OPINION OP THE COURT BY
PERRY, J.This is ah action wherein the plaintiff claims $1,000 damages for the loss of the use of a certain road. The allegations of the declaration are, in brief, that the plaintiff was on the 29th day of September, 1890, ever since has been and still is the owner and in possession of a certain lot in Honolulu; that said lot “abutted on a certain road (herein called ‘rear road’) 18 feet wide and running from the rear of said lot to Kamahola Road;” that ever' since the date named “said rear road has been appurtenant to said lot,” and plaintiff “has had and still has the right to nse the same as a road for passage on foot and with vehicles from said lot to Namahela Road” and “has been accustomed to- use the same as such until the commission of the. acts hereinafter complained of,” that on or about August 1, 1900; defendants obstructed said road by erecting a building across the same and have ever since so obstructed it; and “that said obstruction is a damage to plaintiff only.”
At tbe trial, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the jury, in obedience to a direct instruction by the presiding judge, rendered a verdict for the defendant. The case comes to. this.court on seven exceptions, the sixth being to the instruction ordering the verdict and the seventh to the verdict. The remaining ex-*551eeptions were to rulings excluding certain evidence. It is clear, and conceded, that the sixth and seventh exceptions cannot be sustained unless error is found in the rulings the correctness of which is questioned upon the other exceptions.
After the plaintiff had introduced in evidence a deed to himself, dated September 29, 1890, and executed by one Ilaeo, of a certain lot of land situate on King Street, in this city, and being a part of the land described in R. P. 3229 to J. Moanauli, the witness Kaeo was asked, “Did you show Mr. Quadros any map of the lots?” and later, “The deed which you gave Mr. Quadros mentions a proposed road;-what was that road?” The defendant Drear was called as a witness by the plaintiff and at the latter’s request produced a deed to. himself from Kaeo., dated February 2, 1891, of certain lots also described as being: parts of Grant 3229 to J . Moanauli. The deed was put in evidence. The witness was then asked: “I believe your deed does not refer to any map.; did you buy your lots according to a map?” Another witness for the plaintiff, an attorney, after testifying, in effect, that he had drawn the deed to plaintiff, was asked, “This deed says here in the second course that the course runs N. 85° 4(F E., true, 90 feet along lot 3 and proposed road; do you know what these words ‘proposed road’ refer to?” and also, “Do von know whether or not any map was exhibited to. Manuel Quadros before he bought his lot?” Objections to these live questions were sustained and the evidence excluded. In this the plaintiff claims that there was error.
The land conveyed by Kaeo to plaintiff, and to which the road in question is alleged to have been appurtenant, is described in the deed as follows:
“All that piece or parcel of land situate on King Street in Honolulu, described as follows:
N. 1 50 E. ‘True’ 35.5 feet along King Street;
N. 85 40 E. “ 92 “ “ Lot 3 and proposed road;
S. 8 35 E. “ 35.5 “ “ Lot 5;
S. 85 40 W. “ 98.5 “ “ Lot 1, to the' point of beginning. Area 3340 square feet, being a portion of premises *552described in Royal Patent No. 3229 to- J. Moananli and conveyed to me by foreclosure deed of Bishop and Company this day and confirmed by deed of Mrs. Resina IL Manaku to me this day recorded in Liber 125, page 387, and-being a portion of the premises set apart to me by partition deed made by the heirs of J. Moanauli dated October 20th, 1887, recorded in Liber 103, page 441 et seq.”
It is clear from the record that the case-was presented by the plaintiff at the trial on the theory that the so-called “road” was a private right of way appurtenant to plaintiff’s lot and that he-, the plaintiff, acquired such right of way because he purchased the land described in his deed “according to” a map or plat of the Moananli tract made by the- grantor prior to the sale, which map or p-lat showed a road as leading from the rear of plaintiff’s land to Ramakela Road.
Por the purposes of this case it may be assumed to- be true, as contended for by the plaintiff, that, if one conveys lots by a map or plat, which represents .the lots as bounded upon such road or way, and the map or plat is referred to- in the- deed, a right of way over it- passes as part of the grant of each lot as an easement appurtenant thereto. See Jones on Easements, §231. It has been so held, that conclusion being reached by some courts on the theory of an implied grant or covenant, and by others on that of estoppel or dedication. However that may be, one difficulty with the plaintiff’s case is that his deed do-es not refer to any map or plat, nor is any map or plat attached to the deed hvhether with or without reference thereto. Perhaps, if a map were merely attached to the deed, without being referred to, the court might be authorized to regard it as a part of the description of the land conveyed and to make use- of it in construing other parts of the description. Bat that aid is wanting here. Further than that, even assuming, — what is at least doubtful— that, if the deed were entirely silent as to any proposed road or as to its location, evidence could be adduced t-o show oral representations by t he grantor as to the opening of a ro-ad or as to- its proposed location in the rear of the lot, or, under this deed, that such evidence would be admissible to- show such representations *553as to a road on the westerly side, the deed to plaintiff expressly shows that the “proposed road” runs from the westerly side of the land and not from its rear and that on the rear it is bounded by Lot 5. To admit parol evidence tending to show that it was the intention and understanding of the parties that the proposed road should run from the rear and not from the side, which is what plaintiff sought to prove at the trial, (the allegation in the declaration, too, was that the road ran “from tíre rear of said lot”) would be to admit parol evidence to vary and contradict the terms of the deed. For this purpose such evidence is not admissible. The deed is the final expression of the intent of the parties and cannot in this proceeding be varied by any parol evidence of representation made or any understanding had prior to its execution. Plaintiff’s counsel stated at the trial that he wished to show that there was a. mistake in the description. If the description in the deed, by reason of a mutual mistake, does not express the agreement of the parties, proceedings to reform the deed should have been first had in equity.
■Russell, Fleming & Robinson, for plaintiff. Robertson <& Wilder for defendant-.In argument in this court, counsel for the plaintiff seems to rely, in part at least, upon the theory that the road in question was a public road made such by dedication by parol. lYe think that this claim cannot now be set up. In addition to the fact that the evidence rejected was not offered for this purpose, the plaintiff’s claim, as stated in his declaration, is, as we understand it, for the obstruction of a private right of way and not of a public road. The road referred to is declared to run from plaintiff’s lot and to be appurtenant thereto, and the obstruction is declared to be a damage “to plaintiff only.” An obstruction of a public road would be a damage to others also of the public, although the damage to the public generally would, perhaps, be different from that suffered by the plaintiff. The language used in the declaration is inconsistent with the theory of the obstruction of a public road.
In our opinion the evidence in question was properly excluded. The exceptions are overruled.