Snow v. Inhabitants of Orleans

126 Mass. 453, 1879 Mass. LEXIS 292
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 126 Mass. 453 (Snow v. Inhabitants of Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snow v. Inhabitants of Orleans, 126 Mass. 453, 1879 Mass. LEXIS 292 (Mass. 1879).

Opinion

Colt, J.

This is a writ of entry, brought in May 1877, to recover a small triangular lot in Orleans, bounded on all sides by the highway. In 1850, an academy building stood upon it, which in that year was raised up, repaired and improved by one Otis, who then took charge of it as a teacher, and remained in charge until, some time in the following year. Otis had no title to the land, and when he went away, the amount expended by him in repairs was raised by a subscription, divided into thirty shares of ten dollars each, and the money paid over to him. He gave no written conveyance of any interest in the land or building to any one, but the shareholders took possession of the academy, and maintained a school in it until 1857, the lot being used for a playground. In 1859, they sold the building, to be removed from the premises, for $200, and divided the proceeds. From that time to 1864, the lot remained vacant, unfenced and unused. In that year it was fenced, planted with ornamental trees, and furnished with a flagstaff. This was done with money raised by the contributions of neighbors and former pupils of the academy, in token, as they declared, of their interest in and love for an institution which had been of such lasting benefit; and for the purpose of preserving the place for the benefit of the town. After this, and until the library building was erected by the town in 1877, the lot was kept in order by the demandant and others, some of whom were shareholders, so called, in the money raised to pay Otis.

The demandant was one of the original shareholders, and at the trial claimed to be the owner of a majority of the shares. He produced deeds from Seabury and Snow, two other shareholders, dated in March and April 1877, which were delivered on the premises. But his right to the land depends upon his having [455]*455acquired title by bis own adverse possession and the possession of those whose rights he has obtained since 1857, and he claimed no other title.

The tenant claimed the premises under a deed dated in 1820 from Timothy Doane to John Doane, who by deed executed February 28, 1877, acknowledged in March, and recorded in April of the same year, conveyed the same to the town, upon the express condition, that the building in which Snow’s library was to be deposited and kept should be erected thereon. The tenant also, for the purpose of showing title in John Doane, put in a deed to him from Sparrow Horton, dated in 1841.

Against this title by deed in the tenant, the jury must have found that the demandant had acquired no title by disseisin ; and there was abundant evidence to justify this finding, on the ground that the demandant had not shown an adverse, exclusive and uninterrupted possession for such time as to defeat the record title of the tenant.

We find nothing, in the rulings and instructions given at the trial, now open to the demandant’s exceptions.

The subscription papers of 1864 and 1865, signed by Seabury and Snow, were properly admitted as showing that the relation of those persons under whom the demandant claimed was not that of parties claiming title to the land at that time. And the demandant’s offer to prove that a person not a subscriber to the fund asked his permission to make the contemplated improvements, was properly refused, as an offer to prove the act of a mere stranger.

The deed of Sparrow Horton to John Doane in 1841

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Bluebook (online)
126 Mass. 453, 1879 Mass. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snow-v-inhabitants-of-orleans-mass-1879.