Massachusetts v. New York

271 U.S. 65, 46 S. Ct. 357, 70 L. Ed. 838, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 12, 1926
Docket14, Original
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 271 U.S. 65 (Massachusetts v. New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts v. New York, 271 U.S. 65, 46 S. Ct. 357, 70 L. Ed. 838, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 608 (1926).

Opinion

*80 Me. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an original suit in equity brought by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts against the State of New York, the City of Rochester in New York, and certain corporations and individuals, to quiet title to land located *81 in- the City of Rochester, and to enjoin the City from taking it by eminent domain, or in the alternative, to have the amount of compensation for the taking determined by this Court. The case was heard upon bill and answer and the report qf a Special Master appointed, to take proofs and to make an advisory report upon' the questions of fact raised by the pleadings, except as to the amount of damages to be paid for the property if taken by eminent domain.

The land in dispute is a narrow strip of about twenty-1 five acres fronting upon Lake Ontario within the city limits of Rochester. By the Treaty of Hartford, entered into between New York and Massachusetts, December 16, 1786, land within the territorial limits of New York was granted to Massachusetts in private ownership. The title to the land in controversy depends upon the meaning and effect of this treaty, and upon the construction of a subsequent conveyance by Massachusetts of a part of the land thus acquired, through which conveyance the several defendants other than the State of New York derive their title.

Before 1786, Massachusetts and .New York claimed, under Conflicting royal grants, both sovereignty arid title of a large area of what is now western New York. The controversy was settled by the Treaty of Hartford by which Massachusetts gave up all its claim to sovereignty over the territory, and its claim to private.ownership '.in part of it, and. New York ceded.to Massachusetts,- “ thp Right of pre-emption of the . Soil from the native Indians and all other the Estate, Right, Title and Property (the Right~and Title' of- Government Sovereignty and Jurisdiction excepted) ’winch the State of New York hath . . . in or to all the Lands and Territories within the following Limits and Bounds.that is to say,, BEGINNING in the north boundary Line of the State *82 of Pennsylvania in the parallel of forty-two degrees of north Latitude at a point distant eighty-two miles west from the northeast Comer of the State of Pennsylvania on Delaware River as the said boundary Line hath been run and marked by the Commissioners appointed by the States of Pennsylvania and New York respectively and from the said Point or Place of beginning running on a due meridian north to the boundary Line between the United States of America and the king of Great Britain thence westerly and southerly along the said boundary Line to a meridian which will pass one mile due East from the northern Termination of the Streight or waters between Lake Ontario and Lake Erie thence South along the said Meridian to the South Shore of Lake Ontario thence on the eastern side of the said Streight by a Line always one mile distant from and parallel to the said Streight to Lake Erie thence due west to the boundary Line between the United States and the king of Great Britain thence along the said boundary Line until it meets with the Line of Cession from the State of New York to the United States thence along the said Line of Cession to the northwest corner of the State of Pennsylvania and thence East along the northern boundary Line of the State of Pennsylvania to the said place of beginning.”

Article 10 of the Treaty provided that Massachusetts might grant the right of pre-emption in the lands thus acquired, “to any person or persons who by virtue of such Grant shall have good right to extinguish by purchase. the claims of the native Indians,” by compliance with certain conditions not now important.

By act of the Massachusetts legislature, approved April 1/1788 (Laws & Res. 1786-7, c. 135, p. 900), it was provided that “ this Commonwealth doth hereby agree, to grant, sell & convey.”'to Oliver Phelps and Nathaniel Gorham for a purchase price stated in the Act “ all the Right, Title & Demand, which the said Commonwealth *83 has in & to the said Western Territory ” ceded to it by the-Treaty of Hartford. On July 8, 1788, the Five Indian Nations (Mohawks, Oneidas, Onandagas, Cayugas and Senecas) executed a deed or treaty extinguishing the Indian claim to the territory described in it and conveying that territory to Phelps and Gorham. The description embraces approximately the east one-third of the territory ceded to Massachusetts by the Treaty of Hartford, and begins at a point “ in the north boundary line of the State of- Pennsylvania in the parallel of forty-two degrees north latitude at a point distant eighty-two miles west from the northeast comer of Pennsylvania on Delaware river.” The description' proceeds by various metes and bounds, to a point oh the Genesee River from which, so far as now material, it reads as follows:

“ . . . thence running in a direction due west twelve miles, thence running in a direction northwardly, • so as to be twelve miles distant from the most westward bends of said .Genesee River to the shore of the Ontario Lake thence eastwardly along the shores of said Lake to a meridian which will pass through the first point or place of beginning. ...”

By legislative act (Laws & Res. 1788-9, c. 23, pi 35),' approved November 21, 1788, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts granted to Phelps' and Gorham the land which had been conveyed by thé deed or treaty with the Five Tribes, the description of the land; .conveyed being, so far as it is now material, identical with that in the conveyance from the Five Tribes, which we have quoted. By treaty between the Six Nations and the'United States, executed November 11, 1794, known as the Pickering Treaty, 7 Stat. 44, the Indians, formally disclaimed any rights in the land lying east of the west, line of the Pheilps and Gorham tract.

The several corporate and individual defendants who are in possession of or claim an interest in land now in *84 controversy, derive their title, through mesne conveyances, from Phelps and Gorham, who took under the grants last described, from the Five Tribes and from the Commonwealth of'Massachusetts; and Massachusetts is not entitled to relief in this suit unless title in the locus quo was acquired by it by the Treaty oLMartford and remained in it after its grant to Phelps and Gorham.

After the Act approved November 21, 1788, Phelps and Gorham having failed to pay the purchase price stipulated in the Resolve of April 1, 1788, a settlement of the con-. tract or agreement between them and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts was effected. By this they retained the easterly one-third of the lands which had been released and confirmed to them by the Five Tribes and; later conveyed to them by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and they released and quit-claimed to the Commonwealth all their right and title in the remainder of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
271 U.S. 65, 46 S. Ct. 357, 70 L. Ed. 838, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-v-new-york-scotus-1926.