Rhode Island v. Massachusetts

40 U.S. 233, 10 L. Ed. 721, 15 Pet. 233, 1841 U.S. LEXIS 268
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 40 U.S. 233 (Rhode Island v. Massachusetts) 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
Rhode Island v. Massachusetts, 40 U.S. 233, 10 L. Ed. 721, 15 Pet. 233, 1841 U.S. LEXIS 268 (1841).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The attention of the Court has on several occasions been drawn to' this case by the important questions which have arisen in different . stages of the proceedings. At the last term, it came before us upon a plea in bar to the complainant’s bill, which upon the motion of the complainant had been set down for argument.

This part of the case is reported in 14 Peters, 210, where the allegations contained in the bill are so fully set out that it is unnecessary to repeat them here. The Court having overruled the' plea for the reasons stated in the report of the case, the defendant has since demurred; arid in this state of fhe pleadings the question is directly presented, whether the case stated by Rhode Island in her bill, admitting it to be true as ther.e stated, entitles her to relief.

The character of the case, and of the parties, has made it the duty of the Court to examine very carefully the different- questions which from time to time have arisen in these proceedings. And if those whieh are brought up by the demurrer were new to the Court, or if the judgment now to be pronounced would seriously influence the ultimate decision ; we should deem it proper to hold the subject under advisement until the next term, for the purpose of giving to it a more deliberate examination.;

But although the questions now before the Court did not arise upon the plea,' and of course were not then decided, yet much of the argument on that occasion turned upon principles which are involved in the case as it now stands. The facts stated in the bill were brought before us, and the grounds upon which the complainant claimed relief were necessarily discussed in the argument at the,bar, and the attention of the Court strongly drawn to the subject. The whole case as presented by the bill and demurrer, has been again fully and ably argued, at the' present term; and as the Court has made up its opinion, andaré satisfied that the delay of our judgment to the next term would not enable us to obtain more or better light upon the subject, it would be useless to postpone the decision.

*270 The demurrer admits the truth of the facts alleged in the bill, and it is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion xo -state in a few words' the material allegations contained 'in it.

1st. It alleges that the true boundary line between Massachusetts and Rhode Island, by.virtue of their charters from the English crown, is a line run east and west three miles south of Charles river, or any or every part thereof; and sets out the charters which support, in this respect, the averments in the bill.

2d. That Massachusetts holds possession to a line seven miles south of Charles river,'which does not run east and west, but runs south of a west course; and that the territory between this line and the true one above mentioned, belongs to Rhode Island, and, that the defendant unjustly withholds it from her.

• 3d. That Massachusetts obtained possession of this territory under certain agreements, and proceedings of commissioners appointed by the two colonies, which are set out at large in the' bill; and the complainant avers that the commissioners on the part of Rhode Island, agreed, to this line under the mistaken belief that it was only three miles south of Charles river; and that they were led into this mistake by the representations made to them by the commissioners on the part of Massachusetts, upon whose statement they relied. ......

4th. That this agreement of the commissioners was never' ratified by either of the colonies: and the bill- sets out the various proceedings of the commissioners and legislatures of the two colonies, which if not sufficient to establish the correctness of the averment, are yet not incompatible with it.

5th. The bill further states that the mistake was riot discovéred by Rhode Island until 1740, when she soon afterwards took measures to correct it; that she never acquiesced in the possession of Massachusetts, after the mistake was discovered, but has ever since continually resisted it; and never admitted .any line as the true boundary between them, but the one called for by the charters. Various proceedings are set out, and facts stated in the bill; to show that the complainant never acquiesced; and to account for the delay in prosecuting her claim. Whether they are sufficient or not' for that purpose, is not now in question. They are certainly consistent with the averment, and tend to support it.

*271 The case, then, as made by the bill, and to be now taken as true, is substantially this 5 The charter boundary between these colonies was three miles south of Charles river; and the parties intending to mark a line in that place, marked it by mistake, four miles further south, encroaching so much on the territory of Rhode Island; and the complainant was led into this mistake by confiding in the representations of the commissioners of the defendant. And as soon as the error was discovered, she made claim to the true line, and has ever since contended for It.

We speak of the. case as it appears .upon the pleadings. It may prove to be a very different one, hereafter, when the evidence on both sides is produced. But taking it as it now stands, if it were a dispute between two individuals, in relation to one of the ordinary subjects of private contract; and there had been no laches to deprive the party of his title to relief; would-a Court of Equity compel him to abide by a contract entered into under such circumstances ? It is one of the most familiar duties of the Chancery Court to relieve against mistake, especially when it has been produced by the representations of the adverse party. In this case, the fact mistaken, was the very foundation of the agreement. There was no intention on either side to transfer territory, nor any consideration given by the one to the other to obtain it. Nor was there any dispute arising out of conflicting grants of the crown, or upon the construction of their charters, which they proposed to settle by compromise. Each party agreed that the boundary was three miles south of Charles .river; and the only object was to ascertain and mark that point: and upon the case, as it comes before us, the complainant, avers, and the defendant admits that the place marked, was seven miles south of the river, instead of three, and was fixed on by mistake; and that the commissioners of Rhode Island were led into the error, by confiding in the representations of the Massachusetts commissioners. Now, if this mistake had been discovered a few days after the agreements were made, and Rhode Island had immediately gone before a tribunal, having competent jurisdiction, upon principles of equity, to relieve against a mistake committed by such parties, can there be any doubt that the agreement'. would have been set aside, and Rhode Island restored to the true charter line ? We think not. Agreements thus obtained, *272 cannot deprive the complainant of territory, which belonged to her before; unless she has forfeited her title to relief, by acquiescence or unreasonable delay.

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Bluebook (online)
40 U.S. 233, 10 L. Ed. 721, 15 Pet. 233, 1841 U.S. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhode-island-v-massachusetts-scotus-1841.