintiff pointed out to him clumps of trees on lot 14. This the plaintiff denies. Here we have an issue of fact, with the burden of the proof upon the defendant. He swears one way and the plaintiff swears the other way. It is oath against oath, and no corroboration of either party. Can an estoppel be allowed to rest on proof so unsatisfactory? We think not. We think to so hold would encourage fraud and perjury, and place one’s title to real estate upon a very slippery foundation. And besides, as we have already seen, the fact itself, if proved, would not be sufficient on which to base an estoppel, without proof of the further fact that the plaintiff knew, at the time he pointed out the clumps of trees, that they were
The plaintiff’s exceptions were improperly filed, and may be regarded as dismissed without further consideration.
Motion sustained, and a new trial granted.