Talbot v. Town of Little Compton

160 A. 466, 52 R.I. 280, 1932 R.I. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 20, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 160 A. 466 (Talbot v. Town of Little Compton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talbot v. Town of Little Compton, 160 A. 466, 52 R.I. 280, 1932 R.I. LEXIS 42 (R.I. 1932).

Opinion

*281 Rathbun, J.

This bill in equity was brought for the nominal purpose of obtaining a decree restraining a con *282 tinuous trespass to real estate. The real purpose of the action is to try the title to the land in question. The Superior Court entered a decree declaring title to be in the complainant and the cause is here on the respondents’ appeal from said decree.

The bill alleges that complainant has title to and possession of said land; that after she posted the land the town sergeant, by direction of the town council of the respondent town, entered upon the land and removed the signs forbidding trespass. The respondents in their answer deny the allegations of the complainant that she has title to and possession of said real estate and that any trespass has been committed. They further allege that the town of Little Compton has the title to the land and that there are two public ways across the same.

The real estate in question consists of a narrow strip of beach land, situated in said town, approximately 1,000 feet in length and containing a trifle more than two acres. The land is bounded on the west by land of the complainant’s husband, Fred E. Talbot, on the north by Tunipus Pond,— the northeast corner being about opposite to the southeast corner of said pond and the southwesterly corner of land formerly owned by one Sisson — on the east by land apparently owned by the Tunipus Realty Company and on the south by the Atlantic Ocean. The land, which is entirely composed of sand, gravel and rocks, has no herbage except a small amount of beach grass around the edge of said pond.

It is clear that the complainant brought this bill to obtain a determination of the validity of her claim to the land and that the respondents have consented to this proceeding in equity.

*283 *282 Ordinarily courts of equity will not enjoin trespass to land when the parties are in dispute as to the title. In Rogers v. Rogers, 17 R. I. at 625, this court said: “There can be no question that an action of ejectment is the ordinary, proper, *283 and adequate remedy for settling a disputed title, and that courts of equity are not instituted to try issues that may be determined at law.” See also McKittrick v. Bates, 47 R. I. 240; 1 Pom. Eq. Juris. 4th ed. § 177; 14 R. C. L. 450; 32 C. J. 122; note in 32 A. L. R. 502. However, if the respondent raises no objection, courts of equity will sometimes take jurisdiction where the title is in dispute and, if the parties frame issues for that purpose, title to the real estate, as between the parties, will be determined. 32 C. J. 124; Matthews v. Colburn, 102 N. E. (Mass.) 941. Perhaps one reason why equity courts have in such cases consented to take jurisdiction where the dispute between the parties involves title to real estate is because the respondent has not been deprived of a trial by jury, by requiring him, over his objection, to litigate the dispute in a court of equity.

The complainant contends that the trial of this cause should be governed by the technical rules of pleadings applicable to a trial of a law action in trespass quare clausum jregit; and that, therefore, the respondents have, by pleading title in themselves, admitted that the complainant has' possession of the land. No authority is cited in support of this contention. In “Words and Phrases” will be found a definition of liberum tenementum as follows: “In legal effect the plea admits possession in the plaintiff sufficient to enable him to maintain the action against the wrongdoer and asserts a freehold in the defendant, with right to immediate possession as against plaintiff. On the filing of this plea, defendant must prove his title either by deed or other documentary evidence, or by an actual adverse and exclusive possession for 20 years, since by the issue he undertakes to show a title in himself by which the presumption arising from plaintiff’s possession will be avoided.” The bill alleges that the complainant owns the land and discloses that the respondents not only make claim to certain rights and interests in the land but assert the right to do the acts complained of. Issues were framed by stipulation between the parties.

*284 The respondents by pleading title in themselves did not intend to admit possession in the complainant, and we find no reason for holding that by pleading title in themselves they should be deemed to have admitted possession in the complainant. The suit being in equity, the ordinal rules governing trials of causes in equity govern. The complainant is seeking to have the question as to title determined. The burden of proof is upon her, and all defenses are available to the respondents. If the complainant is to prevail she must recover on the strength of her own title and not on the weakness of the respondents’ title. Tripp v. Ide, 3 R. I. 51; Smith v. Haskins, 22 R. I. 6. In 9 R. C. L. 843 the rule was stated as follows: “It is well established that if the plaintiff in an action of ejectment or in the nature thereof relies on a record or paper title, he must show a regular chain of title from the government, or from some grantor in possession, or from a common source from which each of the litigants claims. No length of chain or paper title which does not reach the sovereignty of the soil is sufficient in itself to constitute prima jade evidence of title. There must, in addition, be proof that satisfies the jury that at least one of the grantors in this chain of deeds had been in possession of the premises, where the chain does not reach back to the sovereignty, before the defendant in possession can be required to defend his possession.” In Baxter v. Brown, 26 R. I. 381, the plaintiff, suing in ejectment, proved a good paper title back to 1812. The defendant showed a paper title back to 1869 and actual possession of the land. The court held that defendant had failed to establish title by adverse possession and also that the plaintiff had not established a superior record title. The court said: “Against the plaintiff’s title, shown at the trial, . . . it is not derived from the government nor from a common source with the defendant’s title, nor from or through any persons shown to have been in actual possession of the land. . . . The rule that a good title is one which goes back either to the government or to some one who has had actual possession of *285 the land, or to some one whose title is acknowledged by the defendant, is recognized in 10 Amer. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d ed. 484, and is supported by the numerous cases there cited.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 466, 52 R.I. 280, 1932 R.I. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbot-v-town-of-little-compton-ri-1932.