97 Me. 331 | Me. | 1903
This action is for trespass to real estate, with a count de bonis for certain beech, maple, birch and other trees, not suitable for any purpose but fire-wood, cut and carried away by the defendant between the first day of August, 1901, and the date of the writ, March 18, 1902, from lands reserved for public uses in Indian Township numbered Three, in the County of Penobscot, and under the care, of the Land Agent of the State.
A portion of said Indian Township numbered Three was incorporated into a town by the name of Millinocket by chapter 377 of the Private and Special Laws of 1901. Within the limits of the territory of such incorporated town, organization of which was had, under said Act of 1901, previous to the alleged trespasses, are included the lands so reserved for public uses and duly located in said township prior to the incorporation and organization of said town. By deed dated November 8, 1850, and recorded in the land office of the State, the Land Agent of the State, agreeably to the provisions of chap. 196 of the laws of 1850, conveyed to one Henry E. Prentiss, the right to cut and carry away the timber and grass from the reserved lots in Indian Township until such time as the said township or tract shall be incorporated, or organized for plantation purposes, and no longer. At the times of the alleged trespasses, the right of Prentiss to cut and carry away timber and grass under the foregoing conveyance had vested in the defendant and others as tenants in common.
Upon the foregoing succinct statement of facts, as agreed to by the parties, the case is submitted to this court to determine whether or not the action is maintainable. The proper determination of it will, depend upon the answer to one or more of the following questions:
1. Was the right of the defendant to cut timber on the reserved lands in Indian Township terminated by the incorporation as a town of a portion only of the township, but in which portion the reserved lands are included?
3. If so, are beech, maple, birch and other trees, not suitable for any purpose but for fire-wood, to be regarded as “timber” within the meaning of chap. 196, of the laws of 1850?
If either the first or second question is answered in the negative, it will not be necessary to consider the third.
By the Act of 1850, chap. 196, it was provided that in all townships or tracts of land unincorporated or not organized for election purposes, sold or granted by the State, or by Massachusetts, or by both States jointly, in which lands have been reserved for public uses, the Land Agent should have the care and custody of such reserved lands until such tract or township is incorporated or organized for election purposes. And the Land Agent was directed to sell for cash the right to cut and carry away the timber and grass from off the reserved lands which have been located, the right to continue until the tract or township should be incorporated or organized for election purposes. The Land Agent did sell the timber and grass on the reserved lands in Indian Township to the predecessor in title of the defendant. The township was never organized for plantation purposes, but a portion of it, which included the reserved lands, was incorporated as the town of Millinocket, prior to the acts of trespass complained of.
Whether this incorporation was such an incorporation of the township as determined the defendant’s right to cut timber and grass under the Act of 1850 is a question not without difficulty. It is evident from the context, that the word “tract” in the clause which contains the right to cut “until the tract or township shall be incorporated ” does not refel- to the reserved lands themselves, but to the larger territory sold or granted out of which lands are reserved. In terms the right is to continue until the larger territory or the township is incorporated.
, Before determining what the State did do with reference to the reserved lands by incorporating the town, it will be useful to inquire
By Stat. 1824, c. 280, as revised by Stat. 1828, c. 393, the State by general law enacted that there should be reserved in every township, suitable for settlement, whether timber land or otherwise, one' thousand acres of land to be appropriated to such public uses, for the exclusive benefit of such town, as the Legislature should thereafter direct. By this legislation, the State constituted itself a trustee, retaining as such the legal title, but subjecting the land to such future public uses, for the benefit of the town, as the State itself might afterwards direct, until the town should be incorporated, when, under the Statute of Uses, the title would vest in the town. Dillingham v. Smith, 30 Maine, 370. Until incorporation the' reserved lands and the funds arising therefrom are therefore under ’ the general control of the State. Dudley v. Greene, 35 Maine, 14. The State has placed no limitation upon its power to designáte the uses, or to control thereafter the title vested in' the beneficiariés, only that they are to be public and for the benefit of the town.
This court in Union Parish Society v. Upton, 74 Maine, 545, had occasion to consider the general character of the trusteeship of the State and its power even to change designated xises before the vesting of title in the beneficiaries, and it was held that the State might, as was provided by the Act of 1832, c. 39, direct that income from the proceeds of lands reserved for the use of the ministry should be applied to schools, if the fund or the land had not become vested in some particular parish.
The first general designation of public uses was made in 1846 by c. 217, by which it was provided that the proceeds of the sale of timber, or from trespasses on the reserved lots in unincorporated places should be paid into the county treasury and constitute funds for school purposes, of which the income only was to be used. . If there were no inhabitants of the township, the interest was to be added to the fund. If there were inhabitants, and they had become organized into a plantation, and had organized one or more school districts, the interest on the funds was to be applied to the support of the schools, and in proportion to the number of scholars, if more than one school district; and if a district or plantation consisted of parts of two townships, the interest was to be distributed according to the proportion of such funds arising in each township, for the support of schools in that township.
In 1848, c. 82, it was provided that the proceeds of sales of timber and grass on the reserved lots should be paid into the State treasury, instead of into the county treasuries. By c. 196 of the laws of 1850, under a provision of which this controversy has arisen, the State treasurer was directed, after deducting expenses, to pay the balance of proceeds received from sales of timber and grass on the reserved lands “to the authorities provided by law to receive the same, when they shall hereafter exist, until which time the funds arising from said reserved lands shall remain in the treasury.” And the above named statute provisions, so far as they relate to the designated use of these funds, their creation, custody and manner of expenditure, remain practically unchanged down to the present time. B. S., c. 5, §§ 12 to 19 inclusive.
It follows that upon the incorporation of a township, or a part of a township, from which lands have been reserved for public uses, the State has- the lawful power to make such provision as it sees fit for the vesting of the reserved lands, and for the application of the school moneys arising therefrom. If it divides the township and incorporates a part, it may divide the reserved lands, as was done in the case of Argyle v. Dwinel, 29 Maine, 29. It may, we think, expressly assign the reserved lands to the portion incorporated, or it may expressly reserve them for the part unincorporated. And it would have been competent for the Legislature, in the incorporation of Millinocket out of a portion of Indian Township, to declare that the reserved lands in the whole township should vest in the new town. But no such declaration was expressly made, and we are left to inquire whether in the absence of express declaration, any implication arises either way.
Bearing in mind that the reserved lands are within the geographical limits of the new town, is it or not to be presumed that the Legislature intended them to go with and belong to the new town? The newly-incorporated town embracing the reserved lands, was it
In cases of doubtful construction the legislative intent sometimes may be considerably illuminated by a consid'eration of the consequences which may follow one or another of varying interpretations. The State held the lands as trustee “until incorporation” of the township, just as the grantee of the right to cut timber held that “until incorporation.” Stat. 1850, c. 196. The same phrase has the same meaning evidently in both places in the same Act. Suppose it were to be held that the Act of 1850 was only -to be satisfied by an incorporation of the entire township. Then what has become of the reserved lands and the fund which has arisen'from them? Of course they did not vest in Millinocket upon its incorporation, for it was not the entire township. Equally, of course, for the same reason, they will not vest in the remaining portion of the township, whenever, if ever, it shall become incorporated, or in any subdivision of the township, if it shall be further divided for the purposes of incorporation. And there is no ground for any presumption that the entire township will ever become incorporated as one -town. If this view is the correct one, the State, by incorporating Millinocket, has left the title to the reserved lands and the school funds arising therefrom wholly indeterminate. There is no provision of law by which a dollar can be expended, although it will not be denied that the exigency has arisen within the township, which was contemplated by the reservation of the lands, namely the settling of inhabitants in sufficient numbers to require the expenditure of money for public schools. Can it be supposed that the Legislature still intended to hold these lands in trust, and, perchance, to vest them and their income wholly in the remainder of the township? Is it to be considered that the Legislature intended that the remainder of the township was ever to have any interest in the lands which were incorporated as a part of Millinocket? If so, it seems singular that it did not say so. When these lands were being incorporated together with the rest, if it was intended to make any reservation of interest in the State for the benefit of the remainder of the township, the burden is
Upon the whole, we are of opinion that it was the legislative intent that the reserved lots embraced within Millinocket, should pass to that town and be vested in it, and that that intent is made sufficiently apparent from the fact that the lands were within the limits of the town, and were not excepted from the results which ordinarily follow the incorporation of a township, including reserved lands. And we are also of opinion that when that portion of a township which includes reserved lands is incorporated, it is properly to be deemed, as to such lands, an incorporation of the township within the meaning of the Act of 1850. It is to be deemed that the Legislature intended the reserved lands within the portion incorporated to vest in that portion, unless otherwise expressed, and that it did not intend the right to cut and carry timber and grass to continue in a grantee thereof, after the title to the land itself had vested in a town by incorporation.
From this conclusion, it appears that the acts of the defendant done after the incorporation of Millinocket were trespasses; but it also appears that by that very incorporation, the State ceased to be trustee of the reserved lands, and now has no interest in them, by which it can maintain this action.
In accordance with the stipulation, the entry must be,
Plaintiff nonsuit.