Pells v. Webquish
| Decision Date | 11 September 1880 |
| Citation | Pells v. Webquish, 129 Mass. 469 (Mass. 1880) |
| Court | Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts |
| Parties | Silas A. Pells & another v. Solomon F. Webquish |
Barnstable. Writ of entry to recover a parcel of land in Mashpee. Plea, nul disseisin.
At the trial in the Superior Court, before Brigham, C. J., both parties claimed title to the demanded premises under one Mercy McGrego, who was a proprietor of Marshpee.
The demandant Pells claimed by descent from her, and the other demandant claimed by deed from her other descendants to one Chaplin, dated December 24, 1873, and by deed from Chaplin to him, dated September 27, 1877. Both deeds were duly delivered on the premises, and recorded before the bringing of this action.
The tenant claimed under a deed made on July 23, 1834, by Mercy McGrego to his father, Jesse Webquish, and by sundry mesne conveyances from the administrator of the latter under license from the Probate Court, all which had been duly recorded.
By the St. of 1834, c. 166, which was in force when the deed to Jesse was made, no proprietor of Marshpee could convey land to any person other than a proprietor of Marshpee (now the town of Mashpee), and no person not a proprietor could hold land there; and the demandants contended that, when the deed to Jesse was made, he was not a proprietor, and that McGrego was therefore incapable of conveying to him, and he was incapable of holding land in Marshpee. Upon an issue framed the jury found that he was not then a proprietor.
By the St. of 1842, c. 72, persons having certain qualifications could be admitted as proprietors. It appeared that Jesse Webquish was so admitted in 1842; and that he afterwards exercised the rights of a proprietor, but that he had never exercised those rights or claimed the right to do so prior to his admission, although he was of Indian descent, born either in the county of Barnstable or Plymouth, and had then lived in Marshpee upwards of twenty years.
Jesse Webquish had possession of the demanded premises after the date of the deed to him, but the land always was and now is wild and uncultivated land; and the tenant did not claim title by prescription. There was no evidence that any heirs of Mercy McGrego had ever been in possession of the premises since her deed to Webquish, until the entry was made to deliver the deeds to and from Chaplin.
The tenant contended that, if the deed of Mercy McGrego to Webquish did not operate to convey the title to him at the date thereof, it did so operate when he was admitted to proprietorship in 1842, or when disabilities were removed by the St. of 1869, c. 463, and that the heirs of Mercy McGrego were estopped from setting up title against the same; and asked the judge so to rule. But the judge declined so to rule; and the tenant excepted.
By the St. of 1818, c. 105, § 1, a record was to be made by the overseers of the proprietors of Marshpee, and a return thereof made, annually, to the Governor and Council; and the demandants offered in evidence a duly authenticated copy from the files of the Governor and Council, purporting to be an enumeration of the proprietors of the plantation of Marshpee taken in November 1832 by the overseers, and signed by one overseer, in which the name of Jesse Webquish did not appear. The tenant objected to the admission of this paper, on the ground that it did not appear to be the act of the overseers but of only one of them, there being three, and because the absence of the name of Jesse Webquish therefrom was not competent evidence to show that he was not then a proprietor. The judge admitted it; and the tenant excepted.
After the finding of the jury that Jesse Webquish was not a proprietor, as above stated, the judge directed a verdict for the demandants; and the tenant alleged exceptions.
Exceptions overruled.
G. Marston, for the tenant.
T. H. Tyndale, for the demandants.
Before the passage of the St. of 1869, c. 463, which declared all Indians within the Commonwealth to be citizens, they were treated as wards of the Commonwealth, and the title to lands occupied by them was in the Commonwealth, and their use and improvement were regulated from time to time by the Legislature. Danzell v. Webquish, 108 Mass. 133. Coombs, petitioner, 127 Mass. 278. See also St. 1870, c. 293.
The St. of 1818, c. 105, in relation to the Indians and other persons, proprietors and residents on the plantations of Marshpee and Herring Pond, defined what persons should be considered proprietors; and also enacted that the real estate held by them, as such proprietors, might be disposed of by deed or will. §§ 1, 5. By the St. of 1834, c. 166, § 9, establishing the district of Marshpee, it was provided that, upon the death of any proprietor without descendants, all his interest in the lands of the district should escheat to the proprietary, and that any proprietor of land in severalty might devise or sell the same to any other proprietor. The power of a proprietor, in conveying land held in severalty, was thus limited, and he had no authority to convey to a person who was not a proprietor. And by § 12 the land of such proprietor was exempt from being taken on execution, and if arrested he might have the benefit of the oath of a poor debtor, notwithstanding any interest he might have in such land. It is obvious that it was the intent of the Legislature, by the enactment of this and similar statutes, to protect the Indians from the dangers arising from their improvidence and incapacity. See Thaxter v. Grinnell, 2 Met. 13; Mayhew v. Gay Head, 13 Allen 129.
The deed, therefore, of Mercy McGrego to Jesse Webquish, who was not a proprietor, made after the...
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Commonwealth v. Slavski
...surgeon's certificate of disability (Fitchburg v. Lunenburg, 102 Mass. 358), return of enumeration of proprietors by overseers (Pells v. Webquish, 129 Mass. 469), record of certificate of marriage as showing residence of the husband (Shutesbury v. Hadley, 133 Mass. 242), copy of public docu......
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Elk v. Wilkins
...or legislative or executive acts of the United States as distinct political communities, Danzell v. Webquish, 108 Mass. 133; Pells v. Webquish, 129 Mass. 469; Mass. St. 1862, c. 184; 1869, c. The passages cited as favorable to the plaintiff, from the opinions delivered in Ex parte Kenyon, 5......
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Nickerson v. Nickerson
...v. Mason, 140 Mass. 63, 3 N. E. 19;Lowell v. Daniels, 2 Gray, 161, 61 Am. Dec. 448;Pierce v. Chace, 108 Mass. 254, 258, 259;Pells v. Webquish, 129 Mass. 469, 472. See Nolin v. Pearson, 191 Mass. 283, 77 N. E. 890,4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 643, 114 Am. St. Rep. 605,6 Ann. Cas. 658. She was prevente......
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Jewett v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co.
...towns and cities as to matters of public concern (Hanson v. South Scituate, 115 Mass. 336; Shutesbury v. Hadley, 133 Mass. 242; Pells v. Webquish, 129 Mass. 469). So acts of Legislature or other public officers or of courts, which create a status or which establish or recognize a given stat......
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SEPARATE, SOVEREIGN, AND SUBJUGATED: NATIVE CITIZENSHIP AND THE 1790 TRADE AND INTERCOURSE ACT. (response to Gabriel J. Chin and Paul Finkelman in this issue, p. 1047)
...(101.) Id. at 107 (citing United States v. Elm, 25 F. Cas. 1006 (N.D.N.Y. 1877); Danzell v. Webquish, 108 Mass. 133 (1871); Pells v. Webquish, 129 Mass. 469 (1880)). (102.) Id. at (103.) Id. at 102. (104.) See Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393, 419-20 (1857) (enslaved party), su......