Simpson v. Coe

4 N.H. 301 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1828

Richardson, C. J.

The defendant relies in his plea upon a right by prescription, to enter the locus in quo and do the acts of which the plaintiff complains ; and the question is, whether the prescription alleged in the bar, is, in law, an answer to the plaintiff’s complaint ?

A prescription is a title, the validity of which depends upon continual and peaceable usage from time whereof the memory of man is not to the contrary. Coke Litt. 113, a and b; Com. Dig. “ Prescription 3 Bing. 61, Elliot v. Hardy.

And we entertain no doubt that a right may be claimed and sustained in this state by prescription. 2 Johns. 357, Cortelyou v. Van Brundt; 14 Mass. Rep. 49, Gayetty v. Bethune; 11 ditto, 533, Cook v. Stearns; 6 ditto, 97.

The prescription alleged in this bar, is a right in the owner of the Spinney place, to enter the locus in quo and take the herbage at all times at his pleasure. Does this prescription give a right to cut grass, dig potatoes, and gather apples ? The answer to this question depends upon the true meaning of the word herbage ; a term, which seems to have had the quiet and uninterrupted possession of its legal meaning from the time of Bracton down to this day.

It is very apparent from several passages in Bracton, that the word herbage, in his day, meant feed for cattle in fields and pastures, and nothing more. Thus in one place it is said, “ Est cnim communia in eo, quod dicitur pas-tura de Omni, quod edi poterit, vel pasci, large sumpto vocabulo, vel stride ; large, ul si quis habeat in alieno communiam pastura;, scilicet, herbagii, pessonat sive glandis site nucis et quicquid sub nomine pessonnee contineturd1 Bracton, 232. Here the Herbagium is manifestly used to denote a .species of pasturage. And in explaining the distinction between common and herbage, he says, “ Item communia etnon herbagi-um ut jus falcandi herbam, &c. Brac. 222. Here it is expressly declared that the right of cutting grass is not u Herbagium. ” And again — “ Item notandum quod sub nom-*303ine herbagii non continetur glans, tyc. Glandis enim nomine continentur glans, castanea, fagina, ficus el nuoes et alia quaeque quae edi vel pasci poterunt prefer herbam.” Brac. 226. Here acorns, chesnuts, beach nuts, figs and the like, are said not to be herbage.

The term vesture, according to Lord Coke, was used to denote corn, grass, underwood and the like. Coke Litt. 46; 2 Rolle's Ab. 2. The terms Herbagium terree and “the herbage of woods” are mentioned by Coke, but not defined. Co. Litt. 4, b. Shepherd in his Touchstone, 97, seems to speak of the terms vesture and herbage, as having the same meaning. But this is not the sense of the passage. Shepherd, is enumerating the words by which particular interests, and the words by which the land itself, will pass, and he mentions grants of the vesture or herbage, as instances of grants of particular interests ; and a grant of all the profits as an instance of a grant of the land itself. The terms vesture and herbage are coupled by Shepherd, not because they mean the same thing, but because they are words by which a particular interest will pass.

Jacob, in his dictionary says, “ herbage is the green pasture and fruit of the earth provided by nature for the. food or bite of cattle.” And the word seems to have been used in the same sense in 8 East, 38, Johnson v. Hodgson, which wast“ trespass for breaking and entering a certain close of the plaintiff, &c. and depasturing and taking the herbage there.”

Indeed, it is very clear, that the word herbage, when used as a legal term, means now precisely what it meant in Bracton’s time, and we are of opinion that a right to herbage does not include a right to cut grass, or dig potatoes, or pick apples, and that the plea in this case is insufficient.