Inhabitants of Greenfield v. Inhabitants of Camden

74 Me. 56, 1882 Me. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 30, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 Me. 56 (Inhabitants of Greenfield v. Inhabitants of Camden) 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
Inhabitants of Greenfield v. Inhabitants of Camden, 74 Me. 56, 1882 Me. LEXIS 101 (Me. 1882).

Opinion

Peters, J.

This action is to recover for supplies furnished to David Gordon, wife and minor children, paupers in the town of Greenfield. The facts disclose that David is the son of John Gordon, Junior, whose father was John Gordon, Senior, and that David had a brother first known as John Gordon, Third, and [61]*61that all of them lived in the early part of the present century in the town of Camden. John Gordon died and was buried in Camden "a few years before the war of 1312.” John Gordon, Junior, died in Greenfield in about the year 1850. John Gordon, Third, died during service in the war of 1812. David lives in Greenfield.

The case does not disclose that David has any settlement in the state, unless he takes derivatively the settlement of his father, which the plaintiffs contend the father obtained by being an inhabitant of Camden when that 'town was incorporated on February 17, 1791. Upon this hinge, in our view of the facts, the case turns.

Bearing upon this question the following facts, objected to by the defendants, are relied upon by the plaintiffs : First, papers upon which John Gordon, Junior, obtained a revolutionary pension, being his own sworn declaration, and the accompanying affidavits of two other persons many years deceased, to the effect that ho was born in blow Hampshire in 1764, and lived in Camden from his early youth until he removed therefrom in about the year 1813. However much weight these papers may have morally, they are not legally admissible. As to strangers, they are hearsay merely, and do not, in the main facts sworn to, come under any of the exceptions which make hearsay admissible. The only admissible fact contained therein is the declaration of the pensioner that he was born in 1764. The law receives his statement of the date of birth, but many authorities refuse to receive such evidence of the place of birth, in settlement cases. 1 Green. Ev. § § 125, 555; 1 Whar. Ev. § § 208, 821; Wilmington v. Burlington, 4 Pick. 174; Hall v. Mayo, 97 Mass. 416; Adams v. Swansea, 116 Mass. 591.

The next item of evidence presented is the copy of a deed from the registry of Lincoln county, dated October 12, 1786, in which John Gordon, Junior, deeded to Peter Ott land iu Camden, in which deed the grantor is described as " of a place called Camden in Lincoln county.” There can be no mistake that John Gordon, Junior, was the father and not the grandfather of David, inasmuch as the distinction is well kept up between the two names, [62]*62as evidenced by subsequent conveyances and by various allusions to the two persons in subsequent records of the town. The testimony of several aged persons who are called as Avitnesses confirms the fact. The recital of John Gordon, Junior’s, residence in this deed is competent evidence tending to show that fact. It is an act done ante litem motam, a part of the res gestae, the actors in which are not noAv supposed to be living. Oldtown v. Shapleigh, 33 Maine, 278; Ward v. Oxford, 8 Pick. 476.

The next item in the chain of proof is found in the records of the town clerk of Camden for 1791 and succeeding years. It is needless to argue that the town records are competent proof of the matters found therein. No matter whether they were kept with technical accuracy or not. They pertain to the res gestee, are the acts of the town, and are ancient historical records. These records disclose that on April 15, 1791, the selectmen laid out a road, describing it as running, among other boundaries, "by John Gordon’s lot,” and "to John Gordon, Junior’s, house.” On the same day a road was laid out " from Clam Cove to John Gordon, Junior’s.” In the same year there was an article in the town meeting warrant, " to see if the town vvould accept a road laid out from Mr. Ott’s to John Gordon, Junior’s” ; and the town voted to accept " a road laid out from Clam Cove to John Gordon, Junior’s,” and "not to accept a road laid, out from Peter Ott’s to John Gordon, Junior’s.” In 1791 there also appears a record of a road " leading to a road that leads to J ohn Gordon, Junior’s,” and the town in that year " accepts the road which comes into the road that leads from Clam Cove to John Gordon, Junior’s.” In December, 1791, John Gordon (Senior,) of Camden, conveys land to William Thompson.

The town clerk’s records and registry of deeds show the following facts : That "John Gordon, Junior, of Camden,” on June 2, 1792, conveyed land to E. Gay; that on April 4, 1793, "John Gordon, Junior, of Camden,” conveyed land to W. Hewitt;, that, on April 1, 1793, the town accepted a road, running in one of its boundaries "to J ohn Gordon, J unior’s, fence;” that in the same year, John Gordon and John Gordon, Junior, were the first two signers of a petition for the call of a town meeting; that in 1794, [63]*63tbe selectmen make return of a road, "to the road that leads from Clam Cove to John Gordon, Junior’s ; that, on January 8, 1795, "John Gordon, Junior, of Camden,” conveyed land to Robeson; that, on June 18, 1795, William Thompson conveyed land in Camden "to John Gordon, Junior, of Camden;” that, on April 23, 1798, Joseph Pierce convoyed land in Camden "to John Gordon, Junior, of Camden,;” that, on October 30,1800, "John Gordon, of Camden,” conveyed land to E. G. Dodge, signing and acknowledging the deed as "John Gordon, Junior,” and Mary the wife of John, Junior, joins in the deed to relinquish dower, while the wife of the father was not Mary but Jane Gordon; that, in 1806, John Gordon, Junior, was accepted by the town as a bondsman of a town collector; that, in 1807, land in Camden was conveyed to and also by "John Gordon, Junior, of Camden;” and that in the years 1808 and 1809, "John Gordon, Junior, was chosen hogreeve.”

All the assessment and valuation lists of the town that can be found, up to the year 1813 inclusive, comprising the years 1801, 1804, 1805, 1806, 1807, 1808, 1809, 1811, 1812 and 1813, contain the names of John Gordon and John Gordon, Junior; and John Gordon, Junior, was constantly taxed as the possessor of a considerable real estate, and as a resident of the town. We think the tax exhibits sustain the position taken by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that after 1808, the probable date of the death of John Gordon, Gordon, Junior, was taxed by the ñame of Gordon, Senior, and Gordon, Third, as Gordon, Junior. A glance at the lists shows it.

Then comes the question, do all of these facts combined prove, prima facie, that John Gordon, Junior, .had his residence in Camden, on February 17, 1791? We think such a prima facie case is made out.

By the deed of October 17, 1786, John Gordon, Junior, declares that he was of Camden at that date. That meant more than that he was bodily there. We think it meant that he was residing and dwelling there. Those were days when a man was not apt to have different residences, or a domicile in one place and a residence in another. Best, in his work on evidence, says [64]*64that the place where a person lives must be taken, prima facie, to be his domicile. 2 Best Ev. *535. No doubt, such a declaration in a deed would amount under many circumstances to but slight evidence. But its importance here arises somewhat from the feet that probably not the slightest other legal evidence can ever be adduced in relation to the whereabouts or residence of the grantor at that time. Its 'importance is increased from the fact that it is not inconsistent with any other known event.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Me. 56, 1882 Me. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-greenfield-v-inhabitants-of-camden-me-1882.