Penobscot Development Co. v. Scott

157 A. 311, 130 Me. 449, 1931 Me. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 18, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 157 A. 311 (Penobscot Development Co. v. Scott) 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
Penobscot Development Co. v. Scott, 157 A. 311, 130 Me. 449, 1931 Me. LEXIS 109 (Me. 1931).

Opinion

Pattangall, C. J.

On motion. Trespass quare clausam. Verdict for defendant. Plaintiff’s declaration describes two tracts of land, both situate in Reed Plantation — the first being known as Section 23 in Southern Petitioners’ Tract, containing five hundred thirty-six acres, eighteen acres having been conveyed to Mary Scott, wife of defendant, in 1910; the second being that portion of [451]*451two one hundred acre lots numbered 26 and 28 in the Squatters’ Lots so-called which remained after conveying to defendant in 1910 a twenty-two and one-half acre strip thirty-six rods wide on the west end of both lots.

The particular trespass declared on, so far as Section 23 is concerned, is alleged to have occurred on January 1, 1930, and to have consisted in cutting and removing therefrom thirty-six cedar ties and three or four cords of spruce and fir wood. That declared on with regal’d to Lots 26 and 28 is alleged to have occurred on the same date and involved cutting and removing from these lots seven spruce and fir trees.

Defendant pleaded the general issue, but by his brief statement asserted title by adverse possession to the entire tracts described in plaintiff’s declaration. The record title of the property is admittedly in plaintiff. It was acquired by purchase from the Springer Lumber Company in 1921, which traced its title to the original owners of the township through various mesne conveyances and partition proceedings.

The burden of proof of title by adverse possession being upon him who alleges it, Landry v. Giguere, 127 Me., 268, and cases cited, and defendant having admitted acts which, unless justified by his claim of title, constitute trespass, he is entitled to a verdict only on the theory that he has acquired title to the land on which they occurred.

The issue is clearly defined. If upon any reasonable interpretation of the evidence he has sustained the burden assumed by him, the finding of the jury must stand; otherwise not.

Concerning certain facts, there is no controversy. It appears that some forty years ago, defendant accompanied by his wife came to Reed Plantation and cleared a small tract of land on Section 23 on the westerly side of a highway leading, in a general northerly direction from the settlement of Wytopitlock. Later this clearing was enlarged to include eighteen acres and extended across the highway so as to embrace a triangular piece of land containing approximately four acres on the easterly side thereof. Along both sides of this highway and south of defendant’s clearing other settlers had located homes, among them being one Hardin Smith, who [452]*452occupied a strip of land east of the highway on the westerly portion of what later became known as Squatters’ Lots 26 and 28.

None of these settlers occupied by right of purchase. They settled on the land, as did the defendant, in the manner of the early pioneers, built log huts from the trees which they cut down in making their clearings, after a time cultivated portions of the land, used some for pasture, cut firewood from the adjoining woods and logs for fences, generally occupying such of the territory as satisfied their limited needs, exactly as though they owned the fee.

The land was of small value and the clearings were not extensive. The owners of the township, after years had passed, recognized within certain limits the rights which were acquired by these so-called squatters, and the titles by prescription were in several cases confirmed by deed.

The deed of eighteen acres to defendant’s wife included the original clearing on Section 23. The deed to defendant of twenty-two and one-half acres in lots 26 and 28 included land on which Hai'din Smith settled and on which, after his death, defendant’s father lived and died. These deeds are claimed by plaintiff to limit defendant’s holdings.

His claim to more extensive ownership is based on the theory that irrespective of these deeds, he acquired by adverse possession the whole of Section 23, and that by continued adverse possession of Hardin Smith, his father, and himself, acquired title to the whole of Squatters’ Lots 26 and 28.

It was incumbent on plaintiff, as a part of its prima facie case, to prove trespass by defendant during the period of its ownership. It offered no evidence in support of its allegation that defendant had within that time trespassed on lots 26 and 28. There was testimony that six or seven trees were cut on one of these lots, near the dividing line between them; but as to who cut them or when, the record is silent. Had the case involved these lots alone, regardless of the merits of the controversy between the parties as to title, the verdict, on this record, would have been justified.

There was testimony that since plaintiff purchased the land, defendant cut cedar ties on Section 23, in the vicinity of the eighteen acre lot, the record title to which was in defendant’s wife and to [453]*453which defendant had apparently acquired title by adverse possession prior to the conveyance to her. The sole witness whom plaintiff called on this point testified that these trees were cut easterly of the lot and “might have been some of it cut westerly” thereof. Defendant, whom the jury had a right to believe, testified that they were cut “between me and the Mann land,” evidently meaning between the eighteen acre lot and the east line of Section 23. This would apparently locate the cutting within the limits of the four acre triangle lying east of the highway, separated by it from the eighteen acre lot. The evidence is conclusive that defendant had acquired title by adverse possession to this small tract. This cutting, therefore, did not constitute a trespass.

There was, however, evidence offered by plaintiff that after it purchased the land, defendant cut wood “right along the road in 23.” This could not be accepted as sufficient proof of trespass, even on plaintiff’s theory, because defendant had unquestioned title to certain land along the road in Section 23. Plaintiff rested, therefore, without having proved any actionable trespass on the part of defendant, but defendant supplied the omission. He testified, in answer to a leading question by his counsel, that the wood which plaintiff’s agent referred to as having been cut “right along the road in 23” was cut “just northerly of the eighteen acre piece,” and that, even after having been forbidden to do so, he continued to cut and peel pulpwood at that point. This admitted an act of trespass, as charged in the writ, unless defendant proved his title to Section 23 aside from the land embraced in the eighteen acre lot and four acre triangle.

His claim, in that respect, rested entirely upon his unsupported evidence. The testimony of Mrs. Scott corroborated only their occupation and use of that pa-i-t of Section 23 which made up the twenty-two acres comprising their farm and pasture and to Squatters’ Lots 26 and 28.

He testified that the logs from which his house and barn were built and those that he used for fencing and firewood came from Section 23 but did not state whether from that part to which he unquestionably gained title by adverse possession or from the part in dispute; and there is no evidence that he cultivated, cleared', [454]*454fenced or used as pasture any other part of Section 23. The only use he had made of the land in dispute was to cut saw logs, poles, ties and pulpwood thereon at different times during forty years.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

John Wallingford Fruit House Inc. v. MacPherson
386 A.2d 332 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1978)
Inhabitants of Town of Island Falls v. AKR INC.
170 A.2d 395 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 A. 311, 130 Me. 449, 1931 Me. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penobscot-development-co-v-scott-me-1931.