Crooker v. Pendleton

The opinion of the Court was drawn up by.

, Whitman C. J.

This is a writ of entry, brought to recover possession of an island in Penobscot Bay, called Job’s Island. The plaintiff’s claim is under a deed of release from the States of Massachusetts and Maine, made by their agents, on the twentieth of December, 1829. The defence set up by the defendant is, that he and his ancestors, under whom he derives title, have been in the peaceable and uninterrupted possession of the premises demanded ever since 1766; at which time he alleges that his great grandfather, Job Pendleton, under a grant which has been lost by time and accident, from the then colonial government of Massachusetts, had entered and became possessed thereof. Evidence was introduced at the trial, strongly tending to establish the presumption of such a grant; and as the Judge presiding intimated an opinion, that in con-nexion with the lapse of time, a presumption would be authorized, that a grant had been made, the parties agreed, if such should be the opinion of the whole Court, that judgment should be entered for the defendant; otherwise that a new trial should be ordered.

It is believed to bo well settled, at this day, that grants, not now to be found, may be presumed to have existed, from mere lapse of time, as well against the State, as against individuals. Greenl. on Ev. 50, and cases there cited. Against the State, however, it may be, that they would not so readily be presum*342ed from mere lapse of time. But a much shorter period, accompanied with circumstances tending to fortify the presumption, will suffice to establish it, than would otherwise be requisite. In this case the facts proved do strongly tend to fortify the presumption of an ancient grant to Job Pendleton; or to those of whom he purchased. It is not essential that it should appear, beyond a doubt, that a grant had been made. The presumption may be deemed one rather of law than of fact, although it is usual to refer it to the jury to make the inference. The object is to quiet ancient possessions, and to promote repose, after such a lapse of time, as that it may well be deemed difficult, if not impossible, to prove the existence of a regular grant. Jackson v. McCall, 10 Johns. R. 377. The presumption is bottomed upon the same principle as the statute of limitations, and is analogous to it; and the length of time necessary to establish it is often referred to the limitations prescribed in that statute. If this were a claim under individual grants the plaintiffs, by that statute, would have been barred long ago. But as the plaintiffs set up a claim under the States of Massachusetts and Maine, against whom the statute is supposed not to run, and especially against the latter,' they contend, that they are not barred by any lapse of time, running against them; and so that they have a right to recover. And there may be good reasons why a presumption should not avail against a State, so readily as against an individual. The State cannot be so much upon the alert to look out for its interests, as would be expected of individuals. Individuals therefore, would be barred in twenty years, without corroborating circumstances. In this case more than sixty years had elapsed ; and strong circumstances, tending to render it probable, that a grant had been originally made, are established. We cannot think it unreasonable, therefore, that the defendant should remain unmolested against such a dormant title. In Jackson v. McCall, before cited, after the existence of a similar possession for forty-one years, it was held, that a grant from the State might be presumed. The corroborating circumstances in that case were not more cogent than in this. In Pennsylvania a mere naked *343possession for 90 years was holden sufficient. Mather v. Trinty Church, 3 S. & R. 590. In Goodtitle v. Baldwin, 11 East, 480, in which there had been a possession of fifty-five years duration; and in which a nonsuit had been entered, from a supposed impossibility of presuming any title, which could have been derived from the crown, the court granted a new trial: Lord Ellenborough remarking, that, “ with respect to the general impossibility of presuming a grant against the crown, the courts were in the daily habit of presuming grants from the crown, as of markets and the like. We are therefore clearly of opinion that judgment should be entered for the defendant.