PRESENT: All the Justices
STATE OF MAINE
v. Record No. 080987 OPINION BY
JUSTICE BARBARA MILANO KEENAN
February 27, 2009
RICHARD L. ADAMS, JR.
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY
R. Terrence Ney, Judge
This appeal concerns an action to quiet title to a copy of
the Declaration of Independence (the Declaration) that was
printed in July 1776. We consider whether the circuit court
erred in holding that a Virginia resident who purchased this
document had superior title than that claimed by the State of
Maine, which contended that the document was a public record
owned by the Town of Wiscasset, Maine.
In July 1776, after the Second Continental Congress
approved the Declaration of Independence, each of the colonial
delegations was charged with informing its residents about the
colonies’ decision to separate from England. The Massachusetts
Executive Council (the Executive Council), an entity that shared
governing responsibility with the Massachusetts legislature,
issued an order directing that copies of the Declaration be
printed and delivered to the ministers of all churches in
Massachusetts so that the document could be read to the
ministers’ congregations. 1
The Executive Council commissioned E. Russell, a private
printer in Salem, Massachusetts, to print these copies of the
Declaration. Such copies of documents intended for widespread
distribution were commonly referred to as “broadsides.”
The broadsides that Russell printed contained the
Declaration’s text and the Executive Council’s order directing
distribution and promulgation of that document. The broadsides
also included the Executive Council’s additional order requiring
that the ministers, after reading aloud the Declaration, deliver
the broadsides to the town clerks. The order directed the town
clerks to record the Declaration’s text in their respective town
record books “to remain as a perpetual Memorial thereof.”
Neither the Executive Council’s order nor any other law directed
the town clerks regarding the proper disposition of the
broadsides after their contents were transcribed in the town
record books.
The broadside at issue in this case (the print) bears a
handwritten notation on its reverse side stating that the print
was delivered to the Reverend Thomas Moore in the Town of
Pownalborough and read to his congregation. An additional
1
In 1776, Massachusetts encompassed an area of land that
today includes both Massachusetts and Maine.
2
notation indicates that the Reverend Moore later delivered the
print to the Reverend John Murray, pastor of a church in Booth
Bay, Massachusetts, about 11 miles from Pownalborough.
Also appearing in handwritten text on the reverse side of
the print is the following notation:
To [Pownalborough] Town Clerk according to the with in
[sic] Authority having read the within Proclamation. I
return it to you to be Recorded as ye law directs. Thos.
Moore. Pownalborough October 19th, 1776.
On November 10, 1776, Edmund Bridge, the town clerk of
Pownalborough, transcribed the text of the Declaration into the
official town book in accordance with the Executive Council’s
order.
There is no direct evidence regarding the location of the
print in the years immediately after Bridge recorded the text of
the Declaration. However, certain handwritten entries on the
reverse side of the print state: “from 1776 to 1784 Warrants
[etc.],” “Town Warrants [etc.],” “Pownalborough,” “Declaration
of Independence, July 1776,” and “Loose Papers no Taxes.”
The location of the print remained unknown until 1995, when
Harold Moore, an auctioneer hired by the estate of Anna Holbrook
Plumstead (Anna), discovered the print in the attic of Anna’s
home in Wiscasset, Maine. The print was folded in a box
containing minutes from a Pownalborough town meeting held in
1795, personal family receipts, and other papers unrelated to
3
town business. Wiscasset, Maine (the town) was formerly known
as Pownalborough, Massachusetts. The town’s name was changed
from Pownalborough to Wiscasset in 1802, and Maine became a
state in 1820.
Anna was the daughter of Solomon Holbrook, who served as
the town clerk from 1885 until his death in 1929. Pownalborough
and Wiscasset have had a total of 41 town clerks during the
period between 1760 and the date of trial, and Holbrook was the
28th clerk in order of service to hold that position. Although
Holbrook once owned Anna’s house where the print was found,
Holbrook never lived in that house.
After Harold Moore discovered the print in Anna’s house in
1995, Seth Kaller of Kaller Historical Documents, Inc. purchased
the print at auction for $77,000. In 2001, Kaller sold the
print to Simon Finch, a rare book dealer in London, England, for
$390,000. In 2002, Richard L. Adams, a Virginia resident,
purchased the print from Finch for $475,000.
In 2005, the State of Maine (Maine), on behalf of the town,
sought to recover the print from Adams based on Maine’s
assertion that the print was a public record owned by the town.
Adams filed an action in the circuit court to quiet title to the
print contending that he was its lawful owner. The case
proceeded to a bench trial.
4
The evidence at trial showed that until 1967, the
Pownalborough and Wiscasset town clerks performed the duties of
their part-time position from their homes. In 1967, the town
began conducting its business from a public town office. The
current town clerk testified that although a library was built
in the town in 1805, it is unknown when the library began
storing certain town records that now are housed there.
Jonathan S. Kiffer, Senior Vice President of Sotheby’s,
testified as an expert on the subject of rare documents created
around the time the print was made. Kiffer stated that
broadsides like the print in question were printed as news
releases or bulletins and were in the category of documents
referred to as “ephemera,” or items produced to serve only a
brief purpose. According to Kiffer, once the news contained in
a broadside was disseminated, the broadside had fulfilled its
purpose and could be discarded.
Maine presented the expert testimony of Albert H. Whitaker,
Jr., a former Massachusetts State Archivist who was familiar
with colonial records. Whitaker stated that in his opinion, the
standard practice for a town clerk in 1776 would have been to
retain the print as a town record. Whitaker testified that he
based his opinion on the fact that the print was directed to the
town clerk’s attention and the town clerk actually received the
print.
5
Whitaker also testified that a town generally would retain
a document whose contents were recorded in a town book because
the original document was considered a superior form of written
instrument. However, Whitaker stated that this particular
town’s record keeping was inconsistent regarding documents other
than those relating to births, deaths, marriages, real property,
elections, and town meetings.
In his testimony, Whitaker also discussed the handwritten
entries appearing on the reverse side of the print. As set
forth above, those entries stated: “from 1776 to 1784 Warrants
[etc.],” “Town Warrants [etc.],” “Pownalborough,” “Declaration
of Independence, July 1776,” and “Loose Papers no Taxes.”
According to Whitaker, these entries indicated that the print
continued to “reside” with the town’s clerks for “at least a
short period of time” after 1776. However, Seth Kaller, the
dealer in rare documents who purchased the print at auction in
1995, testified that these particular entries suggested “endless
possibilities” regarding who made these entries and when they
were made.
After considering the evidence, the circuit court issued a
letter opinion explaining its ruling in favor of Adams.
Addressing Maine’s argument that the print was a “public record”
under Maine statutory law, the circuit court held that the 1973
statutory definition of that term was inapplicable because it
6
did not have retroactive effect. 2 However, the circuit court
also addressed the merits of Maine’s statutory argument, ruling
that even if that statutory definition did have retroactive
effect, Maine failed to establish that the town “maintained” the
print as required by that statutory definition.
In addition, the circuit court determined that the print
did not meet the common law definition of a “public record”
because a public officer did not create the print. The circuit
court also found that Maine failed to prove that the town “kept”
the print as a town record.
Finally, the circuit court concluded that Maine failed to
prove that even if the town clerk had once possessed the print,
the print later was converted. The circuit court found that
Maine presented no evidence that the print was wrongfully
removed or converted. The circuit court stated that any
conclusion regarding when and how the print left the town’s
possession would be conjecture.
Based on these findings, the circuit court held that
because Maine failed to establish ownership of the print, Adams
had superior title to the print as a bona fide purchaser and the
party in possession of the print. The circuit court entered a
final judgment order incorporating its letter opinion. Maine
appeals.
2
See ME. REV. STAT. ANN. tit. 30, § 2212(3)(1973).
7
Maine argues that the circuit court erred in ruling that
Adams established superior title to the print. Maine begins its
analysis by arguing that the circuit court erred in failing to
apply a preponderance of the evidence standard and in assigning
Maine the burden of proving “conclusively” that the print was
kept or maintained by the town. Maine contends that, to the
extent that it had a burden of proof, Maine proved that the town
is the true owner of the print because the print meets the
definition of a “public record” under Maine statutory law.
In the alternative, Maine asserts that the print qualifies
as a public record under the common law. Maine contends that
the evidence demonstrated that the town kept the print for a
sufficient period of time, after its delivery to the town clerk
in 1776, so as to render the print a public record. Maine
contends that the evidence showed that town records were kept by
town clerks at their homes in the 18th, 19th, and 20th
centuries, and that this evidence explains the location of the
print in the home of a daughter of a former town clerk.
Maine additionally asserts that the circuit court erred in
ruling that the common law requires that a public record be
created by a public official. Maine contends that the print
qualified as a public record under the common law because
although Russell was a private printer, he created the
broadsides at the direction of the Executive Council.
8
In response, Adams argues that the circuit court correctly
decided that Adams established superior title to the print.
With respect to Maine’s common law argument, Adams contends that
Maine failed to prove that the town owned the print under the
common law definition of “public record” because the print was
not a written memorial made by a public officer. Adams
maintains that under the common law definition, the copy of the
Declaration that the town clerk transcribed into the town book
is the only public record established by the evidence.
Adams also argues that Maine was unable to show that the
town “kept” the print, within the meaning of the common law.
Adams contends that the evidence regarding Holbrook’s connection
to the print is speculative, because the evidence failed to show
that the print had been transferred from town clerks to their
successors, or that Holbrook ever had possession of the print.
Addressing Maine’s statutory argument, Adams asserts that
Maine’s position is defaulted on procedural grounds. Adams
argues that Maine failed to assign error to the circuit court’s
holding that Maine statutory law defining a “public record” does
not have retroactive effect. According to Adams, Maine’s
failure to assign error to that holding bars this Court from
considering whether the circuit court correctly decided that
matter.
9
In resolving these issues, we first observe that an action
to quiet title is based on the premise that a person with good
title to certain real or personal property should not be
subjected to various future claims against that title. Neff v.
Ryman, 100 Va. 521, 524, 42 S.E. 314, 315 (1902); John L.
Costello, Virginia Remedies § 20.07 at 20-38, 20-39 (3d ed.
2005). Thus, in a quiet title action, a plaintiff asks the
court to declare that he has good title to the property in
question and compels any adverse claimant to prove a competing
ownership claim or forever be barred from asserting it. Black’s
Law Dictionary 32 (8th ed. 2004); see City of Staunton v. The
Augusta Corp., 169 Va. 424, 429-32, 193 S.E. 695, 696-97 (1937)
(city failed to carry burden to show it owned certain real
property); Costello, Virginia Remedies § 20.07 at 20-38, 20-39.
At trial, each party asserted that it had superior title to
the print. Accordingly, each party bore the burden of proving
those facts necessary for the court to rule in its favor. See
Sachs v. Horan, 252 Va. 247, 250, 475 S.E.2d 276, 278 (1996);
United Dentists, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 162 Va. 347, 355, 173
S.E. 508, 511 (1934); 9 John H. Wigmore, Evidence in Trials at
Common Law § 2485, 283-86 (Chadbourn rev. 1981).
The common law provides that possession of property
constitutes prima facie evidence of ownership until a better
title is proven. Smith v. Bailey, 141 Va. 757, 776, 127 S.E.
10
89, 95 (1925); see Tate v. Tate, 85 Va. 205, 214, 7 S.E. 352,
356 (1888); Willcox v. Stroup, 467 F.3d 409, 412-13 (4th Cir.
2006). We have explained that possession of personal property
is presumptive proof of ownership because individuals generally
own the personal property that they possess. Saunders v.
Greever, 85 Va. 252, 289, 7 S.E. 391, 410 (1888); see Willcox,
467 F.3d at 412.
This common law presumption of ownership based on
possession requires that the party not in possession of the
disputed personal property produce evidence of superior title.
If the party not in possession is able to produce such evidence
of superior title, the presumption of ownership in the possessor
is defeated. Willcox, 467 F.3d at 413; see Brunswick Land Corp.
v. Perkinson, 146 Va. 695, 708, 132 S.E. 853, 857 (1926).
However, if the party not in possession fails to establish
superior title to the property, the presumption of ownership
based on possession prevails and relieves a court from having to
preside over “a historical goose chase.” Willcox, 467 F.3d at
413.
Maine seeks to establish superior title to the print on the
basis that the print is a “public record” kept and maintained by
the town. In making this assertion, Maine relies both on the
common law definition of “public record” and on Maine’s own
statutory definition of that term.
11
We first examine the common law component of Maine’s claim.
The parties agree that both Maine and Virginia recognize the
same definition of a “public record” under the common law. This
definition, adopted in many jurisdictions, provides that a
“public record” is
‘a written memorial made by a public officer authorized by
law to perform that function, and intended to serve as
evidence of something written, said or done.’ It must be
‘a written memorial,’ must be made by ‘a public officer,’
and that officer must be ‘authorized by law’ (not required)
to make it. [The public official] must have authority to
make it; but that authority need not be derived from
express statutory enactment. Whenever a written record of
the transactions of a public officer in his office, is a
convenient and appropriate mode of discharging the duties
of his office, it is not only his right but his duty to
keep that memorial, whether expressly required to do so or
not.
Coleman v. Commonwealth, 66 Va. (25 Gratt.) 865, 881
(1874)(emphasis and citation omitted); see White v. United
States, 164 U.S. 100, 103 (1896); Treat v. McDonough, 367 P.2d
587, 589 (Colo. 1961); Branch v. State, 80 So. 482, 485 (Fla.
1918); People v. The Dime Savings Bank, 183 N.E. 604, 607 (Ill.
1932); Robison v. Fishback, 93 N.E. 666, 668-69 (Ind. 1911);
State v. Hanlin, 110 N.W. 162, 164 (Iowa 1907); State v. Chase,
330 A.2d 909, 911-12 (Me. 1975); State v. Donovan, 86 N.W. 709,
711 (N.D. 1901); State v. Kelly, 143 S.E.2d 136, 139 (W.Va.
1965).
In the present case, the evidence showed that Russell was
not a public officer, but was a private printer who printed
12
between 200 and 300 broadsides at the direction of the Executive
Council. The fact that the Executive Council authorized Russell
to print the broadsides did not transform his employment status
from that of a private printer to one of a public officer.
Russell was not executing the duties of public office at the
time he printed the broadsides.
The duty that the common law assigns public officers to
make a written record of governmental action reflects the
importance of public records in providing accurate and
transparent accounts of governmental acts. The serious nature
of this responsibility is such that the duty may be required
under the sanction of official oath. See Coleman, 66 Va. at
882. Public officers are charged with the duty to keep written
records of governmental action affecting the citizens of their
jurisdictions, and the record entries made by those public
officers serve as the “public record” on which the citizens can
rely.
In the present case, the duty of the town’s clerk to create
a public record of the Declaration emanated from the Executive
Council’s order directing that the clerks of the various towns
record the text of the Declaration in their town books “there to
remain as a perpetual Memorial thereof.” This order of the
Executive Council reflected the importance of the clerks’ acts
of transcription and the fact that the written entries they
13
created were to be the perpetual record of the Declaration in
the various town books.
In addition, one of the handwritten notations on the
reverse side of the print provided evidence that the print was
not intended to be a public record of the town. According to
that notation, after the print was sent to Reverend Moore in
Pownalborough, the print was delivered to Reverend Murray in
Booth Bay before it was received by the town clerk in
Pownalborough.
The evidence before us shows that Edmund Bridge, the town
clerk of Pownalborough in 1776, created a public record of the
Declaration for Pownalborough when he transcribed the words of
the Declaration into the official town book. The fact that the
print was critical to Bridge’s transcription of the text of the
Declaration did not render the print a public record. Instead,
the only public record of the Declaration under the common law
was the actual transcription that Bridge entered in the town
book in accordance with the Executive Council’s order.
We do not reach the common law issue whether the print was
“kept” by the clerks of the town after the Declaration’s text
was transcribed into the town book. The fact that the print was
not made by an authorized public officer and was not intended to
be the official memorial of the Declaration precluded the print
from qualifying as a “public record” under the common law,
14
irrespective whether the print later was “kept” by the town’s
clerks. Coleman, 66 Va. at 881; see White, 164 U.S. at 103;
Treat, 367 P.2d at 589; Branch, 80 So. at 485; Dime Savings
Bank, 183 N.E. at 607; Robison, 93 N.E. at 668-69; Hanlin, 110
N.W. at 164; Chase, 330 A.2d at 911-12; Donovan, 86 N.W. at 711;
Kelly, 143 S.E.2d at 139. Thus, we hold that the print was not
a public record of the town under the common law. 3 See Coleman,
66 Va. at 881; White, 164 U.S. at 103; Treat, 367 P.2d at 589;
Branch, 80 So. at 485; Dime Savings Bank, 183 N.E. at 607;
Robison, 93 N.E. at 668-69; Hanlin, 110 N.W. at 164; Chase, 330
A.2d at 911-12; Donovan, 86 N.W. at 711; Kelly, 143 S.E.2d at
139.
Maine argues, nevertheless, that the print is a “public
record” as defined under Maine statutory law. The circuit court
rejected that argument holding, among other things, that the
3
Based on this holding, we do not address Maine’s other
arguments concerning whether the documents were kept by the town
clerk, including the circuit court’s allocation of the burden of
proof regarding how and when the print left the town’s
possession, the circuit court’s statement that Maine had the
burden to prove “conclusively” that the print was kept by the
town, the circuit court’s consideration whether other towns
currently maintain broadside prints, the circuit court’s ruling
that no law required the town to keep the print after it was
transcribed into the town book, and the circuit court’s
consideration whether a library was built in Wiscasset in 1805
to store town records. As stated above, Maine’s failure to
prove that the print was a written memorial made by an
authorized public officer precludes the print from qualifying as
a “public record” under common law, irrespective whether Maine
produced any evidence that the town clerks kept the print.
15
print “pre-dates Maine’s 1973 definition of ‘public records,’
and Maine did not produce evidence that Maine’s legislators
intended for this definition to apply retroactively to all of
the documents that ever entered the state of Maine. Therefore,
the 1973 definition of ‘public record’ does not apply to this
case.”
We are unable to consider the merits of Maine’s statutory
argument. A party who asks this Court to consider whether a
circuit court’s holding was erroneous is required to assign
error to the challenged holding so that it may be identified
properly for our consideration. Rule 5:17(c); Friedline v.
Commonwealth, 265 Va. 273, 278-79, 576 S.E.2d 491, 494 (2003);
Kirby v. Commonwealth, 264 Va. 440, 444-45, 570 S.E.2d 832, 834
(2002); Chesapeake Hosp. Auth. v. Commonwealth, 262 Va. 551, 556
n.2, 554 S.E.2d 55, 57 n.2 (2001). Thus, when a party fails to
assign error to a particular holding by the circuit court, that
holding becomes the law of the case and is binding on appeal.
See Little v. Cooke, 274 Va. 697, 722, 652 S.E.2d 129, 144
(2007); Chesapeake Hosp. Auth., 195 Va. at 565, 554 S.E.2d at
62; Trustees v. Taylor & Parrish, Inc., 249 Va. 144, 154, 452
S.E.2d 847, 852 (1995).
Maine did not assign error to the circuit court’s holding
that Maine’s 1973 statutory definition of public “record” was
not intended to have retroactive application to documents such
16
as the print. 4 Therefore, we hold that the circuit court’s
determination that Maine’s statutory definition of public
“record” was not intended to have retroactive effect has become
the law of this case. See Little, 274 Va. at 722, 652 S.E.2d at
144; Chesapeake Hosp. Auth., 195 Va. at 565, 554 S.E.2d at 62;
Trustees, 249 Va. at 154, 452 S.E.2d at 852.
Our decision that Maine’s statutory definition of “public
record” is procedurally barred from review also removes from our
consideration Maine’s various arguments based on that statutory
definition. Thus, we do not consider those issues, including
whether the circuit court erroneously employed a “conclusive”
standard of proof regarding whether the print was “maintained”
by the town within the meaning of the statutory definition.
Finally, we find no merit in Maine’s argument that
regardless whether the print met the definition of a “public
record” under the common law or statutory law, the circuit court
erred in holding that Wiscasset did not own the print. Maine
bases this argument on its contention that because the print was
delivered to the town clerk in 1776, the print immediately
became the property of the town. Maine asserts that Solomon
4
See ME. REV. STAT. ANN. tit. 30, § 2212(3)(1973). We also
observe that Maine agreed during oral argument of this case that
the current statutory definition of the term public “record,”
found in Title 5, Section 92-A(5) of the Maine Revised Statutes
Annotated, is substantially the same as the 1973 version
addressed by the circuit court.
17
Holbrook’s family wrongfully converted the print, and that Maine
as the true owner of the print may recover it from Adams
irrespective whether he was a bona fide purchaser for value.
Even if we assume, without deciding, that the town owned
the print by virtue of having had the print in its possession
more than 200 years ago, the record does not establish that the
print was converted. “Conversion is the wrongful assumption or
exercise of the right of ownership over goods or chattels
belonging to another in denial of or inconsistent with the
owner’s rights.” Economopoulos v. Kolaitis, 259 Va. 806, 814,
528 S.E.2d 714, 719 (2000); see Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp. v.
Kaplan, 198 Va. 67, 75-76, 92 S.E.2d 359, 365 (1956); accord
Withers v. Hackett, 714 A.2d 798, 800 (Me. 1998); Leighton v.
Fleet Bank of Maine, 634 A.2d 453, 457 (Me. 1993).
Maine produced no evidence supporting its theory of
conversion but merely asks us to speculate that because the
print was found in Holbrook’s daughter’s attic, Holbrook or a
member of his family converted the print. We will not engage in
such speculation and conclude as a matter of law that Maine did
not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the print was
converted by Holbrook or his family.
Accordingly, we conclude that the circuit court did not err
in holding that Adams established superior title to the print.
In reaching this conclusion, we need not consider whether Adams
18
was a bona fide purchaser of the print because after Adams
established prima facie title to the print, Maine failed to
prove under any theory that Maine owned the print or had
superior title. See Smith, 141 Va. at 776, 127 S.E. at 95;
Tate, 85 Va. at 214, 7 S.E. at 356; Willcox, 467 F.3d at 412-13.
For these reasons, we will affirm the circuit court’s
judgment and enter final judgment declaring that Richard L.
Adams, Jr. has good title to the print.
Affirmed.
19