Webber v. Austin

121 A. 673, 123 Me. 95, 1923 Me. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 A. 673 (Webber v. Austin) 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
Webber v. Austin, 121 A. 673, 123 Me. 95, 1923 Me. LEXIS 112 (Me. 1923).

Opinion

Deasy, J.

On report. Peal action in which the plaintiff seeks to recover land in the village of Grand Lake Stream described in the declaration thus:—

“A certain tract of land situated on the easterly side of Grand Lake Stream, in'the Plantation of Grand Lake Stream, heretofore township number three (3) in the first range of townships north of Bingham Penobscot Purchase, and known as Hinkley township, which tract of land is described as follows: Beginning on the westerly side of Church Street, at a point six hundred fifty (650) feet northerly of Milford road, and running westerly, at a right angle with line of said Church street, ten (10) rods; thence northerly, at a right angle, .thirty-five (35) rods; thence easterly, at a right angle, twenty-six (26) rods; thence southerly, at a right angle, twenty-seven and one half (27§) rods; thence westerly, at a right angle, sixteen (16) rods; thence southerly, at a right angle; by westerly line of Church street, to place of beginning.”'

The plaintiffs' title is based upon two mortgages from Charles W. Clement, Trustee to John P. Webber, one dated May 7, 1887 for [97]*97forty thousand dollars, and the other dated December 13, 1887 for twenty-five thousand dollars, both mortgages having been assigned to the plaintiff Charles P. Webber and by him foreclosed. The other plaintiffs hold under deed from Charles P. Webber. These mortgages contain covenants in the usual form. The description in them includes the locus.

The defendant interposes three grounds of defense: (1) Title by deed. (2) Title by adverse possession. (3) That even if the defendant has acquired no title either by deed or adverse possession the plaintiffs have failed to make out a prima facie case entitling them to prevail over the defendants mere possession admitted by the declaration.

Defendant’s Record Title.

The essentials of the defendants record title are these: Deed from Charles P. Webber (plaintiff) et al, dated August 14, 1896 running to the International Leather Co. Deed of same date from Charles W. Clement, Trustee, to the same grantee. A series of deeds in some of which the descriptions are ambiguous, but which are undoubtedly sufficient to transmit to the defendant the International Leather Company’s title to the locus. The defendant as above indicated holds under a deed from the plaintiff signed by his authorized attorney.

This deed includes large tracts of land in various parts of Washington County. We are concerned only with this part of the description. “Also any and all other buildings of every kind whatsoever, and the several lots of land belonging to the same situated within the limits of the Village of Grand Lake Stream in said town of Hinckley as said limits are delineated in the 'Atlas aforesaid.” (Colby’s Atlas).

Whatever buildings and land belonging to the same in the village of Grand Lake Stream were in 1896 owned by Charles P. Webber passed by this deed to the Leather Company, the defendant’s predecessor.

It fairly appears from the evidence that in 1896 there was one building, and only one, standing upon the land described in the writ; that this building, known as a camp, still stands and is occuped during a part of each year by an Indian family named Tomah.

[98]*98From these facts it is obvious that in 1896 the plaintiff Charles P. Webber parted with his title to this camp and the land belonging thereto, by deed to the Leather Company through whom the defendant takes title. The plaintiff of course cannot recover the property which he thus 'conveyed.

The phrase “land belonging thereto” is vague, but is sufficient to convey a camp lot.

A copy from Colby’s Atlas introduced in evidence indicates the camp to be upon Lot 12 in the section between Bates and Lake Streets. The surveyor however testifies that the camp is not in the place thus indicated. The court has no data from which it can describe the'lot. But the camp and lot used with it and reasonably necessary to be used with it are owned by the defendant and must be excepted from any land which the plaintiff recovers.

The plaintiff raises this objection to the defendant’s record title:— The deed to the Leather Co. was not signed by Charles P. Webber personally, but by his father John P. Webber as his attorney. The deed plainly includes the camp and lot, but the plaintiff says that his father had no right to so include it inasmuch as his power of attorney authorized the sale only of village property appertaining to the tanneries, or necessary to their enjoyment.

But Charles P. Webber allowed many years to pass after the deed was recorded before making the claim that his father had exceeded his authority. So many years indeed were permitted to pass that probably any claim against the estate of his father on account of selling property which (as the son now says) he had no right to sell has been barred by time.

In view of this long delay and the general situation as disclosed by the evidence we think that in the absence of direct testimony pro or con, we may fairly assume that in 1896 the camp and lot were village property appertaining to or necessary to the enjoyment of the tanneries.

Adverse Possession.

The defendant urges that the plaintiffs have never had possession of the locus, or any part of it. This is immaterial. The plaintiffs do not claim title by possession, but by deed. There are and have been no buildings upon the land to which possessory title is claimed. [99]*99There is no evidence of fencing, cultivation or other use. The defendant utterly fails to show title by adverse possession.

This would end the case and the plaintiffs be entitled to recover the land claimed, except the camp and its curtilage but for the further claim that the plaintiffs have failed to produce evidence sufficient to overcome the defendant’s mere possession admitted by the writ.

Estoppel.

But the plaintiffs say that the defendant under the law cannot be permitted to dispute their title. They invoke the legal principle which is in the brief of their learned counsel thus stated:

“A party to an action seeking to sustain a title to real estate derived only from the adverse party will not be heard to deny that such adverse party ever had title.”

But this principle does not apply to the pending case for the following among other reasons:

The only real estate to which the defendant has “derived title from the adverse party” is the camp and camp lot. He does not “deny that such adverse party ever had title” to the camp lot. To do so successfully would be to exchange his title by deed for mere possession which is the very feeble tenure under which he holds the rest of the land. To do so would be to ‘ ‘sit on a limb and saw himself off.”

To the rest of the land he has only the prima facie right that is presumed from mere possession. If the plaintiffs can show a prior warranty deed or a prior seizin within twenty years, however brief and even without deed, they may lawfully dispossess him. But if they have no title he is not required to surrender possession to them, and the fact that he received a deed of the camp lot from one of them does not estop him from proving, if he can, that the plaintiffs have no title to land of which he received no deed from them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 A. 673, 123 Me. 95, 1923 Me. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webber-v-austin-me-1923.