The right of the plaintiffs to the injunction which they ask depends upon their title to the lime-rock, locally situate on the land of the defendants, where they are now digging, and propose to continue digging lime-rock. If they establish their claim to the exclusive right to the rock, the defendants must be enjoined from further excavating, burning, or using the limestone there.
The right to the rock has never been conveyed to the corporation by deed executed by the owners of such lime-rock; but the plaintiffs claim, that the title to the premises in question vested in them by the act of incorporation, which declared what should be capital stock. The charter declares, that certain lime-rock shall constitute the capital stock, and that it shall be owned by the petitioners or corporators in the same proportion as they owned the rock at the time they petitioned. The question is, what was the extent of that lime-rock which was made capital stock, and as owners of which the petitioners asked to be incorporated. The plaintiffs say, that the corporate stock included all the lime-rock then upon either of the farms owned by the petitioners; that the intent was to include in such stock all the lime-rock, and the right to dig and take the lime-rock upon both farms which was held by the petitioners in common, and that it included the lime-rock at the defendant's present quarry.
The defendants say, that not only was no lime-rock upon the Christopher Dexter farm included, but that nothing was included and made corporate property by the act of incorporation, *Page 364 except the great ledge or hill of limestone; and that was wholly upon the Jonathan Dexter farm; that the petitioners prayed to be incorporated only as they were owners in common of so much lime-rock as was called and known by the name of the Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock; and that no other lime-rock was called or known by that name except the hill of lime-rock which did not extend into the Christopher Dexter farm, and the charter declares no other lime-rock to be corporate property.
Had the term "Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock," as used in the charter, acquired a settled definite meaning, well understood in the community as including certain lime-rock of definite extent, and excluding all other, we should be obliged to hold that such lime-rock only was covered by the charter, and we could not consider any general intent of the corporators to have included more, or to have included less. If the term so defined and settled had included the hill of lime-rock upon one farm only, the charter could have included no rock on the other farm.
In looking at the testimony submitted as to what was called or known by the name of Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock, in connection with the language of the petitioners in their application for a charter, the defendants fail to satisfy us that the term Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock was, in the contemplation of the parties, confined to the ledge on the Jonathan Dexter farm only, although the evidence shows, we think quite clearly, that that term was more generally applied to the great ledge or hill of lime-rock, and generally, to that ledge as the Dexter Ledge, yet that it was sometimes extended to the smaller, or Hacklestone Ledge.
It can hardly be claimed, if we regard the language of the petition and of the charter, that the parties to the act of incorporation intended to limit the charter to the great ledge. The language very clearly implies that they did not. The petitioners say, that they are the owners in certain proportions of certain lime-rock, comprising, in the whole, all the Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock; that they had experienced a difficulty in the business of working the quarries, and defining the just shares of each to the rock taken therefrom. They speak of quarries, in the plural, and not of one quarry only. There was at the *Page 365 great hill or ledge but one quarry. There was another, and but one other, at the smaller, or Hacklestone Ledge. Both the quarries had been at some time worked in common. These quarries are spoken of in connection with the Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock, and as parts of the Dexter Ledge which were owned in common. They must have understood that the rock at both pits was included in the Dexter Ledge, the difficulties in the working of which they desired to obviate by this legislative act.
The plaintiffs claim even more than the two quarries, and that the act of incorporation included all the lime-rock of the same formation as the rock at the quarries, to whatever point it might be continued, and that the term, Dexter Ledge, included all such rock, wherever it might be.
Our inquiry should naturally be, what was called and known as the Dexter Ledge of Lime-Rock? How extensive was the rock, called and known by that name? The plaintiffs have offered no evidence upon this point, except in rebuttal of that offered by the defendants to show that it was confined to the great hill of limestone. That which they did produce was merely to prove that no locality was known by that name; but it failed to prove that that term was ever used in the indefinite sense here claimed, as including all the rock of the same formation with that at the quarry opened. There is no witness who says this, or that the term was ever applied in fact to more than the two quarries thus open, the one on the Jonathan Dexter farm, the other on the Christopher Dexter farm, both of which had been worked by the Dexters, and owned in common by them. No witness says that it was ever applied to the Briggs Ledge, on the west part of the Jonathan Dexter farm. To determine, however, the extent of the plaintiffs' right to lime-rock on the Christopher Dexter farm, and whether it extended to the quarry opened by the defendants, it became necessary to determine the extent of the lime-rock owned by the parties to the act of incorporation, as tenants in common. The plaintiffs say that this is to be ascertained by the mutual deeds executed by Jonathan and Christopher Dexter in 1804; and the question arises, what interest passed to the respective *Page 366 parties upon the proper construction of these deeds. These deeds should be construed in the light of all the circumstances surrounding the transaction in order fully to understand the application of the language used, and determine the sense in which it was used. From the exhibits and proofs in the cause, it appears that one John Dexter, in 1761, was the owner of both these farms. He had, in 1753, leased for the term of ninety-nine years a portion of the great ledge or hill of lime-rock to certain parties, ten rods in breadth extending through the hill, and had in this lease reserved the right to dig lime-rock sufficient for the use of one kiln, then proposed to be built upon his own land. He covenanted not to dispose of any other lime-rock which might be obtained from the farm, to the injury of the lessees who had the right to dig and burn lime during the lease. John Dexter, in 1761, divided this farm into two parts, giving to Jonathan, his son, one of the parties to the deed of 1804, the westerly part, and at the same time granting the free liberty to dig limestone for burning lime on the other, or easterly part. On the same day he conveyed to William Dexter, another son, the easterly part, with like free liberty to dig lime-rock upon the farm given to Jonathan. The right and title of William Dexter seems to have passed by several mesne conveyances to Christopher Dexter, the other party to the deeds of 1804. In 1804, when these deeds were executed, there was a hill situated upon the westerly, or Jonathan Dexter farm, a little southerly of the dwelling-house, descending easterly and coming to the level before reaching the westerly line of the Christopher Dexter farm, and situate wholly on the Jonathan Dexter farm. This hill was composed of lime-rock, and was, according to the testimony of the witnesses, from thirty to forty or fifty feet above the general level of the land, and had been excavated extensively, some parts of it below the surface, and there was a drift-way leading from the place where the hill had been excavated, easterly, to certain lime-kilns upon the Christopher Dexter farm. To the eastward of the dwelling-house of Jonathan Dexter, and upon the Christopher Dexter farm, and north of the drift-way and coming up to the side of it, was an open quarry of lime-rock. This *Page 367 had been excavated to a considerable depth below the surface; and though the rock at the way rose to the surface, there was no elevation here of the land or of the rock. There was also upon the westerly part of the Jonathan Dexter farm another quarry of lime-rock, called the Briggs Ledge, which does not appear to have been worked at any time, by Christopher Dexter, or by his predecessors.
The plaintiffs claim, that by these mutual deeds between Jonathan and Christopher Dexter, Christopher Dexter conveyed to the said Jonathan one half of all the lime-rock upon his the said Christopher's farm which was what is termed by geologists "rock in place," as distinguished from boulders or detached rock removed from the place of its original formation; that by the term, Great Hill or Great Ledge of lime-rock, situate on the homestead farm of the grantee a little southerly of the grantee's dwelling-house, all the connected rock of that formation of limestone passed, wherever it might extend, whether upon the grantee's farm, or upon land of the grantor.
The claim of the plaintiffs is founded upon the assumed sense in which the term, Great Ledge, was used in these deeds. They claim that it was used in the sense, and with the definition, oflayer, or stratum of limestone, and therefore included all of the layer or stratum which is continuous and unbroken, of which the hill is part; and as this formation extends into the Christopher Dexter farm, and under the meadow where the defendants are now working, the rock there passed also.
We may assume for this purpose, that the same formation extends from the great hill to the pit or quarry of the defendants, and we think the evidence shows that the rock in both places is of the same formation. But it does not aid the plaintiffs in the construction of the deed. If we substitute the definition of the word ledge, as claimed by them, for the term itself, we still meet with the same difficulties. We then have the one half of a great layer or stratum, or hill of limestone, upon the grantee's farm, a little southerly of his dwelling-house. Some significance must be given to the term "hill of limestone;" for it is evidently used as synonymous with ledge, and as descriptive of the subject. If the parties intended to include *Page 368 the whole formation, and to extend beyond the hill easterly and indefinitely, the word, hill, ceases to have any meaning, and must be rejected; and so we must also reject that part of the description which describes it as situate southerly of the dwelling-house; for this would give it a location easterly as well as southerly from the house, and include the smaller ledge which is described to be situated easterly; and we should be driven one step farther, that is, to reject that part which describes the lime-rock conveyed as being upon the grantee's farm. The description then would be simply, the one half of a great stratum or layer of lime-rock, without any locality, — a description so indefinite that parol proof alone could ascertain what was granted, or intended to be.
It is said, indeed, that the parties understood at the time that the formation at the great ledge extended into the Christopher Dexter farm and perhaps entirely across it, and included the smaller or Hacklestone Ledge also, and therefore it must be presumed that the parties intended to convey to each other all their property in the entire formation. They might well enough have presumed that the lime-rock at the great hill extended to the smaller or Hacklestone Ledge, for the distance between them was very small, and that they were both parts of the original formation, though the parties were probably little versed in geology, and it is at least doubtful if they were familiar with the term "rock in place," as used by geologists. There was less indication of lime-rock at the meadow where the defendants now work, or that the formation extended there, since no pit had been opened; and we cannot determine whether they did, or did not, have the opinion imputed to them as to the actual extent of this lime formation. But suppose they had. This does not relieve the difficulty, for the question immediately forces itself upon us, why should they, if they intended to convey the whole, use such description as is appropriate to a part only? Why use the term "hill" at all or describe it as upon one farm only, when it was in fact upon both, or as southerly of the dwelling-house, when it extends far to the east, and even in that view most probably included the position of the dwelling-house itself? But the descriptive part *Page 369 of the deed certainly leaves us to imply that the deeds were not made upon any such opinion. There were two subjects of grant in these deeds. The great ledge is treated as one, and the ledge situated easterly of the dwelling-house is treated as another, distinct subject. This last is situate (so the deeds say) north of a drift-way leading to the first, viz., the great ledge or hill of lime-rock; indicating that the great ledge was intended to be described, as local and including only lime-rock on the Jonathan Dexter farm, and not the lesser ledge, along the southerly side of which the drift-way led. And, upon the whole, we are driven to one of two conclusions, either of which is fatal to the plaintiffs' view; either, that they considered at the time the lime-rock at the great ledge, and that at the smaller ledge, easterly of the dwelling-house, as different formations, or else that they intended to describe and convey different and distinct portions of one entire formation; and it is quite immaterial which view be taken. This is the more apparent from the description given of the several subjects of grant. It is, one half of the ledge of lime-rock lying easterly of the grantee's dwelling-house, and northerly of the drift-way leading to the great ledge. By no rule of construction can this grant be carried south of the drift-way. It would be a perversion of terms to do so. The drift-way is to be the southern boundary of this second parcel of lime-rock, regardless of the extent of the formation of which it might be part.
The defendants on their part say, that the term ledge, as here used, includes the idea of prominence or projection, either upwards, when it is sometimes called a ridge, or projecting horizontally, — jutting out from, — and therefore the term is here used in the sense of hill or elevation of lime-rock; and so every separate hill, or elevation of lime-rock, may be termed a ledge, within the meaning of that term as here used by the parties. The description of the first subject of the grant evidently does include this idea of a prominence of rock; but in the description of the second subject the idea of elevation, or ridge of rock, is as evidently excluded. This locality had no prominence or elevation. It was on the general level of the land, and though the lime-rock originally came to the surface, and still did at the *Page 370 drift-way, it had long before been excavated far below the surface elsewhere. The term here did not mean hill, ridge, or elevation of rock, but simply a body of lime-rock, lying easterly of the house and north of the drift-way, — all the rock there. It is indefinite in extent, except that it does not extend west of the house or south of the way. It is difficult to give this term, ledge of lime-rock, as used in reference to both subjects of the grant, any other meaning than, a body of connected lime-rock, whether hill or valley or upon the general level with the land, and reconcile it with the language here used by the parties. The terms, great ledge or hill of lime-rock, must be construed to be, all that body of connected lime-rock locally situate southerly of the dwelling-house of Jonathan Dexter and upon his farm, and not extending beyond it easterly. But at the same time, the term, ledge, applied to the other subject of grant, since there are no words limiting it except the drift-way on the south, may be used in the larger sense, as including all the body of connected lime-rock upon the grantor's land which lies north of said drift-way.
This construction would not include the meadow south of the drift-way, and easterly of the Jonathan Dexter farm, where the defendants are now excavating rock. It has been suggested that by this construction no effect is given to the reservation contained in the deed, viz.: "always excepting and reserving to myself, my heirs and assigns, all the scattering rock which is, or may be found upon my farm;" and the plaintiffs say, that this reservation shows that the grantor did not design to retain to himself any of the rock in place, so called, but detached rock only, what geologists term boulders, rock removed from the original formation and separated from the mass of connected rock. It may be said in regard to this, what could not have escaped the notice of counsel, that in the extended sense which he would give to the term in the deed, as conveying all the rock in place upon the grantor's farm, the loose rock or boulders can in no proper sense be included. It is no exception to anything which could have passed by the general description in the deed; boulders could not with any propriety be deemed, in any sense, rock in place. Looking at it in this light, the exception *Page 371 is simply inoperative, and that equally, whether the rock in place described in the deed be upon the grantee's farm only, or be extended into the land of the grantor. But it may be said also, what is apparent from this deed, that Christopher Dexter did clearly grant a connected body of lime-rock locally situate upon his own farm by the description, "ledge of lime-rock situate easterly of the dwelling-house and north of the drift-way." If the terms of the reservation are to be considered as excepting anything which could otherwise pass and as excepting part of the rock described, and "detached rock" is an exception from the grant of the ledge, full operation is given to the reservation in application to the rock granted north of the drift-way. It is said by the plaintiffs, in the argument, that the intent of these deeds was to make the parties equal as to their right to lime-rock on both farms. These deeds were made between father and son, and it would seem in anticipation of a conveyance by the father to another son, to whom he did convey his interest in 1809. At the time of the execution of the deeds, Christopher Dexter, the son, was the owner of the greater portion of the farm conveyed to William Dexter in 1761. It may be that he owned the whole. This is not made certain by the conveyances. The right granted to William Dexter to dig lime-rock from the western farm, if it vested in Nathan and Samuel, the sons, by the devise of the farm, had by the deed of Nathan, in 1783, to Jonathan, become extinguished. Jonathan Dexter by the same conveyance acquired not a mere right to dig lime-rock, but a property in one half the lime-rock on the eastern farm, and in consequence thereof the mere right to excavate and take lime-rock from that farm, granted in 1761, became extinguished. The purpose of the deeds of 1804, as understood, and as the plaintiffs urge, was to define the rights of the parties, and to make their interest in the lime-rock equal; and it is apparent from the deeds themselves, that the equality was to be accomplished by vesting in the parties the property in the rock itself, and to make them tenants in common of all the rock in which they were to have an interest. To do this, some rights were to be created or granted anew, some to be released. That common interest in the rock on the western farm, designed *Page 372 to be vested in Christopher Dexter, was to be newly granted by the deeds, and the deed of Jonathan does convey one half of the great ledge of lime-rock on that farm, he reserving, and Christopher agreeing that he shall retain, all the scattering rock then apparent or to be thereafter found on that farm; and since no rock is included in the description except the great hill of lime-rock, this reservation is, in effect, of all other lime-rock on that farm. Without the reservation the effect would be the same. Christopher Dexter's deed purports to convey to Jonathan, one half of the ledge of lime-rock lying north of the drift-way on his farm. It is at least doubtful if this deed conveys to Jonathan any greater right to lime-rock on the easterly farm than he before had. The deed to Nathan Dexter made to him in 1783, purports to vest in him one half of all the lime-rock on that farm. By the deed of 1804, the grant, instead of being a grant of one half of all the lime-rock, is limited to one half of the ledge. By these mutual deeds Christopher Dexter reserves to himself, and Jonathan agrees that he shall retain to himself all the scattering rock which then was, or which might thereafter be found upon his farm, — in effect all other lime-rock upon that farm, except what was described and purported to be conveyed.
It is claimed, further, that the acts and declarations of Christopher C. Dexter, about the time of procuring the charter and in endeavoring to effect a sale of shares in the corporation, estop, not only Dexter himself but all the defendants, to deny that the lime-rock incorporated extended to the place where they are now excavating. These representations, as charged, consist in representing that the rock of the corporation extended under the meadow and under the whole farm of which he was part owner. If the other parties to this act of incorporation have been by representations of the defendants misled to their injury, and upon the faith of such representations have been induced to vest their money or their property in the stock of this company, and must now suffer loss unless such representations are held to be true, the general rule of law would require that the defendants should be estopped to deny that they were true.
The objection in his case is, first, that the representations *Page 373 were not made by all the defendants or by all of the owners of the rock claimed, but by one tenant in common only, and the remedy asked cannot be given without at the same time doing an injury to the other tenant in common, who is not responsible for the representations made, it would be in effect compelling A. to make good B.'s default. There is another objection, that while Christopher Dexter, one of the defendants, was making the representations here charged, other members of the corporation, and who became such by virtue of their ownership of lime-rock on the western farm, were making representations of precisely an opposite character, that no lime-rock upon the farm was designed to be made corporate property except the ledges then worked, and that it was not intended to include other lime-rock. There is a third objection: that whatever the representations were which were made by C.C. Dexter, it does not appear that the corporation, or any member of the corporation, was misled by them, or ever acted upon them, either in applying for the charter, or in the purchase of stock in the corporation.
The plaintiffs, having failed to establish their right to the lime-rock which the defendants are excavating, this bill, which prays that the defendants be enjoined from further excavating, must be dismissed with costs. *Page 374