Bott v. Perley

11 Mass. 169
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 15, 1814
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Mass. 169 (Bott v. Perley) 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
Bott v. Perley, 11 Mass. 169 (Mass. 1814).

Opinion

Sewall, C. J.

The title of the demandant, which is the extent of an execution, upon a judgment recovered by him against William Cr;ed, has been stated and examined in the case decided at this term, between the same demandant and Joseph Burnell. The difference in favor of this case is, that the premises demanded in this action are lots which had been drawn and assigned to the right of Joseph Hale, an original proprietor of Bridgeton; and this right had been conveyed to Creed, and described as including these lots. The demandant, therefore, showing the extent and return of his execution, maintains his title, at least against Creed, and all persons claiming under him. Upon this evidence, too, he shows a constructive, if not an actual, seisin of the premises demanded.

The extent of Botfs execution bears date on the 27th of December, 1783. The deeds and evidence of title offered *for the tenant at the trial are subsequent, and [ * 173 ] must avail him, if at all, as a title acquired against Bott.

For as to the title attempted to be derived from Hale, by a deed of release from Joseph Hale to the tenant, dated after the action was commenced, the tenant would not have been defended by that evidence if it had been admitted.

In 1771, the committee of the proprietors of Bridgeton for the time being conveyed to Samuel Johnson all the right of Joseph Hale, as the right of a delinquent proprietor, including and mentioning the demanded premises as lots drawn or assigned to that right; and, in 1773, the same right was conveyed by Johnson to Bridges, and, on the 4th of May, 1778, by Bridges to Porter, and by him, on the 7th of June, 1780, to W. Creed.

Without examining the validity of the conveyance by the committee, or the evidence of their proceedings, we incline to the opinion that the demandant proves a constructive seisin in Johnson and in those claiming under him, from the date of the deed to Johnson, although the same was not registered until April, 1794. The result of which would be, that the will of Joseph Hale, the original proprietor, proved in November, 1778, containing a resid uary devise to his son Joseph, which might be construed to in [164]*164elude his right in Bridgeton, had no operation as a conveyance to the son.

It may be objected that the deed from the committee to John-¡on, and the other deeds by which the title is derived to Creed, were not registered until 1794, after the date of the will and the death of the testator; and there was no evidence of an actual entry under those deeds.

But we think it very clear, as the son proves no seisin under the devise to him, that still the extent of Bott’s execution in 1783, and the subsequent registry of the title deeds, by which the tide from Johnson is derived to Creed, must prevent the operation of the will of Joseph Hale, the son. This was proved in 1795, and contains a resi.duary devise to his son Joseph Hale; and it was [ * 174 ] from this last devisee * that Perley, the tenant, obtained his release. The proceedings of the committee, and their deed to Johnson, and the subsequent deeds under which the title is derived to Creed, and the extent upon the execution against him, prove a seisin in the demandant, sufficient against Joseph Hale, the son, and all claiming under him, there being no evidence of an entry on his part, to avoid the consequences of these proceedings.

There is no suggestion of evidence of an entry on the part of Hale, the son, and we think the tenant is not entitled to a new trial, for the rejection of the evidence upon which he relied to show a title derived from Joseph Hale, the original proprietor.

I may observe, further, that the proceedings of the proprietors of Bridgeton, in making their allotments, and of their committee in selling the rights of delinquent proprietors, appear to have been confirmed by an act of the General Court in 1783. In this view of the defence, our attention has been called to the proceedings of the committee, from whom Enoch Perley received a deed in November, 1788, and to the effect of that deed, as conveying a title, which is to avail against the present demandant, if at all, as the delinquent proprietor of the lot in question.

With the rest of the evidence offered for the tenant at the trial, and rejected by the judge, was the deed, dated November 18, 1788, from Ingalls and others, a committee of the proprietors of Bridgeton to Enoch Perley, and the deed, dated August 31, 1791, from Enoch to Thomas Perley, the tenant. Under these deeds, if effectual to that purpose, the tenant derives to himself a title in the premises in controversy; and the premises have been sold away from the demandant.

By the first of these deeds, Ingalls and others, professing to act [165]*165in their capacity of a committee appointed by the proprietors of Bridgeton to make sale of the delinquent proprietors’ lands, pursuant to an act or law of'the General Court of the commonwealth, sell and convey to Enoch Ferley * three [*175] lots of land in Bridgeton, two of which are the lots of land described in the demandant’s writ; and these are sold sub ject to the proprietor’s or owner’s right of redemption.

There is no law of the commonwealth, and I believe 1 may say confidently, there never was any general or public law, either of the colony, the province, or the commonwealth, which authorized the sale of appropriated lots, such as had been severed and located by a committee of proprietors acting as a corporation ; such a sale being adopted as a mode of enforcing the collection of taxes assessed by the proprietors, by virtue of their authority to, manage their common and undivided lands. Proprietors of common and undivided lands had, indeed, by a provincial act,

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Related

Brown v. Town of Sudbury
1 Davis. L. Ct. Cas. 227 (Massachusetts Land Court, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mass. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bott-v-perley-mass-1814.