Sewall v. Ridlon
Sewall v. Ridlon
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question is whether the copy of the proceedings in the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in the year 1788, was properly rejected, when offered to be read in evidence by the counsel for the petitioner. If not, the verdict must be set aside and a new trial granted. Several objections have been urged against its admissibility, on the ground of certain alleged irregularities in those proceedings.
One irregularity or imperfection, as contended, is in the description of the tract of land, whereof partition was prayed. This objection is founded on an intimation in a note subjoined to the report of the case of Cook v. Allen, cited in the argument. But on examining the great boundaries of the tract referred to, which from their nature must have been notorious, they must be considered perfectly intelligible to all persons interested ; and though certain parcels were excepted by particular references or descriptions, yet forty years ago those excepted parcels must, in all probability, have been well known to the co-tenants, as they all claimed under William and Bridget Phillips, by title derived after many of the excepted parcels had been conveyed by said William Phillips. These co-tenants must be presumed to have known that their common tract did not include those parcels. As to them, therefore, the description in the petition could not have been uncertain or unintelligible; and it does not appear that Ridlon, the respondent, or in fact any other persons, at that time, were in possession of any part of the land described, who could have been deceived, even if the description had been less definite than it was. This objection was not very seriously urged by the counsel, and we all consider it unsubstantial.
In the second place it has been contended that no formal judgment was entered, either interlocutory or final. This is true ; but it ap
Another supposed-illegality is the appointment of Robert Southgate an inhabitant and freeholder in the county of Cumberland, as one of the commissioners, though the lands to be divided were in the county of York. We consider the act of 1783, ch. 41, as a satisfactory answer to this objection. That statute does not require that the commissioners should be inhabitants and freeholders of the same county in which the lands lie. Such was the construction which the court gave to the act, when they appointed Mr. Southgate ; and we do not feel at liberty or disposed to question its correctness on this occasion. We therefore overrule this objection also.
The last point, and that which the counsel Have principally relied upon, is that the informal interlocutory and final judgments were both entered in the county of Essex. It is admitted that a petition for partition may be entered in any county and an order of notice there made, because the process does not assume an adversary character till the return of notice to all concerned ; yet the counsel have strenuously contended that all parts of the process, in which any respondent has a right to appear, and which he may legally contest, must always be conducted and decided in the county in which the estate is situated ; and that such should have been the course of proceedings
Since the organization of this court, the course' pursued has been to receive petitions for partition in any county, but to order notice ■returnable in the county where the lands lie; though the language of our statute is the same as that of Massachusetts, relating to this ' subject. This has been considered the mode most convenient, all circumstances taken into view. The State being so far settled, and this court holding one or more terms annually in each county, it seems advisable to continue, it. If the co-tenants of any large tracts reside out of the State, still, the partition must be madé by the authority of some court within the State, and the proceedings may be had in the county where the lands lie, as easily as in any other. In deciding, however, on the legality of the mode adopted by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts forty years since, such considerations as
We have thus examined and given our opinion upon all the objections which have been urged by the counsel for the respondent, presuming this course the most useful to the parties, and not unimportant to others. The answer which we might have given, and which would have been decisive of this cause, is, that if the proceedings in question were irregular, and not in conformity to the provisions of the act of 1786, still the judgment and proceedings would not be void8 but only voidable in the usual manner, and could not be impeached in the summary and indirect manner contended for by the respondent’s counsel. The court had general jurisdiction of the subject j and if they had conducted improperly in its exercise, the judgment and proceedings should be examined on error; but till the judgment shall be so reversed, it must, like other judgments, be respected as binding the rights of the parties, at least so far as their possessory rights are involved. We are therefore all of opinion that the verdict must be set aside, and a new trial granted.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sewall & als. v. Ridlon
- Status
- Published