In the year 1857 the defendant, being-then the owner of lot two on block three of a plat made by said company in addition to the city of Marquette, conveyed the same to William J. Gordon and Peter White, “reserving therefrom all that part of said lot above described which is now used and occupied by said Cleveland Iron -Mining Company for railroad or railway purposes, to be used and occupied by the said Cleveland Iron Mining Company, its successors and assigns, so long as needed or desired by them for the right of way for *32said railroad or railway purposes.” Gordon subsequently conveyed his interest in the premises to White, and White conveyed to the plaintiff. At the time defendant conveyed to Gordon and White, and ever since, defendant has occupied some portion of said lot with its railway track, but the evidence in this record tends to show that the occupation has not been confined within exactly the same limits as when the deed was given.
The plaintiff now brings ejectment for that portion of the lot which the defendant occupies. He claims, first, that what is called a reservation in the deed, but which is in fact an exception, is void on the face of the deed for ambiguity; and second, if not void, the party claiming the benefit of it must take the burden of proving what was intended by it, and that he is entitled to hold nothing which he does not clearly show was thereby excluded from the conveyance.
I. There is no ground for saying that there is any ambiguity on the face of the deed. The exception from the conveyance was of that portion of a certain lot which was then occupied for certain purposes. It is true the deed did not describe the parcel itself by metes and bounds, or refer to records, or to trees or stakes; but it gave a means of identification which presumptively was not only ample, but was as definite and certain as any that could well be suggested. A grant must always be applied to its subject by regarding it from the standpoint of the parties, and in the light of the knowledge they had at the time; Ives v. Kimball, 1 Mich., 308; Cooper v. Bigly, 13 Mich., 463; Anderson v. Baughman, 7 Mich., 69; Willey v. Snyder, 34 Mich., 60, and here the parties designated that which was intended by particulars that were unmistakable: a present holding by a party named, for a purpose specified. If it had turned out that in fact there was at the time no such occupation, a difficulty might then have been presented of which the deed gave no indication; but on the face of the deed itself the exception was perfectly good and presumptively effectual.
*33II. It • being shown that the defendant did actually oecupy a part of the lot for railway purposes at the date of the deed, if the plaintiff claims that more is now occupied, and seeks to recover it, he must take upon himself the burden of showing it. In other words, he must make out his case. There is no presumption that defendant is guilty of a violation of law, or is an intruder upon anybody’s rights. Whoever asserts that he is trespassed upon must show it. We cannot enter upon a discussion of a principle so elementary.
There was nothing in the rulings of the court below for the plaintiff to complain of, and the judgment must be affirmed with costs.
The other Justices concurred.