The opinion of the Court was read at the ensuing November term in Cumberland, as drawn up by
It sufficiently appears that the title to the locus in quo was in Robert Moor, and that it passed from Moor to the plaintiff in June 1819, unless his seisin had been previously divested. The defendants trace back their title to a period long anterior, derived however from the same source ; and depending originally upon two sales of Moor’s right, for delinquency in the payment of sums voted to be raised by the propriety, of which he was a member. If both or either of these sales can be supported, the plaintiff has failed in his proof of title. And this will depend principally upon the provincial statute, under which the sales were made. If that of 1738, 2 LL Mass. 1016, was not repealed by that of
One, if not both these sales, was manifestly made under the act of 1738. The original proprietor acquiesced for thirty-eight years. This acquiescence is not to be accounted for by the minority of his heirs for a portion of the time, or their ignorance of his title ; but ho himself survived during that whole period, and when he conveyed to the plaintiff, he did it by release, without covenants, and without any valuable consideration expressed in the deed. Whether other sales under the act of 1738, subsequent to 1753, have been made is not within our knowledge. It has been insisted in argument that there have been, and that many titles will be affected, by holding the former repealed by implication. A contemporaneous construction, in a doubtful case, has very properly great weight in determining the effect of ancient statutes. This is to be sure but a single case, and could have little influence in settling the construction ; but so far as it goes, it is in accordance with the conclusion to which we have arrived, that the act of 1738 was not repealed by that of 1753, by fair or necessary implication.
It appears that the grant to Noah Johnson and others, in which Moor was interested, was made by the General Court upon conditions, and at the time of the assessments and sales, upon which the defendants rely, the conditions had not been fulfilled.
An objection is made by the counsel for the plaintiff to the vote of three dollars to each share to defray the charges of the proprietors, for the nonpayment of which the first sale was made ; and to the vote of four dollars on each share, for the nonpayment of which the second sale was made. There had been a previous assessment of one hundred dollars in paper money, then greatly depreciated ; the first made at an original meeting, and die second and (bird at successive adjournments of the same meeting, ft is insisted that the sum
This is an ancient transaction, which remained without question for nearly forty years; and every reasonable presumption is to be made to uphold it. A verdict was returned, by the direction of the Judge whq presided at the trial, for the plaintiff, subject to the opinion of the court, upon the evidence reported. And upon that evidence as reported, the opinion of the court is, that the plaintiff has not entitled himself to judgment thereon. The verdict is accordingly get aside, and a new trial granted.
