Craig v. Inhabitants of Franklin County

58 Me. 479
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 Me. 479 (Craig v. Inhabitants of Franklin County) 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
Craig v. Inhabitants of Franklin County, 58 Me. 479 (Me. 1870).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

The piece of land demanded in the writ is part of a parcel which was conveyed July 13, 1802, by John Church, with warranty of title, and release of dower by Church’s wife, to “ David Moors, treasurer of the First Meeting-house Society in the center of Farmington, and his successors in said office, for the use of said society so long as it shall be improved for public use,” habendum, “ to the said David Moors and his successors in said office, to the use of said society to their use and benefit forever.” The deed appears to have been made in consideration of $100, the receipt of which is acknowledged, and the property to have been thus conveyed to Moors, as treasurer of a voluntary, unincorporated association, composed of about fifty persons, who, on or about “ ye 3d May, 1802,” at Farmington, subscribed a paper declaring that they are “ desirous to unite and add to the respectability of this town, and are sensible that this end can be attained in no way so well as by building a meeting-house, for public and social worship, near the center of said town,” and, accordingly, “ do agree to form ourselves into a body politic with a determined resolution to effect the building of said house, and we do severally pledge our honor to abide by the regulations hereunto subjoined to the completion of said meeting-house.” The first of these regulations is as follows :

“ 1st. Said meeting-house is to be the exclusive property of said society.” Their determined resolution seems to have been crowned with success; a large parcel of land was purchased and conveyed to their treasurer, as above recited, a meeting-house erected, the [484]*484pews sold, and the house occupied for public worship more or less by various denominations for quite a long series of years.
After the business connected with the erection of the meetinghouse and the sale of the pews was adjusted, the meetings of the association seem to have been very infrequent. But we find a record dated March 1, 1813, of a meeting at which a new treasurer was chosen, and a committee to confer with the town respecting the compensation to be allowed by the town to the proprietors for the use of the house to hold town meetings in. This meeting was twice adjourned for the purpose of petitioning for an act of incorporation, but nothing appears to have been done about it at that time, and no record is found of any meeting of the association from that time until September, 1821. But in 1822 (prior to which time it is agreed that David Moors, who held the legal title to the land in trust for the proprietors, was deceased), an act of incorporation was procured apparently in pursuance of action taken at the meeting of the association in September, 1821, and certain gentlemen, including a considerable number of the original proprietors, “their associates and assigns,” were “incorporated into a body politic by the name of The Proprietors of the Center Meetinghouse in Farmington.” By the second section of the act of incorporation, it was “ further enacted that the land heretofore conveyed to David Moors, treasurer of said proprietors, and now deceased, and his successors in that office, on which the meeting-house aforesaid stands, be and hereby is confirmed to such treasurer as said proprietors shall hereafter choose, for the use and benefit of said proprietors, agreeably to the intention of the original grant; and the treasurer, so hereafter to be chosen, shall be to all intents and purposes the successor of said Moors.” By the third section, the proprietors were empowered to raise money for the purpose of repairing the meeting-house and a proper improvement of the land, and for other incidental expenses to be assessed “ on the several proprietors of pews in said meeting-house, according to the relative value of the respective pews they may own therein as established by said proprietors,” and the private property of each proprietor [485]*485was charged with the payment of such assessments, “ in the same manner as it would be holden to pay State, county, and other taxes.”

The proprietors seem to have promptly organized under the act of incorporation, and to have held their first meeting April 24, 1822, when, among other officers,.they chose John Church, the son of the original grantor of the lot, their treasurer, and appointed a committee to form a code of by-laws and regulations, and report at a future meeting, and a committee to see what repairs are necessary, and receive proposals for making them and report. At an adjournment, May 4, 1822, they voted to accept the code of bylaws reported by the committee, acted on the report of the committee on repairs, and voted that the assessors should “ ascertain, as far as possible, the owners of pews,” and sell the pews, then to be erected in the gallery, to the highest bidder. At a further adjournment, on June 15, 1822, they “ voted that all votes of said proprietors, prior to their incorporation, be valid,” accepted a plan of forty-five pews to be erected in the gallery, and postponed the sale of them at auction previously voted, but authorized the sale by the assessors of one pew on the ground floor held in common, and of the gallery pews at private or public sale, the treasurer to give quitclaim deeds of them. On the 28th of December, in the same year, among other things, they voted to dismiss the second article in the warrant, which was, “ to see what method shall be taken to sell the pews in the gallery,” but passed a vote to build them, agreeably to the plan before accepted, and Have them completed in eighteen months.

This matter of the sale of the gallery pews seems to have been the subject of much discussion and frequent action, as also was the use of the lower floor by the town for town meetings in consideration of stipulated payments.

The forty-five gallery pews were completed at last, and, June 19, 1824, by vote of the corporation, they were offered for sale for a gross sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, and sold in ten shares for that price ($ 10 on each share in cash, and the balance the fol[486]*486lowing winter with interest), “the several purchasers to receive deeds of said pews from the treasurer when securities are given for the payment.” Feb. 10, 1827, they revised their by-laws, providing, among other things, that pews on the lower floor should be estimated at six shares each, and the pews in the gallery at one share each, and one share shall. be entitled to one vote, and the proprietors of twenty pews shall constitute a quorum to do business (changed Aug. 11, 1827, “ so as to have thirty pews on the lower floor constitute a quorum to do business, raise money, or to revise the by-laws); ” and that “all officers shall be chosen by written ballot, except committees, and be continued in office until others shall be chosen in their room;” that “each pew shall be valued on the lower floor in assessing taxes according to their original purchase as they were bid off, and pews in the gallery according to the appraisal of the committee chosen for that purpose; ” and that “ upon change of owners of gallery pews, the new proprietor to give written notice and make proof of the fact to the clerk before he shall be allowed to vote in proprietors’ meetings; ” and the clerk was required to get and keep as complete a list of the proprietors as possible, and transmit a copy to the assessors when a tax was to be assessed.

By an additional act of incorporation, the provisions of the original act as to liability for assessments were “ so far altered and amended as that the pews of the proprietors only shall be liable for the payment of moneys assessed,” . . .

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Bluebook (online)
58 Me. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-inhabitants-of-franklin-county-me-1870.