In the construction or interpretation of written instruments, the intention of the parties as therein expressed is *279tbe great object of search. If while standing in the shoes of the parties when a deed was executed and reading it in the light of the then existing facts and circumstances, snch as the nature, condition, occupation, etc., etc. of the thing granted, the intention is not apparent, then resort may be had to the rules of construction. Many of these rules are intended to aid in ascertaining the intention of the parties by pointing out and giving effect to those things about which the law presumes the parties are least liable to make mistakes. Treat v. Strickland, 23 Maine, 234, 244. Some are arbitrary, resorted to “for want of a better reason,” and to be invoked therefore if at all only when all other means fail. If, however, the intention is apparent it must govern. Abbott v. Abbott, 51 Maine, 575, 581.
One of the general rules to be observed, and to which it is said there is no exception, is, “taking the whole instrument together, what does it mean?” Thomas, J., in Ide v. Pearce, 9 Gray, 350, 354.
The case discloses the following facts: The Worromontogus stream flowing westerly is a tributary of the Kennebec river flowing southerly. About twenty rods above the confluence, the stream leaving the upland reaches a parcel of flat land elliptical in form, three to four acres in extent, and known as the Worromontogus cove. At the upper end of the cove, the stream divides, one channel flowing along the northern and the other the southern border to the lower end where they unite, flow under a bridge (constituting a part of the highway along the bank of the river,) and thence into the river. The cove is flowed by the tide backing up from the river and by freshets. At other times the land between the channels is bare, a small portion of it being more or less covered with small bushes. Logs can be so easily floated in there from the river, that the cove has been used for many years as a safe and convenient place for securing and booming them for rafting as well as for holding them to supply the mills at the head of the cove ever since their erection.
In the fall of 1865, Joseph Bradstreet, owning the land all about the cove, agreed to convey certain land on the south side to the plaintiff. In November following, the parties procured a *280surveyor “to run out the land” who in their presence surveyed the premises and subsequently made a plan thereof which is referred to in the deed and was put into the case. By the survey and plan the north line i. e., the line next to the stream or cove, commences, where the third call in the plaintiff’s deed begins, to wit: at a cedar post on the bank of the stream at the south-west corner of the Neal lot, between which and the stream is a rod of upland ; and thence by seven specific courses and distances through as many monuments to the highway, thus running along “on the borders of high water, to where the water sometimes flows in a freshet.”
In the first clause of the deed, the third call commences at the same cedar post and describes the north line as “thence westerly by said stream to the above named road.” A bank, margin or side of a stream may be monuments limiting the land thereto when the language clearly shows such to be the intention of the grantor. Bradford v. Cressey, 45 Maine, 9, and cases there cited. It is familiar law, however, that when land is described as bounded by a monument standing on the bank of a stream where, as in this case, the tide ebbs and flows, and thence by the stream, etc., the. effect is to convey the grantor’s title to the land and flats to low water mark; and the construction may be the same if the monument do not stand exactly on the bank but a short distance back from it—the monument then 'being referred to only as giving the direction of the line to the stream and not as restricting the boundary on the stream. Pike v. Munroe, 36 Maine, 309. This clause however, is not the whole description. The plan is a part of the deed and to have the same effect as if its details of courses, distances and monuments were incorporated into the deed. Lincoln v. Wilder, 29 Maine, 169.
. The instruction to the jury was, that the first description in the deed should prevail, and that the plaintiff’s land extended to low water mark. We think this was erroneous. We are aware of the old maxims, that the first deed and the last will shall operate, Shep. Touch. 88; and that of two contradictory clauses in a deed, the former shall stand. 2 Cru. Dig. (Greenl ed.) 591. “These, however, are technical rules of construction, adopted as declared by Lord Mansfield, ‘for want of a better reason,’ and are *281not entitled to much consideration, and should never be resorted to unless difficulties are presented which cannot be resolved by more satisfactory rules. In modern times, they -have given way to the more sensible rule, which is in all cases to give effect to the intention of the parties if practicable; when no principle of law is thereby violated. This intention is to be ascertained by taking into consideration all the provisions of the deed, as well as the situation of the parties.” Pike v. Munroe, 36 Maine, 309, 315. To the same purport are 2 Cru. Dig. (Greenl. ed.) 468, note 1, and 23 Am. Jur. 277.
If there be conflicting descriptions in a deed, which cannot be reconciled, that construction should be adopted which best comports with the intent of the parties, and the circumstances of the case. Loving v. Norton, 8 Maine, 61. Bell v. Sawyer, 32 N. H. 72.
Placing ourselves in the situation of the parties to the deed,i-eading the whole instrument and seeking for their intent by the light of the subject matter, and the then existing circumstances, we can entertain no doubt that the plaintiff’s title does not extend to low "water mark, but is restricted to the north line indicated by the plan. Lincoln v. Wilder, 29 Maine, 169.
The plaintiff contends that the intention of the parties to bound the land at low water mark, is settled “by the provision in the deed that the grantor reserves the right to flow these very flats by a dam below them on the stream, for if they were not conveyed, there was no need of such a right.” The answer is: The reservation does not apply to “flats,” for the tide flowed them twice a day ; but to the “Great Worromontogus cove,” so called, and flowing the cove might flow the land above the line indicated on the plan, and hence the reservation. Exceptions sustained.
WaltoN, Baebows and Petebs, JJ., concurred. Libbéy, J., having been of counsel, did not sit.