44 F. 34 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island | 1890
This was an action of ejectment, brought by Nathan Fuller, in his own right and as trustee, to recover 27 undivided 28 parts of a lot of land, containing about 14 acres, and situated in the town of Lincoln, formerly Smithfield, in the state of Rhode Island. The defendants pleaded the general issue and 20 years’ possession under the statute of possessions of Rhode Island, and upon these pleas issues were joined. Both parties claimed title under Francis Richardson, who acquired a tract of land, including the lot in dispute, in 1750, died in
The court, against the plaintiff’s objection, and tor the purpose of showing that Stephen Jeneks was assessed for and paid taxes on this land from 1770 to his death, in 1805, admitted in evidence original tax-lists of the town (being all before 1805 that the legal custodian thereof, as he testified, was able to find) for the years 1770 and 1805, and 21 of the 81 intervening years, each of which contained the name of Stephen Jeneks as a person taxed, with the amount of his tax, and generally the word “land,” opposite to it; as well as a list of the polls and estates, real and personal, of the proprietors and inhabitants of the town, called an estimate for taxation, for the year 1778, (being the only list found during the same period,) by which it appeared that he was listed for 32 acres designated as wood and waste land, and also for 2 acres of tillage and 10 acres of pasture land. It being in dispute whether Jeneks had so much land in the town other than the land in question, the plaintiff contends that all those lists were erroneously admitted, because they did not identify this land. But the names of the Fullers did not appear upon the lists, and there was no evidence that they were taxed in the town during the period in question; and it was proved that this land had been conveyed to Jeneks in 1768, and has been assessed to bis heirs ever since 3 805. These ancient records, therefore, were rightly submitted to the consideration of the jury. Fletcher v. Fuller, 120 U. S. 552, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 667; Com. v. Heffron, 302 Mass. 148, 152, 153.
1 pon the question of presuming a deed to Jeremiah Richardson before 1768, the plaintiff offered evidence of the poverty of himself and his
No error is shown in the refusal to charge that—
“If the jury find that Abigail Fuller, wife of Ezekiel Fuller, entered into possession under the devise in the will of Francis Richardson, then there is no sufficient evidence in the case to show an actual adverse and exclusive possession by any person under whom the defendants claim prior to the year 1800.”
The bill of exceptions does not profess to state all the evidence introduced upon this point, or contain anything to restrict the application of the general rule that the sufficiency of evidence is a question for the jury.
Objection is taken to the refusal of the court to instruct the-jury—
“That if they should" find that the defendants, or those under whom they claimed, had had twenty years’ uninterrupted adverse and exclusive possession of the premises, during which time the plaintiff, or those under whom he claimed, had been free from legal disabilities, they were justified in presuming a grant; but otherwise they must decide according to whether the evidence did or did not lead to the reasonable belief in the rightful origin of the defendants’ possession, or of those under whom they claim.”
. But such an instruction would be entirely inconsistent with the opinion of the supreme court, in which it was distinctly affirmed that, when the other circumstances are very cogent and full, there is no absolute bar against the presumption of a grant within a period short of the statute of limitations; and also that when a proprietary right has long been exercised, although the exclusive possession of the whole property to which the right is asserted may have been occasionally interrupted, yet if the actual possession has been accompanied by other open acts of ownership, and the interruptions did not impair the uses to which the possessor subjected the property, and for which it was chiefly valuable, they should not necessarily be held to defeat the presumption of the rightful origin of his claim, to which the facts would otherwise lead. 120 U. S. 550, 552, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 667.
The instruction requested, “that if the jury should find that Jeremiah Richardson made the deed to Stephen Jencks in 1768, claiming to own
The instructions given upon the return of the jury into court for further instructions were as follows:
“ With respect to the presumption of a grant or deed, it does not rest upon the fact of whether these defendants prove a lost deed as a matter of fact; for the law says to you that it is your duty, if you find that these defendants, the Fletchers and the Dexters, have claimed this property for more than a hundred years, if they have paid taxes on it for a long period of time, if they have exercised acts of ownership over it, and if they have been in possession of it for more than twenty years, then it is your duty to presume a grant: provided, the rebutting evidence.on that does not overcome it. The presumption of a grant does not arise from the proof of the fact that such a lost deed in fact existed, because then it would be a more question of proof. A presumption rests upon the infirmity of human nature. It arises from the fact that evidence, owing to lapso of time, is lost; from the fact that the muniments or the deeds of title may be lost; from the fact that parties who are entitled to a valuable possession will claim it, provided others are enjoying it. Therefore the law says that you are warranted or justified in presuming a grant, whatever your belief may be of the fact of such grant, in order to quiet a long possession. So that this is the rule: it is not necessary, in order to presume a conveyance, to believe that the conveyance was in point of fact executed. It is sufficient if the evidence leads to the conclusion that a conveyance might have been executed, and that its existence would be a solution of the difficulties arising from its non-existence. It is not founded on a belief that a grant has actually been made in the particular case, but on the general presumption that a man will naturally enjoy what belongs to him, the difficulty of proof after lapse of time, and the policy of not disturbing long-continued possessions. It is not indispensable, in order to lay a proper foundation for the legal presumption of a grant, to establish the probability of the fact that a grant ever issued. It would be sufficient ground for a presumption to show that, by legal possibility, a grant might have issued. Though the presumption of a grant or deed is one that may be rebutted by proof of facts inconsistent with its supposed existence, yet where no such facts are shown, and the things done and the things omitted with regard to the property in controversy by the respective parties, for long periods of time after the execution of the supposed conveyance, can be explained satisfactorily only upon the hypothesis of its existence, it is the duty of the jury to presume a conveyance, and thus quiet the possession, if they find that the defendants or their ancestors in title have claimed the land for more than a century, that during that time they have paid taxes thereon, and for a long period of time exercised acts of ownership, suited to the condition of the property, and have actually-used the property for twenty' years or more, these things would justify you in presuming a deed from Abigail Fuller to Jeremiah Richardson, to quiet the possession of tho defendants. ”
These instructions were “duly excepted to, so far as they relate to the right or duty- of the jury to presume a grant upon the facts as developed in this case;” but they wore in exact accordance with the judgment of the supreme court in 120 U. S. 534, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 667.
The objections urged against the instructions originally given to the
The remaining grounds assigned for the motion for a new trial are as follows:
“Because, during the trial of this cause at November term, 1887, one or more of-the jurors impaneled to try the case were furnished, by parties unknown, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, with a printed copy of the opinion of the supreme court of the United States delivered in this case [Fletcher v. Fuller] on writ of error at October term, 1886, which said printed opinion was' read and examined by said juror or jurors during said trial, and before the close thereof. Because, two days before the commencement of the trial, one of the drawn jurors attending for the term, and who afterwards was accepted and sworn to try the said case, wras furnished with a printed copy of said opinion of the supreme court by William II. Gooding, town-clerk of the town of Lincoln, a person pecuniarily interested in the defense of this suit, and said juror did, at said Gooding’s request, read said opinion, and read the same during the said trial.”
The depositions taken by a commissioner, appointed by the court with the consent of the parties, prove this state of facts: One of the defendants, before the last trial, caused to be printed 100 pamphlet copies of the opinion of the supreme court as reported in Fletcher v. Fuller, 120 U. S. 537-555, 7 Sup. Ct, Rep. 667, with no separate statement of facts or evidence prefixed, and with a cover entitled “Opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, in favor of the defendants, Nathan Fuller, in his own right and as trustee, vs. Lucy W. Fletcher et al., delivered March 7, 1887:” and distributed them among friends and relatives interested in the case, and among other persons in the neighborhood, including some who had been jurors or witnesses at former trials. Pending this trial, the foreman and another of the jury each read one of those copies, brought to his notice under the following circumstances: A copy was left, by whom did not appear, at the place of business of the foreman in Providence. Gooding, the town-clerk of Lincoln, and who held other land under the same title as the defendants, testified that two days before the last trial he called at the residence in Lincoln of another juror drawn and attending at that term, and afterwards sworn as a juror in this ease, and gave him a copy, for the purpose of enabling him to understand the case better, and with no intent to influence his judgment. Gooding’s conduct, though meddlesome and foolish, does not appear to have been dictated by a corrupt intent to interfere with the administration of justice, and there is not the slightest evidence that either of the defendants had a hand in
In order to set aside a verdict because a paper was unlawfully communicated to tbe jury, it must, at least, appear either that the party in whose favor the verdict was afterwards returned took some part in the communication, or that the paper was such as could be supposed to have influenced tile minds of the jury; and the affidavits of jurors, though incompetent to prove the part which any of them took, or tbe motives by winch any of them were influenced, in their discussions with each other about the case, arc admissible to disprove that a certain paper was before the jury or ivas read by them. Woodward v. Leavitt, 107 Mass. 453, 466-469. The copies in question having been communicated to tbe two jurors out of court, and without any participation of the defendants, the case stands just as if those jurors had happened, on the way to or from court during the trial, to read the opinion in a newspaper, or in the official reports of the supreme court; and there is no such presumption that they could have been unduly influenced by their separate reading of that opinion as will justify the setting aside of tiie verdict subsequently returned by the jury, after being fully instructed by tbe court upon the law applicable to the case. U. S. v. Reid, 12 How. 361, 366. Judgment on the verdict.