Hunter v. Marlboro

12 F. Cas. 957
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1846
StatusPublished

This text of 12 F. Cas. 957 (Hunter v. Marlboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunter v. Marlboro, 12 F. Cas. 957 (circtdma 1846).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Justice.

This is a case of no little intricacy and doubt. The events in dispute occurred long since, some of them near half a century, and most of them over a quarter, and they are naturally obscured by time and death and forgetfulness. They are rendered still more doubtful, by an attempt in most instances of controverted facts to prove what is relied on, by oral testimony rather than by writings or records: and several of the legal questions raised have been rendered the more difficult by founding them on supposed oral agreements between parties, often secret and loose and at variance with the written conveyances. They are thus attempted to be maintained in equity through resulting trusts, or part performances, or some detached recognitions of them in subsequent writings. But I am obliged to take the case as it is presented; and after being elaborately argued on both sides, and considered by the court with care, X shall render that judgment on it which the facts, so far as they can be unravelled, and the law and the equity of the case seem to demand. The conclusions at which I have arrived are such as to render unnecessary' any decisive opinion on several of the questions discussed, and many of the objections taken to the testimony. As to others, preliminary to the merits, such as the motion to amend the bill, so as to conform to the record of the town, which was not before the respondents when they answered, it is granted in order not to leave them in a false position. I do this, on that account, though the matter of the [960]*960amendment will be of no importance in the view taken by the court, and if it was, the influence of what was stated at first, and has been thus corrected, would- have to be weighed as it deserved under all the circumstances.

Another of these preliminary questions is the competency of the inhabitants of the town as witnesses, and the competency of their admissions or statements pertaining to this subject I consider it to be well settled in New England, ever since it has been divided into townships, endowed with certain specified powers as public political corporations, and holding little property except for public purposes, and the inhabitants of them liable to taxes only for public objects, and the property held by each, being private and independent, rather than in common with the rest, that those inhabitants are competent witnesses in actions where the town is a party. 1 N. H. 273; 5 Conn. 416; 12 Johns. 285; and other cases cited in a note, 1 Greenl. Ev. 208.

Their interest is of so public a character, rather than private, so small in any event in a pecuniary view, and the necessity of the case such to prove transactions occurring in a town by the inhabitants, or not all (23 Pick. 13), that their competency has been very uniformly admitted, leaving their credibility to be weighed under all the circumstances by the jury. Any principle, which would exclude the inhabitants of such public corporations of a political character from being witnesses, would exclude the inhabitants of a county where that is interested, or even the inhabitants of the state in all public prosecutions in the name of the state; a ruling that would be suicidal to the judicial tribunals themselves, and leave them, as well as all individuals within the state, exposed to criminal outrage and destruction, without the means of legal proof for redress or punishment. Where these considerations have not led courts to admit such inhabitants as witnesses, as it seems to me they ought to, without a special statute authorizing it, or when doubts have required declaratory legislation, it has been at times had in favor of their admission, as in Vermont, Massachusetts, Delaware, New Jersey, and Louisiana, as well as now in England by 54 Geo. III. c. 170, and - 3 & 4 Viet. c. 25. The difference between official members or officers of a corporation and private members, is as great as that between trustees and cestui que trusts. [Louisville, C. & C. R. Co. v. Letson) 2 How. [43 U. S.] 510, 511, arguendo; City of London v. Wood, 12 Mod. 669. So it is well settled, that citizens of a county or state may be judges in cases where the county and state are a party, whether they be civil or criminal suits. But if the judge is mayor of a city, and the suit is in the name of the mayor and commonalty, perhaps he cannot sit, without a license by statute, as it is trying what really, as well as nominally, is his own cause, as an officer. But if the suit was in the name of the city of London, or of its mayor and commonalty, and the judge was merely a citizen of London, he eould sit. Id.

The next question connected with this, in the present cause, is, whether the confessions of such inhabitants are competent evidence to bind the town. This question does .not depend on the decision of the former one, and allowing such confessions to bind, when the person making them is not a competent witness, and excluding them when he is, as argued at the bar. Because, unless a person is a party on the record, or an agent to the party, or is the party in interest conducting the suit, his admissions are, as a general rule, not competent in respect to it, whether he be admissible as a witness or not Here the confessions of the inhabitants are not competent, because, as individuals, they are not parties, the suit being in the name of and for the public corporation (21 Me. 506); nor are the inhabitants the parties in interest as individuals,- but are merely liable in a certain contingency to be affected by the result in their public relations and public liabilities. The defendant, as a corporation, may make admissions by its votes and records, which would be competent, and so by its duly authorized agents; but these would be admitted, because confessions of the corporation, either made in its corporate meetings by a vote, or made by its public representatives, selected and authorized by such a vote, and made in that capacity, and not in an individual capacity, as in that of a mere inhabitant of the town. 8 Pick. 127; 1 Metc. (Mass.) 479. Who ever heard that the confessions of a private citizen of the state should bind the state? or of a citizen of a county should bind a county? The English cases on this subject are cited as conflicting with these views. 1 Greenl. Ev. p. 208; 11 East, 586; 1 Maule & S. 636. But they may have been, in some instances, where the confessions of the inhabitants appeared to be of such as were acting in the capacity of agents for the town or parish. Or they may have been in other cases, where the town or parish did not sue as a corporation. But however they may have arisen, the confessions of inhabitants merely as such, are here not competent.

Passing next to the merits of this case, there are a few leading features in it, respecting the early conveyances from D. Hunter, about which little contradictory evidence exists, and which force the mind strongly to one conclusion. The first is, that he was seised of these premises, and in the actual occupation of them in 1801; that the farm was large, consisting of more than two hundred and fifty acres of land, with the usual buildings; that while in prison for a small debt of only §14 and costs, he conveyed the whole to one Joab Stow, for [961]*961the consideration of only $250 named in the deed, and without other proof of any debt or payment whatever between them; that he then swore out of jail, taking the poor debtor’s oath, and immediately returned to his family, still residing on the farm; and that they continued, uninterruptedly, to occupy the same till the conveyances of it to the town of Marlboro’, twenty years after-wards, in A. D. 1821.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-marlboro-circtdma-1846.