Batchelder v. Robbins

45 A. 837, 93 Me. 579, 1900 Me. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 6, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 A. 837 (Batchelder v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Batchelder v. Robbins, 45 A. 837, 93 Me. 579, 1900 Me. LEXIS 25 (Me. 1900).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This was a writ of entry brought by the plaintiff to establish her title to a certain tract of land on “ Treat & Webster Island” in Old Town, designated on a plan made by A. S. Howard in 1835, as “lots 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49,'50 and 51.” The plaintiff sought in the first place to derive title under a deed from Treat and Webster of July 30, 1823, through various mesne conveyances to her father, Samuel Pratt, and under a quitclaim deed from Newell Blake to Samuel Pratt, dated April 14, 1860, founded on a tax title.

The defendants claimed title by virtue of a deed from Jeremiah A. Swan, dated October 4, 1894.

But the plaintiff furthermore claimed that, immediately upon the delivery of the deed from Newell Blake, in 1860, Samuel Pratt, the grantee therein named, entered into actual occupation of the land described in the writ, under color of right and claiming title thereto; that such occupancy was continued to the time of his death in 1863, and subsequently by his heirs, the plaintiff and her sister, until 1867; that the plaintiff then acquired by purchase the interests of her sister and mother in the property and thereafter continued in the uninterrupted occupation of the premises until 1894. It was accordingly contended that prior to the date of the defendants’ deed in 1894, the plaintiff had acquired a perfect title to the premises by adverse possession.

The plaintiff’s claim of adverse possession was contested by the defendants upon two grounds: first, that the plaintiff’s occupancy and acts of ownership were not of such kind and character as [581]*581would ripen into a title by adverse possession; and secondly, that her possession had not been continuous and uninterrupted for a period of twenty years. There was evidence tending to show that during the period of the plaintiff’s occupancy, several other parties cultivated and occupied some parts of the demanded premises, and the defendants relied especially upon the occupancy of John B. Beaulieu, who was alleged to have been a lessee of Jeremiah A. Swan from whom they derived their title in 1894.

The only question submitted to the jury was whether the plaintiff had acquired a title to the land by adverse possession. The jury returned a general verdict for the plaintiff and found specially that the plaintiff, and her predecessors under color of title, had been in the possession and occupation of the premises for twenty consecutive years; and also that the plaintiff herself had “been in open, notorious, adverse, exclusive and uninterrupted possession and occupancy of the lots 48 to 51 both inclusive claiming title thereto, for a period of twenty consecutive years.”

The case now comes to this court on exceptions to the rulings and instructions of the presiding justice and also upon a motion to set aside the verdict as against the evidence.

The exceptions: With respect to the continuity of the plaintiff’s possession, and the character of the occupancy on the part of the defendants’ grantor, or those claiming under him, which would amount to an interruption of the plaintiff’s possession, the presiding judge instructed the jury, inter alia, as follows :

“And it must be uninterrupted by the owner for this period of twenty years. An interruption which would prevent the running of the limitation and the acquiring of title by possession might be by suit of the owner, and it might be by some decided, visible open acts of the owner, inconsistent with the claim of the party setting up adverse possession within twenty years, and brought home to the knowledge of the party asserting it either by words or by acts in the open, so that the party would know that the owner was asserting his right; it would not be an interruption of adverse possession, occurring within twenty years, for the true owner to go upon the lot in the night time and do something there which was [582]*582not apparent, or, if it was a wood lot, to go in and cut a tree or some trees of which the party, seeking to gain title by adverse possession had no knowledge. It would need to be something which was brought home in some way to the senses, the eyes or ears of the party who was in possession, claiming adversely, which would indicate to him that the owner was intending to assert his rights as against him.....
“An interruption to interfere with and make a break in the twenty years of the party acquiring title by adverse possession, must be by the owner or by his authority. It is not a legal interruption for a trespasser to go onto the land, for a man to go upon there without any authority or consent of anybody and build a house and squat there; he is a mere trespasser. It must be an interference by the owner himself or by somebody having authority to act for him or occupy under him; and in such a case as that, if the true owner went and built a house upon it or let it to somebody to build a house, and that house was occupied by the true owner or his tenant, that would be an interruption to possession being acquired adversely by the other party. But these acts by a man not acting by the authority of the owner, a mere trespasser, squatters, would have no such effect as to interrupt the acquiring of title by adverse possession.....
“It is said that some men went on there and planted little gardens, and that they went there, in one case I think and perhaps more, but I remember one where the party says that they went on there under an arrangement with Swan, and Swan at one time seems to have had some conveyance of the property which perhaps gave him color of title; and if they did go on by his permission, that would be practically going on with the authority of Swan, and would, if in other respects sufficient, operate as an interruption at that time of the running of the twenty years; but as I said to you before, in order to affect the Pratt heirs and this plaintiff, it should have been known that that act was done by the authority of Swan, and that the parties were not mere squatters.”

Exceptions are taken to these instructions because it is said in the first place, that in effect they required the jury to find that no [583]*583entry upon the land or occupation of it by the defendants or their grantor, would operate to defeat the plaintiff’s disseizin, unless he had actual knowledge of such entry, and that it was made by authority of the defendants or their grantor.

In the earlier parts of the charge the presiding judge had explained to the jury the character of the occupancy and the nature of the acts of ownership on the part of the plaintiff which would enable her to acquire title by adverse possession. Among other things he said to the jury: “ The rule upon that is very succinctly stated and I will read it: . . . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hightower v. Pendergrass
662 S.W.2d 932 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1983)
Ahern v. Travelers Insurance
142 A. 400 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 837, 93 Me. 579, 1900 Me. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batchelder-v-robbins-me-1900.