Crowell v. Woodbury

52 N.H. 613
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 N.H. 613 (Crowell v. Woodbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crowell v. Woodbury, 52 N.H. 613 (N.H. 1873).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

In support of the report in this case, the petitioner relies upon a dictum in Morrill v. Morrill, 5 N. H. 134. That was a petition under the statute for partition of certain real estate, called the sawmill privilege, at Crowley’s Falls, bounded, &e. The committee made a return- of partition, assigning to one of the petitioners {í a tract of [614]*614land, bounded, &c., together with the right and privilege of taking and drawing from Exeter river so much water as will flow through a gate eighteen inches long and sixteen inches high,” &c.; and to the other, a tract of land, &c., together with a right to take the same quantity of water in the same way, leaving the balance of the land and the balance of the water-privilege to the defendant. The court held that the report was well enough on its face, and that judgment should be entered accordingly, unless it were shown to be very injurious to the property.

In the course of a short per curiam opinion, the court say, — “ When the estate cannot be divided into several parts and a distinct part assigned to each owner, it is to be divided by assigning to one the use of it one week, and to another the use of it another week,” &c.

This case was decided in 1830, and the proceeding was under the statute of 1810, or that of 1829, the two being alike in all respects material here. Laws of 1815, p. 223; Laws of 1830, p. 459. Both confer upon the court power to cause partition to be made, upon application, and the share or shares of the person or persons making the application to be set off from the rest, by a committee, &c.; and both are silent as to what shall be done in case the premises are not partible, or in case they cannot be divided without great injury.

Prior to 1810, the probate court had' exclusive jurisdiction of the matter of partition. The act of February 4, 1789 (Laws of 1792, p. 236), which relates wholly to partition by the’judge of probate, contained a provision, that, when the premises could not be subdivided without great prejudice or inóouvenience, the whole might be assigned to one of the parties, he paying, or giving bond to pay, such sum as the committee should award to the others. But it was not until the revision of the statutes, in 1842, that this provision was incorporated into the act conferring jurisdiction-in matters of partition upon the superior court of judicature. Sec. 25, ch. 228, Gen. Stats., is identical in effect with this clause of the act of 1789, being now made applicable to proceedings in this court; and it is, perháps, a little remarltable that no provision has ever been made for the very possible contingency, that the party to whom the whole land is assigned may not be willing to take the property and pay the price awarded by the committee. Such a contingency was foreseen and provided against in a colonial statute passed during the administration of Lieutenant-Governor Usher, as early as 1693 (3 Prov. Pap. 197, 14);—and see Co. Litt. 165 a, and the statutes of many of our States collected in 1 Washb. R. P. 561, note.

But whether this statute furnishes the means of making legal partition of premises that cannot be divided without great prejudice or inconvenience, when neither of the joint owners is willing to take the whole and pay to the others the price awarded by the committee, it is not now material to inquire. It is enough that in 1830, when Morrill v. Morrill was decided, even this means of escape from the difficulty presented by a case where two joint owners of a thing not partible apply to have their shares therein set off to them in severalty, was not [615]*615furnished to the court; and to increase the embarrassment of the sit* uation, there was no court in the State at that time clothed with equity powers.

In this condition of the law, a case like Morrill v. Morrill, which called for the division of a water-power, naturally suggested the inquiry, What could be done were the thing absolutely indivisible, like a villein, a corody uncertain, and the other examples given by Lord Coke? Co. Litt. 164, b, 165, a.

The court fully recognized the doctrine that partition is a matter of right, and the existence of such a right implied the existence of some legal means whereby to give it effect. Under these circumstances, a special partition, which should direct the alternate enjoyment of the common property by the common owners according to their respective interests, was suggested as the way out of a dilemna which, although not then forced upon them, the court could not fail to see was liable at any time to arise.

That such a mode of making partition has been understood „o be authorized by the early practice of the common law is doubtless true. Co. Litt. 164 b, 165 a, et seq.; Shaw, C. J., in Adam v. Iron Co., 7 Cush. 366; Royce, J., in Conant v. Smith, 1 Aik. (Vt.) 67. How far such a practice ever prevailed, even before the old writ departitione facienda had become obsolete, and before courts of equity assumed jurisdiction in the matter of partition, is not very clear. Without making any particular examination for that purpose, I have not met with any case, where the proceeding was by the common law writ of partition, in whidh such a course seems to have been taken.

But no such special partition was even attempted in Morrill v. Morrill, and the question was in no way directly before the court for determination. The remark, therefore, in that case, upon which the petitioner here relies, was at best purely a dictum, doubtless suggested by the somewhat anomalous condition of the law and the limited powers of the court at that time.

Long before any court having general chancery powers was established in this State, the concurrent jurisdiction of equity in making partition of land held in common by coparceners and tenants in common had become perfectly established—Hargrave’s note to Co. Litt. 169 a; Story’s Eq., sec. 646, et seq.; and there can be no doubt but that this branch of equity jurisdiction was fully conferred upon the court, with other equity powers, by the act of 1832. Whitten v. Whitten, 36 N. H. 326.

Since the decision of Morrill v. Morrill, two observable changes have been made in the statute relating to partition by the court: first, the provision found in sec. 25, ch. 228, Gen. Stats., already referred to; second, the clause in sec. 13 of the same chapter, directing the mode in which the shares shall be set off by the committee, has been made somewhat more explicit by adding the words, “ by proper metes and bounds or other distinct description.” These changes may not have a very important bearing upon the question before us; but we think [616]*616that, taken in connection with the fact that a court of chancery has in the meantime been established, they sufficiently indicate-the intention of the legislature to cover the whole ground, and provide, in one way or the other, for all cases that may arise, without reviving and calling'in the aid of an obsolete device or practice of the common law. Besides, if it had been the intention to renew or reaffirm the existence of such a mode of making partition, it seems extremely probable that it would have formed the subject of an express enactment, as was the case in Massachusetts.

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52 N.H. 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowell-v-woodbury-nh-1873.