Adams v. Hannah

266 Mass. 101
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 266 Mass. 101 (Adams v. Hannah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Hannah, 266 Mass. 101 (Mass. 1929).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This case comes before us upon exceptions saved by the respondents to certain findings and rulings of a single justice after a hearing upon the merits in pursuance of the judgment of this court in Adams v. Hannah, 261 Mass. 125, 130.

The record discloses that the petitioner filed his petition for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranta; that this petition was demurred to for want of jurisdiction; that the case was reserved for the full court, the reservation stating, “it being agreed that if jurisdiction exists probable cause has been shown and the petition may be filed and the case stand for hearing on the merits.”

After the order in the decision, supra, that “Petition may be filed and case stand for hearing on the merits,” the petitioner filed his petition, and after the answer thereto the case came on for hearing before a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court. The petitioner, as his only material evidence, introduced a certified copy of the records of the ancient proprietors of Yarmouth and rested. The respondents offered in evidence assignments, exhibits 4, 5, and 7, to Samuel D. Hannah of sharer interests which the several assignors had in all the proprietees described in the several instruments of assignment; a petition to a justice of the peace to issue a warrant to call a meeting of the Yarmouth Proprietors “as provided by custom and by law”; an assignment from Samuel D. Hannah of one fifth of his interest in the Yarmouth Proprietee to Edwin J. Hannah and others; a warrant for a meeting of Yarmouth Proprietee; certified copies of the Old Proprietors Records of the Town of Yar[105]*105mouth; and a photostatic copy of a grant to Anthony Thacher, Thomas Howes and John Crowe. The respondents called Marcus H. Howes, who testified that he was a direct descendant of Thomas Howes, and introduced the genealogical tree of the Howes family. Samuel B. Jenkins was also called by the respondents; he testified that he was a direct descendant of one Gyles Hopkins, one of the original Yarmouth Proprietors, and introduced in evidence the genealogical family chart of the Hopkins family. The respondents also introduced in evidence certain Plymouth Colony Records and Province Laws which are printed in the record as exhibit 16. Respecting the several assignments to Samuel D. Hannah, the single justice found as follows: “Howes is a descendant from one of the original grantees. The Crowells and William and Samuel Jenkins are descendants of men once, in all probability, proprietors and tenants in common in the tract originally granted; but I am unable to find that they or Howes had any title to the lands, or interest in the corporation on the day of their assignments. They are ignorant themselves, in regard thereto, of all but their kinship and their good faith toward their grantee.”

The exceptions of the respondents, seventeen in number, are directed to portions of the findings, rulings and order of the single justice. Of these exceptions we consider only those argued or briefed, and we shall deal with them in the order of their presentment in the respondents’ brief.

The first exception argued in the respondents’ brief, as we understand it, rests upon the contention that no evidence was introduced at the hearing on the merits to sustain the necessary allegation of the petition to the effect that the “petitioner’s private right and interest has been injured and put in hazard by the exercise by the respondents of a franchise or privilege not conferred by law in that acting under the guise of being the Yarmouth Proprietors they are interfering with and harassing the petitioner in his use and enjoyment of his said land and are putting him to the expense and delay of a long protracted litigation and inquiry and postponing him in the establishment and registration of the title to said land and impeding his plans for the proper and profit[106]*106able development of his property and that all of said actions and doings of the respondents depend upon and are fostered by their pretense of being and exercising the franchise of being a propriety known as the Yarmouth Proprietors.”

Under G. L. c. 249, §§ 6, 7, and 10, such evidence is required in the summary hearing upon the petition for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranta, and, in the absence of the Attorney General’s intervention, such proof is required at the hearing on the merits. In the instant case the Attorney General has not intervened. At the hearing the petitioner offered in evidence the transcript from the records of the Yarmouth Proprietors showing the winding up of the proprietorship and rested. The record does not disclose any evidence by the petitioner, or by the respondents, that the petitioner was possessed of a private right or interest, as is alleged in paragraph “9” of the “Information Petition.” The single justice found and ruled, “I do not pass in any way upon the title of the petitioner, but assume his right to bring this proceeding to have been determined by Adams v. Hannah,” 261 Mass. 125. The demurrer to the petition for leave to file an information in the nature of quo warranta admitted the facts stated in the petition for the purpose of that proceeding only. The petitioner, however, contends that the question of his right to a trial on the merits is concluded against the respondents by the agreement contained in the reservation “that if jurisdiction exists probable cause has been shown and the petition may be filed and the case stand for hearing on the merits”; and by the further fact that the case has been tried on the merits, upon the assumption that probable cause has been shown, there being no question that the petitioner’s title and possession are necessary elements of the probable cause which the statute requires to be proved. We think the contention of the petitioner is sound and that the agreement is no more than a flourish of words unless it means that the petitioner has title sufficient to maintain this form of action if the Supreme Judicial Court had jurisdiction of the subject matter.

The exception next briefed and argued by the respondents is to the order of judgment for the petitioner against the [107]*107respondents other than Weatherbee. The prayer of the petition is for “the consideration and judgment of this court in the premises and that due process of law be issued requiring the respondents to appear and make answer by what warrant they claim to have and enjoy the liberties, privileges, and franchise of being a proprietary as aforesaid, and if law and justice shall so require that the respondents may be so convicted of the premises herein charged against them and may be forejudged and excluded from said liberties, privileges and franchises and enjoined from acting or pretending to act as said propriety or as representatives thereof in any legal proceeding or in any court or in any other manner and for such other orders and decree as law and justice may require.] The contention of the respondents advanced in support of this exception is based upon the assumption that the petitioner has no right to the judgment ordered because the single justice has not made the essential finding of fact, that the petitioner is possessed of private rights or interests which have been injured or put to hazard by the respondents’ exercise of a franchise or privilege not conferred by law. Because of the legal effect of the agreement and the voluntary action of all parties thereunder there is nothing to this exception.

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Bluebook (online)
266 Mass. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-hannah-mass-1929.