Spaulding v. HE Fletcher Company

205 A.2d 556, 124 Vt. 318, 1964 Vt. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 6, 1964
Docket1223
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 205 A.2d 556 (Spaulding v. HE Fletcher Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spaulding v. HE Fletcher Company, 205 A.2d 556, 124 Vt. 318, 1964 Vt. LEXIS 107 (Vt. 1964).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is an action of tort. The plaintiff alleging to be the assignee of certain reserved rights to a granite quarry in the Town of Plymouth, seeks conpensatory and punative damages from the defendant for granite removed by it from the quarry which the plaintiff claims to be hers by virtue of the claimed assignment. Trial was had in the Windsor County Court. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the court below granted defendant’s motion for a verdict to be directed in its favor. This appeal is not only from the verdict and judgment but from the ruling of the trial court excluding from admission in evidence certain documentary exhibits offered by plaintiff in proof of title.

The granite quarry, which is the center of this controversy, is located in the Calvin Coolidge State Forest in the Town of Plymouth. The land upon which the quarry is situated is part of a right or original share in the township, granted by Benning Wentworth, the last Royal Governor of New Hampshire, for the use of the Church of England. Under the original grant, the Church was entitled to receive the rentals for this land for its support. Such lots have long been designated as “glebe land” in Vermont.

Because the rights of lessor and lessee in such glebe land are involved in the questions before us, and important in the decisions which must be made, it will be helpful for an understanding of the case to summarize them.

The American Revolution resulted in the legislative transfer of income from Church of England glebe lots to the schools of the respective towns in which such lots were located, and the withdrawal of such income from the Church. The care of such lands was placed in the hands of the respective town selectmen. 24 V.S.A. §2401. For a more complete historical background, see Bogart, The Vermont Lease Lands.

The selectmen of such town, except when the land has otherwise been disposed of according to law, are entitled to the possession of such lands. 24 V.S.A. §2402. Selectmen who are in possession of *320 such lands “may lease such lands as they deem beneficial, reserving rents for the same which shall be paid annually into the treasury of the town.” 24 V.S.A. §2403.

Since the early days of the State, such glebe lands have been conveyed by durable leases, conveying to the lessee, his heirs and assigns, a lease of the land for “as long as grass grows and water runs” or phrases of similar durability. The consideration for such leases is an annual rental. Early in the history of these glebe lands it was held that the rights which accrued to a lessee under such leases, and which he could pass to another by assignment, could not be divested by the unilateral act of the State.

The selectmen are empowered to prosecute or defend any actions in the name of the town, necessary to recover or protect their possession. 24 V.S.A. §2402. '

The glebe land with which we are here concerned was originally leased by the selectmen of Plymouth to one Timothy Wetherby in 1819. The lease was a durable one and provided for a yearly rent of twelve dollars to be paid to the town. The lease contained a provision that “if it should happen that said yearly rent of twelve dollars hereby reserved or any part thereof to be behind and unpaid for a period of sixty days next over or after the day wherein the same ought to be paid as aforesaid, the same being first lawfully demanded, that then and from thenceforth it shall and may be lawful, that the selectmen and their successors in office, to enter again upon the land and expel Wetherby and his heirs and assigns from the premises.”

The parties are agreed that the glebe land in question was passed by assignment from one lessee to another over the years until one Arthur Walker became the lessee in 1925, with the exception of one small parcel of .land not material to the questions presented here.

'On November 17, 1925, Arthur Walker signed and acknowledged a quit-claim deed by which he transferred all his right, title and interest in the glebe lot to the State of Vermont. This deed was not recorded in the land records of the Town of Plymouth until December 22, 1925. The glebe land was then made a part of the Calvin Coolidge National Forest by the State of Vermont, and came under the jurisdiction of the Department of Forests and Parks.

On September 13, 1961, the Department of Forests and Parks of the State of Vermont leased the granite deposits on such lot for a.ten-year period, with a right of renewal for an additional ten years, to the *321 defendant, H: E. Fletcher Company. There is no dispute but that the Fletcher Company had, since receiving such lease from tire State, removed and sold quantities of granite of considerable value from the premises.

The crux of the matter before us is the offered documentary exhibits of the plaintiff which she contends would have established her superior claim of title to the granite on the glebe lot over that of the defendant. If the lower court was correct in excluding such exhibits from the evidence in the case, plaintiff admits the direction of a verdict in favor of the defendant would also have been correct.

The cornerstone of plaintiff’s structure of title-is her offered exhibit No. 211. This exhibit purports to be a new lease, or as plaintiff contends, a novation of the old lease, between the selectmen of Plymouth and Arthur Walker. The significant difference between the terms of the original lease under which- Walker held possession of the glebe land as the assigned lessee, and the claimed novation, is the reservation by the selectmen for the town of granite rights on the glebe lot in the claimed novation.

Other exhibits, offered by the plaintiff and excluded from evidence by the lower court, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, stem from the claimed novation. One such exhibit is a lease from the selectmen of the town of the reserved granite rights on the glebe lot to William W. Stockney and John G. Sargent on December 1, 1929 on payment of an annual rent. Other excluded exhibits are various quit-claim deeds and probate decrees, which plaintiff says, would establish her present possession of the granite rights reserved by the town.in the novation of the old lease with Walker, and leased by the town to Stickney and Sargent.

Returning to offered Exhibit 211, the claimed novation is dated as of October 1, 1925. It was not acknowledged, however, until November 21, 1925. It was recorded in the land records of the Town of Plymouth. Plaintiff does not dispute that the effective date of this instrument would be on the date of acknowledgment, November 21, 1925. While no evidence appears in the record before us as to the date of delivery of the quit-claim deed from Walker to the State of Vermont the deed is signed and acknowledged as of November 17, 1925. A deed is presumed to have been delivered at the date of the instrument, and this presumption is strengthened if the date of the acknowledg *322 ment is the same as that of the deed. 16 Am. Jur. Deeds, §387.' See 9 Wigmore, Evidence §2520 (B), at 436. It follows that the effective date of the deed from Walker to the State was prior to the effective date of the claimed instrument of novation.

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Bluebook (online)
205 A.2d 556, 124 Vt. 318, 1964 Vt. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaulding-v-he-fletcher-company-vt-1964.