Den ex dem. Cubberly v. Cubberly
Den ex dem. Cubberly v. Cubberly
Opinion of the Court
Upon tlio trial of this cause, certain evidence, without which the plaintiff could not show title to the premises he claimed having been overruled, a non-suit was ordered. lie now seeks a new trial because, as he alleges, the evidence offered was competent and should have been received.
Both parties claimed the premises in question under the will of William T. Oubberly, deceased, the husband of the one and the father of the other. The dispute grew out of the proper location of a lot of land devised to the defendant.
The beginning corner was the first object of research. It was described as “in Joseph Wall’s line at the corner between him and B. Chambers.” There were two corners not far from each other, answering .this description. On this head there was little dispute as the defendant said the plaintiff might begin at either. But the plaintiff was permitted to prove, and did prove by the scrivener who drew tlio will, at which corner the testator intended to commence. He was farther permitted to prove which of the two directions following the courses round the farm the testator intended to run; but in this particular no evidence was introduced.
The next inquiry was whither the description wont, starting *froin tlio beginning corner as already ascertained. The will reads thus : “ A lot of land beginning in Joseph Wall's lino, at the corner between him and B. Chambers, thence as the line runs till it comes to the middle of the road leading from Vauderveer’s tavern to Esq. James’, thence down said road to Joseph Wall’s land, all the land to the oast of said road that I own in said tract to Joseph Wall’s.”
The testator owned a large tract of land of about eight hundred acres lying together. The road above mentioned, from Vanderveer to James, passed through it. At the east end of the road, where it left the testator, was land of Joseph Wall, and at the west end was land of Joseph Tin
Is there then such an ambiguity ? Are the words of the will clear and explicit, and does the difficulty grow out of the proof of extraneous facts ? Does the ambiguity “ lie hidden in the person, or thing, or subject, whereof the will speaks '?” I think those questions must be answered in the negative. There is simply a question of construction, to ascertain the meaning of the testator in the language he has employed. All which should be done from the will itself, ex viscerilus testamenti; as well from the particular clause, or devise, as from every other part of the will whence any light can be drawn. As soon as the construction of the will is settled, all difficulty in locating tho premises is ended. The moaning of the words, “ the line,” is a matter of construction. So, oí the word “as.” So whether the words “ as the line runs ” requires an adherence to a line, or admits a departure, and to run where there is not, and has not been, a line. If, then, the parol evidence would contradict or vary the just construction of the will, as drawn from its * terms, it is manifestly inadmissible, as tending
It remains to inquire whether this construction of the will in the mode adopted for the location of the devise, is consistent with other parts of the description and other clauses' of the will. After arriving at the middle of the road, the description proceeds down said road to Joseph Wall’s land. The most natural construction of these words is, that the boundary from the place where it strikes the road, runs on, or along the road, until it reaches Wall’s land. And according to the location of the defendant it does so, but by the plaintiff’s location it must run three courses or lines from the road along lands of Joseph Tindall before it touches the land of Joseph Wall. The remaining clause of the description is, “ all the land to the east of the said road that I own in said tract to Joseph'Wall’s.” The premises in dispute are as fairly said to be to the east of the road as the part admitted to be contained in the devise. The tract there mentioned is construed by the plaintiff to mean the one hundred and twenty-five acres parted from the rest of the testator’s land by the road, and as the devise to the defendant is of .a lot, it is said, he must have thereby meant a part of it only, and not the whole as is contained in the defendant’s construction. But by the term tract is most probably meant the whole lands of the testator lying in one tract, or body, or the term may be used in the same signification with the word lot, as if it had been all the land to the east of the road that I own in said lot. .In the devise to David Oubberly, where the testator did not intend to follow an actual line, but to form a new one running in the same course with another line, he uses the expression, “ thence running the same course of James Oubberly’s line until it strikes Daniel Hutchinson’s line,” and does not say, running as James Oubberly’s line runs. So in the devise to Elijah, “ thence the same course as the road till it strikes the lane,” and not “ thence as the road runs ” until it strikes the lane.
Upon the whole, I am of opinion that the construction and mode of location, adopted by the judge, is conformable to the intention of the testator, and the just import of the language he has employed, and that the parol evidence was rightly rejected.
Ford, J. Elizabeth Cubberly, the devisee of part of her late husband’s real estate, is alleged to have taken more of his lands into possession, than the terms of the devise to her, will comprehend. The language of the will is as follows: “Beginning in Joseph Wall’s line at the corner between him and E. Chambers; thence as the line runs till it comes to the middle of the road leading from Vanderveer’s tavern to Esq. James’; thence down said road to Joseph Wall’s land; ail the land to the east of said road, that I own in said tract, to Joseph Wall’s.
The dispute first occurring in this case, touches the beginning corner mentioned by the testator, which though described with apparent certainty in the will, is rendered ambiguous by means of an extrinsic fact, which is produced and brought to light by parol evidence, that there are two corners in Joseph Wall’s line, between him and E. Chambers, ansAvering so exactly to the description in the will, that no construction upon the instrument itself can shew Avhich one of the two the testator intended. The law denominates this a latent or hidden ambiguity, not apparent upon reading the Avords; but being disclosed and br’ouglit
*Another part of the foregoing clause gives rise to a further dispute. The testator says, “ thence’ as the line runs till it comes to the middle of the road;” and the dispute is about what line he intended. The plaintiff insists that Wall’s line, just before mentioned by him, is the one he intended. But that line does not extend to the road mentioned ;. it stops eighteen chains short of it, and then turns off in another direction; therefore, the devisee insists that by “ the line,” was meant the line of the testator’s farm till it comes to the road. In order to settle this dispute, the plaintiff offered to prove again, by the scrivener, that the testator specified Wall’s line from the corner to the road; but the judge perceived no latent ambiguity to authorize parol evidence of what the testator said, and, therefore, he rejected it entirely. In doing so, he was certainly right. A latent ambiguity arises when two things or persons, both answering exactly to the thing or person described in the will, such as the two corners in Wall’s line, between him and Chambers, happen to exist; and then parol evidence of what the testator said may be lawfully adduced to show which of the two lie intended; but it cannot, in any case, be allowed to show that he meant a thing different from that described in the will; for this would be to vary the will itself. Now the line of Wall and Chambers does not run till it comes to the road ; nor agree to the description in the will. There being but one line that runs till it comes to the road there is no ambiguity at all in the case. Parol evi
But the will does not call, it is said, for a line running to the road ; the words being “ thence as the line runs and an extension of it in that course to the road, will be as it runs, the word (as) meaning likeness, like as or in like manner as it runs. This construction would be a plausible one, if it did not omit some essential words. The omitted words are “ till it comes.” The word it means line. There is no other antecedent. The grammatical, and only possible, sense is this, thence as the line runs till it (the line) comes to the road. It speaks most evidently of a line, and tells as evidently where it comes to. If it is not the line, what is it that comes ? To keep the course of that line *till the extension of it comes to the road, is neither the language nor the meaning of tho will.
But furthermore, by following an extension of Wall’s line, until the surveyor comes to the road, if he then run along it to Wall's land as the will directs, it will give the disputed premises to the widow; and there is no way to avoid this evident result, but to let him run in an opposite direction along tho road, until he comes to Tindall’s land, in defiance of the testator’s directions.
Moreover, after giving the particular bounds of a tract for the widow, the testator gives a general description of it in these words — “ all tho land to the east of said road, that 1 own in said tract, to Joseph Wall’s ” whereby he fixes her eastern boundary on Joseph Wall’s land. Yet the plaintiff proposes to stop the line of her tract nearly thirty chains before it reaches to Wall’s land, though the will declares that her eastern boundary. These reasons make it abundantly evident, that neither Wall’s line nor an extension of it in the samo coarse could have been intended by the testator. On the other hand, there is but one line answering the description in the will, and that is the line of the farm, of
Drake, J., concurred.
Rule to shew cause for a new trial discharged.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Den on the demise of Elijah Cubberly v. Elizabeth Cubberly
- Status
- Published