Ring

72 A. 548, 104 Me. 544, 1908 Me. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 18, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 72 A. 548 (Ring) 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
Ring, 72 A. 548, 104 Me. 544, 1908 Me. LEXIS 104 (Me. 1908).

Opinion

Peabody, J.

This is a petition presented by the Land Agent for the appointment of a committee to locate public lots in the Plantation of Elliottsville in Piscataquis County.

Under a public act of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts May 1st, 1794, Samuel Weston was authorized and directed to survey three ranges of townships between Penobscot River and the Million Acre Purchase north of Waldo Patent, which subsequently became .a part of the State of Maine.

The survey located Ranges Seven, Eight and Nine and divided them into townships six miles square. The plantation known as Elliottsville was Township Eight, Range Nine, according to Weston’s survey. By an act of the General Court of Massachusetts, approved July 9, 1784, the Committee for the sale of Eastern Lands were directed in the conveyance of each township to appropriate two hundred acres for the use of the ministry, two hundred acres for the first settled minister, two hundred acres for the use of the Grammar School, and two hundred acres for the future disposition of the General Court, and by an act, approved March 26th, 1788, the previous act was modified so as to require thereafter in the conveyance of every township of six miles square a reservation of four lots of three hundred and twenty acres each, one for the first settled minister, one for the use of the ministry, one for the use of schools and one for the future appropriation of the General Court.

This act continued in force until the separation of Maine from Massachusetts, when its provisions in regard 'to school and ministerial lots were incorporated in paragraph seven, section one of the Articles of Separation adopted June 19th, 1819.

The first conveyance of lands within Township Eight, Range Nine, was the grant by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to the Trustees of the Massachusetts Medical Society dated March 2nd, 1813, by virtue of a resolve passed February 10th, 1810, and by a resolve passed February 27th, 1813. The appropriation was of one township of land to contain six miles square and in order to obtain [548]*548the full township of six miles square the conveyance was of all of township Nine, Range Nine, north of Waldo Patent, except three thousand acres in the north west corner which had been conveyed to William C. Whitney, and to make up for the three thousand acres conveyed to Whitney the grant included a strip of land on the west side of Township Eight, Range Nine, one mile in width upon the north end and two hundred and eighty-six rods in width upon the south end.

In this grant it was provided that the Trustees of the Massachusetts Medical Society should lay out in the township three lots of three hundred and twenty acres each for the following uses, namely, one lot for the use of the ministry, one lot for the first settled minister his heirs and assigns, and one lot for the use of the schools.

By chapter 176 of the Private Laws of 1830, Township Nine, Range Nine, was incorporated as the Town of Wilson. The public lots within this town were located by proceedings authorized by the Act of March 15th, 1821, chapter 41, upon a petition filed by the officers of that town. These proceedings could legally embrace only the lots which had been reserved in the part of the tract above mentioned granted by the Commonwealth to the Massachusetts Medical Society which was within the Wilson Township, so the territory included in the tract on the west side of Township Eight, Range Nine, being in the Plantation of Elliottsville, is involved in the pending petition.

The second conveyance of lands within Township Eight, Range Nine, was a grant by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to the heirs of William Vaughan dated January 25th, 1814, of one-half township of land containing eleven thousand five hundred twenty acres, which grant contained the following provision :

"Conditioned, however, that said grantees their heirs and assigus shall lay out in said tracts four lots of one hundred sixty acres each for the following uses, 1 lot for the first settled minister; 1 lot for the use of the ministry ; 1 lot for the use of the schools ; and one lot for the future appropriation of the General Court, said lots to average in situation and quality with the other land in said tract.”

The third conveyance of lands within Township Eight, Range [549]*549Nine, was the grant by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to the Trustees of the Saco Free Bridge Fund dated October 28th, 1829, of a tract of land surveyed by Tristiam Johnson containing four thousand forty-four acres, in which was the following provision :

"Conditioned, however, that said grantees, their successors and assigns, shall lay out and reserve three lots of fifty-six acres each for the following purposes, viz; 1 lot for the use of the ministry, 1 lot for the first settled minister his heirs and assigns, and 1 lot for the use of the schools within the township, said lots to average in situation and quality with the lands in said tract.”

Township Eight, Range Nine, was thus composed of the tract of land comprising a part of the grant of the Commonwealth to the Massachusetts Medical Society, situated on the west side of the township, the tract of land conveyed to heirs of William Vaughan, the tract of land conveyed to the Saco Free Bridge Fund, and a tract of land lying directly south of the Saco Free Bridge Grant of sufficient width to make the township contain six square miles or twenty-three thousand forty acres, known as the State Tract, which was acquired by the State of Maine from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts under the Separation Act. The State Tract was surveyed by Caleb Leavitt in 1830 and according to his plan contained two thousand six. hundred and twenty-six acres. It is apparently the portion of the division and allotment of lands between Maine and Massachusetts made on the 28th of December 1822, described in the first Division as follows: "Also that part of lot number eight in said ninth range which had not been conveyed, containing four thousand four hundred and seventy-six acres,” but the actual survey made subsequent to this division we may assume is more correct as to the number of acres in the tract though leaving a deficiency in the acreage of the township of one thousand eight hundred and fifty acres. This may have resulted from the exclusion from the Leavitt survey of the part of the State Tract covered by great ponds within its boundaries.

All the lands embraced in this township were granted while the resolve of 1788 was the law governing the reservation of lands for public uses, except the State Tract. The law providing for the [550]*550reservation of one thousand acres of land in every township suitable for settlement was enacted by chapter 280, section 8, of the Public Laws of Maine 1824, and could not apply to prior grants nor to those previously provided for because controlled by the language of paragraph seven of the Articles of Separation, which provides, "All grants of land, franchises, immunities, corporate or other rights, and all contracts for, or grants of land not yet located, which have been made or may be made by the said Commonwealth, before the separation of said District shall take place, having or to have eifect within the said District, shall continue in full force, after the said District shall become a separate state;” but it did apply to the State Tract.

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Bluebook (online)
72 A. 548, 104 Me. 544, 1908 Me. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-me-1908.