Knox v. Pickering

The opinion of the Court was delivered' in Cumberland, at the adjournment of May term, in August following, by

Mellen C. J.

The Resolve of February 17, 1798, was passed •on tire petition of Henry Knox, late father of the demandants, and largely interested in the Waldo claim at the time. The Resolve of February 23d of the same year relates to the same subject, and makes further arrangements for the completion of the objects contemplated in the former one.- From both of them, viewed in connexion, the following facts appear, viz : — That in the year 1692 a large tract of land was granted to Beauchamp and Leveret, which in the year 1785 was confirmed by the legislature of Massachusetts to the heirs of Brigadier General Waldo, and others interested therein, agreeably to certain boundaries recommended by the committee for the sale of eastern lands ; and that in the survey and location of said tract, the same was found to run into the Plymouth patent, which *109Was holden under a prior grant; and on the representation of said heirs and others interested, in consequence of snob interference, a committee was appointed to investigate the subject. That when their report was made, on their recommendation, Thomas Davis, Esquire, was appointed and commissioned with full power to cause a re-survey of the Waldo patent to be made; to ascertain the amount of deficiency occasioned by the interference above mentioned with the lands of the Plymouth company, and cause to be laid out and assigned, to said heirs and others interested, so much land, belonging to the Commonwealth, as would be equal to the amount of such deficiency, and extend the addition to be made to the Waldo patent, the whole length of the northern line of it, as far as the lands of the Commonwealth adjoined thereto. And that the lots, not exceeding one hundred acres to each settler, which should be occupied by any settlers on the additional lands to be assigned, should not be considered as taken to make up said deficiency” — but that such settlers should be “ quieted afterwards in their settlements in such maimer as the General Court should direct.” All these proceedings were had prior to the conveyance oí Davis to Henry Knox; and the resolves were introduced by the demandant. We have been thus particular in stating these transactions, because, as they were originated on the petition of Henry Knox, he must be considered as conusant of them, and, in some measure, as a party to them, as well as deeply interested; for- we find the deed from Davis -was made to him alone ; and his heirs are the demandants.

It appears in the case that James Dunning was a settler on lot No. 10, in Bangor, prior to the year 1784-; and that the deed was made to Ids heirs in November 1802, by the agents for the Commonwealth, in consequence of such settlement, and pursuant to resolves of the legislature. There were also many others in different parts of the town, in possession of lots abutting on the river, prior to i 784. The Commonwealth, as successor of the crown, became proprietor of all the public lands within its limits ; and as to those in Bangor, continued so to be, until the 20th of July 1799, when the deed was made by Davis in behalf of the Commonwealth to Knox ; and in virtue of the colonial ordinance of 1641, and of the usage and prin*110ciples founded thereon, the flats in Penobscot river and the Kendus-heag stream, in and near the land in question, were also the property of Massachusetts. Theré is no proof or pretence that there was ever any discrimination between the upland and flats made by tire occupants of these shore or river lots, or any severance of the one from the other contemplated, until two years after the conveyance by Davis to Knox, even if there was then,, at the time of Holland’s survey and location of the settler’s lots. We do not mean to intimate that any such severance was made by the deed of the agents of the Commonwealth to the heirs of Dunning ; nor is it a question, the decision of which we deem necessary on this occasion. Butin addition to this negative proof, it appears that in 1800, Dudley, claiming under James Dunning, one of the heirs of the original settler, took possession of lot No. 10; and the next year built a wharf on a part of the premises demanded, extending to the first channel; and soon after erected a store on it; and that all the flats were claimed, as well as the upland. With these facts before us, which must be presumed to have been known to Davis and Knox at the time the deed was made, by reason of their agency and interest in the anterior proceedings relating to these lands, we are now to examine and ascertain the true construction to be given to the exception contained in that deed. After a general description of the lands intended to be conveyed, is the following expression$ “ excepting certain lots occupied by settlers, not exceeding one hundred acres to each.” Knox by accepting this deed, admits that settlers were then occupying certain lots on die land conveyed. Their possessions are called lots yet this deed was made about two years before Holland’s survey; of course it could have no reference to that. We must give a reasonable construction to the language of the exception, and ascertain as nearly as we can, what was the understanding and intention of both parties. It is a matter of notoriety that die settlers on the lands of .the Commonwealth have always been treated with indulgence ; and under numerous resolves, applicable to different parts of the country, have been quieted in their possessions, on payment of a small sum, perhaps not more than the amount of the expenses of survey and location. The usage was to quiet each settler in one *111hundred acres, 'so laid out to him as to include his improvements. The intention of the legislature, as expressed in the resolve oí February 23, 1798, was that this liberal and indulgent treatment should be extended to the settlers on the four townships conveyed by the deed in question; hence the limitation as to the quantity of land, which forms a part of the exception. The whole course of proceeding on the part of the government, proves that these settlers were considered as the equitable owners of the lots or lands cultivated and possessed by them, and that they were to become the legal owners in the usual maimer. For this reason, the agent of the Commonwealth, by the insertion of the exception, intended to leave the lands occupied by the settlers, under the complete control of the legislature, in the same way, as though the conveyance to Knox had never been made, and to be disposed of iu the manner mentioned in the resolve of 1798. Knox had no concern with the terms and conditions on which the legislature might choose to quiet the settlers within the limits of the tract conveyed ; being excepted in the deed in the language before mentioned, every thing composing a settler’s lot, both upland and flats were excepted. Nor can we believe that the legislature, while thus liberal and indulgent to settlers, as the resolves prove them to have been, could have intended they should be excluded from the benefit of the waters and shores of the river and the accommodations they afforded, and thus deprived of those peculiar privileges which constituted a principal inducement for settling on lots adjacent to the river ; nor would it have been very consistent with that liberal spirit which we have alluded to, for the legislature to have contemplated that the little strip of flats adjoining the upland of each settler should have been included as a component part of the one hundred acres designed for him. Such a construction would involve a singular confusion and contradiction of motives, unworthy of the legislature of Massachusetts. Surely, neither the heirs or assignees of Henry Knox have any reason to complain. The deed conveyed to him a tract of land sufficient to make up all the deficiency in the ancient grant, occasioned by the interference with the lands of the Plymouth Company. In addition to all the foregoing facts and circumstances, there is anoth*112er deserving of distinct consideration, as confirming our construction, and showing the understanding of all concerned at the time of the transactions we have been considering. The claim now made by the heirs or assigns of Knox, has for almost thirty years, to all appearance, been deemed by those interested to assert it, as one destitute of all legal foundation. During this long period all has remained in profound silence and repose. The claim has not been awakened from its slumbers by any newly discovered facts, the absence of which could account for such perfect acquiescence, in the measures adopted in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and carried into effect by different agents employed under its authority, in accordance with the evident intentions of all concerned.

In the view we have thus taken of this cause, inasmuch as not only the upland, but the flats adjoining the Dunning lot, w.ere embraced in and by the language of the exception in the deed in question, it becomes an immaterial inquiry what is the true construction of the language of the agents’ deed to Dunning's heirs. The flats demanded in this action never having been conveyed to Henry Knox by Davis’s deed of 1799, there is no proof whatever of the seisin of Henry Knox, on which the demandants have counted: of course the action is not maintained. In this result there appears tobe a perfect coincidence of the law and justice of the case.

The verdict must be set aside; or rather, so amended as to stand a yerdict for the tenant.