The State of Rhode Island v. the State of Massachusetts

39 U.S. 210, 10 L. Ed. 423, 14 Pet. 210, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 39 U.S. 210 (The State of Rhode Island v. the State of 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
The State of Rhode Island v. the State of Massachusetts, 39 U.S. 210, 10 L. Ed. 423, 14 Pet. 210, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 371 (1840).

Opinion

Mr: Chief Justice Taney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

When this case was last before the Court, Massachusetts had not made her election, whether she would continue her appearance to the suit, or withdraw it according to the leave previously granted. She has since that time made-her election, by. putting in her plea to the amended bill of the complainant; and both parties are now regularly before the Court.

' in the present stage of the case, the question is upon the sufficiency of the plea, as a bar to the relief sought by the complainant’s bill. The object of the bill is to establish the boundary between the two states, according to their respective charters; and to be restored to the right of jurisdiction and sovereignty over that portion of her *252 territory of which she alleges that Massachusetts has unjustly deprived her.

The bill states the various charters from the crown, to the colonies of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, from 1621, to 1691; and avers that, by virtue of the charter of Rhode Island, the 'boundary between her and Massachusetts was a line run east and west, three miles south of Charles river, or any or every part thereof; that the place of the.said line being unsettled and in dispute between -the two colonies, commissioners were mutually appointed to ascertain and settle it; that these commissioners met in 1710; and that the commissioners of Massachusetts then represented that a certain Nathaniel Woodward and Solomon Saffrey had, a long time before, ascertained the point three miles south of Charles river, ahd had set up a stake there ; and that the commissioners of Rhode Island, relying on these -representations, and believing them to be true, entered into the agreement of 1710, which is recited at large in the bill; and which adopts .the place marked by Woodward and Saffrey, as the commencement of the line between Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

The bill further states, that no mark, stake,, or monument at that time existed; and that the persons who consented to- the pretended agreement, did not go to the place where it was alleged to have been set up, nor make any survey, nor take any measures,'to ascertain 'whether the place was, in fact, three miles, and no more, south of Charles river.

That the said agreement was never assented to or ratified by thé colony, or'the'state of-Rhode Island; and that the tract of one mile in breadth, referred to in the agreement, was never conveyed to or enjoyed by the town of Providence, or the colony of Rhode Island;, and that no persons appointed by the governor and council of the' said ty'o governments of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, within the space of six months from the date of the agreement, or at any other time, showed the line of Woodward and Saffrey, or raised or renewed- any marks, stakes, or other memorials, according- to the terms of the said pretended agreement.

The bill then proceeds' to state the continuance of the controversy about the-boundary, and the appointment of commissioners by both colonies, in 1717 and 1718; that they met.in 1718, and that the-like representations, as those charged to nave taken place at the former' meeting of the commissioners; were again made by the commissioners of Massachusetts; that they were again believed by the commissioners of Rhode Island; and the agreement of the 22d of October,. 1718, executed by them under that mistake. This agreement is set out at length. The complainants aver that the commissioners did not go to the place where the stake was -alleged to.jiave been set up, or make any survey-in relation to this agreement. These averments are; in substance, the same with those made'in relation to the agreement of 1710.. The bill then' sets'out an order of the General Assembly of Rhode Island, directing the return of the commissioners *253 to be accepted and placed to record bn the colony book; but the complainants aver that the last mentioned agreement was never ratified by either Rhode Island or Massachusetts.

The bill then sets out the running of the line, under the belief on the part of the Rhode Island commissioners, that it was only three miles south of Charles river, when it was in fact more than seven; sets out, at large, their report of the running, which is dated May 14, 1719, and that the return was approved by the General Assembly of Rhode Island; b'ut the bill avers that the persons who signed that report, were never authorized by Rhode Island to run, agree upon, or report, said .line, and had no legal authority to act in the premises; and that Massachusetts, about the timé last mentioned, wrongfully possessed herself of the disputed territory, and hasbeld it ever since.

The bill further states, that the line run as aforesaid was never established by any act binding upon-the complainant; on the contrary, she has always claimed that the true dividing line was three miles south of Charles river: that she has never acquiesced in the claim of Massachusetts to a different line; and that the claim of Rhode Island was publicly and frequently urged by the colony, and by the freemen and inhabitants thereof; that all the proceedings of Rhode Island before mentioned, were'founded on the mistaken belief that the stake set up by Woodward and Saffrey, and the line run as aforesaid, was only three miles south of Charles river; that this mistaken belief continued until about 1749; that controversies existing during that period between the* citizens of the two colonies in relation to' the boundary, Rhode Island, in the year last mentioned, appointed certain persons to run the line, when it became manifest that the line run as above mentioned -in 1-719, was more than three miles south of Charles river.

The bill then states the negotiations and other proceedings of the two colonies in relation to this boundary; that commissioners were appointed on both sides to run the'line; that it was actually run, as now claimed by the complainant, by the commissioners of Rhode Island, in the absence of the commissioners of Massachusetts-; who refused to attend. All of these things are particularly set out in the bill; and also that Rhode IsFand attempted to obtain the decision of the king in council; and the failure is accounted for by the. poverty of the colony at that time, and the war which shortly afterwards broke out between France-and England; that the war of the Revolution, which soon followed, interrupted and defeated the attempt to obtain the decision of the king in council; that in 1782, the legislature of Rhode Island again took up the subject, and appointed a committee, who reported in favour of the claim now made by the complainant; that in 1791, the two-states mutually appointed eomsioners to adjust this boundary, who met together in that year; and at that meeting, the commissioners on the part of Massachusetts ¿cknowledged, and also set forth in their report subsequently made to the legislature, that the pretended agreement of 1719, herein before mentioned, had never been ratified either by Massachusetts *254

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 U.S. 210, 10 L. Ed. 423, 14 Pet. 210, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-state-of-rhode-island-v-the-state-of-massachusetts-scotus-1840.