Winthrop v. Curtis

3 Me. 110
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 15, 1824
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Me. 110 (Winthrop v. Curtis) 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
Winthrop v. Curtis, 3 Me. 110 (Me. 1824).

Opinion

Weston J.

The demandants in this action move for a new trial on account of a misdirection of the Judge in a matter of law to the jury ; by which they were instructed that “iftheybeliev- “ ed the demanded premises were within fifteen miles of Kenne-u bee river, measuring in any direction, or on any point of compass “ from the river, they ought,to find their verdict for the deman-u dants.” It appears from the evidence reported by the Judge, that the demanded premises are within fifteen miles of Kennebec river, measuring in one direction ; but that they are not within fifteen miles of the river, measuring upon a west-north-west course.

It is conceded that the land of the proprietors of the Kennebec purchase extends fifteen miles from the river, on each side ; and that the determination of this cause will depend upon the course upon which this distance of fifteen miles is to be measured.

The counsel, for the demandants contend that it is to be ascertained by measuring in any direction, from any part of the r.iver within their limits. On the other side it is insisted that this distance is to be ascertained by measuring at all points, at right angles with the general course of the river, which, as the counsel for the tenant assume, would require an admeasurement upon a west-north-west course. And they insist that their position is supported by the true construction of the original title of the demandants ; by their actual grants and locations ; by their deeds ofreleasetothe Pejepscot proprietors,, ascertaining a part of the southerly line of their claim; and by the adjustment made b etween them and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, by which their title was confirmed within certain limits.

We are met at the threshold of this controversy by a decision of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in the case of the Pejepscot proprietors, under whom the present tenant claims, and [115]*115Zadock Bishop, cited by the demandant’s counsel, but not to be found in the reports, which they contend, determines the question in favor of the demandants. Upon examining the case cited, as reported by the Judge who presided at the trial, it appears that the tenant claimed under the proprietors of the Kennebec purchase ; that the land in dispute would not be included within their claim, measuring the fifteen miles upon a west-north-west course; but that it was within fifteen miles of the river measuring upon a course at right angles with the river, and probably meaning according to its direction at the place from which the admeasurement was made. The Judge instructed the jury that the proprietors of the Kennebec purchase had a right to extend their grant fifteen miles from the river, to be measured on a course at right angles with the river in every part; and that if they believed that the land in dispute lay within fifteen miles of the river, measuring in any direction, they must find their verdict for the tenant, which they accordingly did. To this opinion and direction of the Judge the demandants excepted, and moved for a new trial on account of a misdirection in a matter of law. This motion having been argued in the county of Kennebec, and having been continued nisi, the Supreme Judicial Court, at November term 1819, in Middlesex, directed the clerk of the county of Kennebec to enter upon the , docket of the preceding term of that county that the motion for a new trial was overruled, and ordered judgment to be rendered upon the verdict.

From the record and proceedings in the case cited, it would seem that the whole Court sustained the opinion given by the Judge to the jury ; but the counsel for the tenant in this action having produced a letter from one of the Judges of that Court, stating that no general principle of construction was settled, or intended tobe settled in that cause, I have deemed it suitable and proper to go into a full consideration of the general question raised between these parties.

It may tend to a more satisfactory elucidation of the question, to consider, first, upon what principles the claim of the deman-dants ought to be settled, independent of any actual locations made, or agreements entered into, by them ; — and secondly, how far their rights may have been affected by such locations or agreements.

[116]*116The original grant from the council established at Plymouth, of the lands now claimed by the proprietors of the Kennebec purchase, after fixing the points in Kennebec river above and below, to and from which it was limited, extended it for “the space of fifteen English miles on each side of the said “ river, commonly called the Kennebec river, and all the said “ river called the Kennebec that lies within the said limits and “ bounds, eastward, westward, northward and southward.”

The difficulty in ascertaining the extent of the grants on each side of the river, arises from the winding and serpentine course which rivers and streams are uniformly found to pursue.

By measuring the fifteen miles at every point, at right angles with the general course of the river, upon the hypothesis contended for by the counsel for the tenant, the tw,o sidelines would very nearly correspond with the particular course of the river in all its parts, and the end lines would be at right angles with the general course, and parallel with each other.

The lines ascertained in this manner would embrace about the same quantity of land which the grantees would have been entitled to, had the river proceeded in a straight line between the points to which their grant is limited ; — and if we assume that the distance between these points in a straight line is twenty miles, but that as the river runs it is twenty five miles ; this rule of construction requires that a given space projected from a meandering line'of twenty five miles would embrace no more land than would be included in the same space projected from a straight line of twenty miles. It is demonstrable, however, that if you pass the end of a line of the given space in length, along the meandering base, and, without withdrawing it in any part therefrom, with the opposite end mark an exterior line, keeping the measuring line always upon an inclination which will give such exterior line its greatest extension ; the land embraced will be much more than the same measuring line would include, extended in the same manner along the straight base. And from every point in the exterior line you would reach the winding base in the given distance, and from every point in the same base you would reach the exterior line in the given distance, in some one direction.

[117]*117The position in favor of the tenant’s mode of admeasurement, the force of which I have felt most strongly, is — that every rod in the given base, which is the river, should determine the location of the same space in each of the exterior lines ; the only practicable way of doing which would seem to require his construction. But the land conveyed was to extend the space of fifteen miles on each side of the river, which is equivalent to saying that it is thus to be extended from the whole and every part of each side. If therefore, extended from some points in the river, the line 'of fifteen miles would not include so much land as if extended from other points ; yet, as all points are equally given, I can perceive nothing which would preclude the grantees from measuring from such points as would be most favorable to them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Me. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winthrop-v-curtis-me-1824.