This is a writ of entry to which the tenant has demurred. The demurrer was overruled and the declaration adjudged good, to which ruling the tenant has filed exceptions.
The demandant claims to recover “the possession of a certain lot or pra’cel of land with the buildings thereon, situated in said Bangor, on the easterly side of Ohio street, being the former homestead of Oarleton S. Bragg, and being part of the premises conveyed by said Oarleton S. Bragg to the Bangor Savings Bank, by deed dated July 14, 1869, and recorded in Penobscot registry of deeds, book 391, p. 32; and is the part first described in said deed, and being the same premises conveyed by said Bank to the said Bebecca N. Bragg by deed dated October 5, 1870, and recorded in book 412, page 443 of said registry, and the same conveyed to said White by said Rebecca N. Bragg, by deed dated June 5, 1872,” &c.
Eliminating the references to the registry of deeds, the description is sufficient. The town in which, and the street, and the side of the street on which the lot of land in controversy is situated, are clearly stated. It is further described as “the former homestead of said Oarleton S. Bragg,” of which “the demandant ought now to be in quiet possession,” but into which “the said White hath since unjustly entered, and holds the plaintiff out.”
The objection taken is, that the description is not sufficiently definite, that the officer could not find the premises, and that the declaration should be so clear, that the officer need not be obliged to consult the records. But if there was no reference to the records, we cannot say, that the description is so fatally defective that the officer could not deliver seizin. Riley v. Smith, 9 Allen, 370. The “former homestead of Oarleton S. Bragg,” with a description of the street, and the side of the street, gives as much description as is necessary. If the pleader had given monuments and distances, the officer must find the monuments at his peril, as here he must find “the former homestead of Bragg;” which the officer could find with as much readiness as he could stake and stones. No indefiniteness as to the former homestead appears ; for nothing discloses that Bragg had but one; and the court cannot, as the counsel for the tenant have done, presume without *160evidence ; that he had an indefinite number of former residences, thereby to render the writ defective for its indefiniteness.
“The property sued for may be described as a ‘tract of land containing so many acres,’ or ‘so many acres of land,’ or ‘a certain messuage,’ called by a particular name, by which it is known, or with the abuttals.” Stearns on Neal Actions, 151. Here, the homestead of Bragg is one part of-the description, to which more is added to prevent mistakes.
After all, the demurrer seems rather for, and on account of the officer, rather than of the tenant. But the tenant is not the protecting guardian of the officer. If the officer cannot find the land, it will be the misfortune of the demandant, not of the tenant. If he can find it, then the declaration is sufficient. Silloway v. Hale, 8 Allen, 61.
Whatever the description may be, however precise and definite, the officer must find the land to which it applies — the messuage, if it be one; the monuments of the lot; the homestead ,• and if he errs, he becomes a trespasser. But inquiry will enable him to solve the difficulty as readily in the present case, as in any other. The land is in possession of the tenant ; it is the former homestead of Bragg, situated on the east side of Ohio street, in Bangor. If the officer fails to find it, the tenant will receive no harm. We apprehend the fear is, that he may find it. Willey v. Nichols, 59 Maine, 253. The Proprietors of Kennebec Purchase v. Lowell, 2 Maine, 149.
The allegation of disseisin is sufficient. Oliver’s Precedents, 628. Exceptions overruled.
Judgment for the demandant.
DiokersoN, Barrows, .YirgiN, Peters and Libbey, JJ., concurred.