Court Opinion

ID: 8046308
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 03:59:46.441538+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:37:30.502118
License: Public Domain

SAWYER, J.
By the vote of the proprietors, accepting the report of the committee, the plan constituting their report is made the record evidence of the allotment or assignment to the several original proprietors of their respective shares or estates in the common lands. It is immaterial in what form the allotment is made, whether by a plan on which may be delineated the boundaries of the several lots, with the names of the proprietors or proprietary rights to which they are assigned, or by a description in words of those boundaries, in connection with the names to which the lots so described may be assigned. In either case the allotment is by writing, and the plan becomes, in the former case, the record evidence of the assignment; as does the record description in the latter. Upon the familiar principle that when such record evidence exists it cannot be controlled by parol, the testimony of Asa Watson, so far as it had any tendency to show that the allotment was not what it appears to have been from the plan, was inadmissible. The evidence derived from the plan is that a lot was designated by boundaries so located as to include *352the locus in quo within them. The lot is designated on the plan as belonging to Watson to the extent of 66§ acres, on the westerly part, and to Joseph Hoit, to the extent of 33⅞ acres, on the easterly ; together making up the hundred acres which the committee so set off to each proprietary right under which a pitch, as it was termed, had been made ; that is, under which the proprietor had selected the general location of his claim, or share, by entry and occupation. That this lot was intended to be assigned to the right of Nathan Hoit would seem not to have been questioned at the trial. The fact that he had conveyed an undivided interest to each of the persons whose names are entered upon the plan in connection with the lot, and in the proportions corresponding with the number of acres specified on the plan; that is, two thirds of his right to Watson and one third to Hoit, clearly indicates this. We are to suppose also that it was made certain at the trial by the conceded fact that other localities indicated upon the plan, showed the location of this lot to be at the Red Hill Falls, where, as it appeared from the evidence, Nathan Hoit had made his pitch. The case finds that the plan represents the lot, as surveyed for his pitch, as lying in one body ; there being no line upon it to indicate that the portions of it marked as Watson’s and Hoit’s respectively, were separated by any intervening land which could be regarded as common land, and thus pass by the conveyance from the proprietors in 1815-
The plan is referred to as a part of the case. It is contended by the plaintiff that, from an inspection of it, this statement contained in the case appears not to be correct; that there do appear upon the plan faint traces of a line or lines, which may indicate that the 66f acres, assigned to Watson, and the 33⅛ acres, to Hoit, were in separate parcels, not lying contiguous to each other, and thus showing a tract between them, not assigned to the right of any proprietor; and it is claimed that the question should have been submitted to a jury, whether such lines did not originally appear upon the plan limiting the assignment of the one hundred acres, under the “ pitch” of Nathan Hoit, to the two separate parcels. The plan is somewhat defaced and muti*353lated, and much of the writing upon it nearly obliterated. There are slight appearances of an irregular line across the lot, such as might indicate the course of a stream or margin of a pond, and also a faint appearance of a straight line, extending a short distance into the lot, apparently the continuation of the dividing line of adjacent lots. This latter, however, runs between the name of J. Hoit, as written on the easterly part of the lot, and the figures 33⅛, indicating his number of acres; and cannot, therefore, be supposed to have been intended as the boundary of his parcel, but rather as an accidental extension of the dividing line of the adjacent lots beyond the point intended. Whatever appearances of this nature are to be seen upon the plan, it must be understood from the case that the trial proceeded upon the ground that the plan showed what is stated, viz : that the lot was surveyed out in one body, with no lines upon the plan to indicate two separate parcels, and that no question upon that point was raised before the jury. It cannot be understood, that if such question had been made at the trial the court would have declined to submit it to the jury; and if it was then waived by the plaintiff, the nonsuit should not be set aside for the purpose of enabling him now to raise it.
Upon the evidence shown by the case, the plaintiff failed to make out title to the locus in quo, and the

Nonsuit must stand.