By a rule of the Supreme Court, the practice of the English
courts of chancery is the practice in the courts of equity of the
United States. In England, the party who puts in a plea which is
the subject of discussion has the right to begin and conclude the
argument. The same rule should prevail in the courts of the United
States in chancery cases.
In a case in which two sovereign states of the United States are
litigating a question of boundary between them in the Supreme Court
of the United States, the Court has decided that the rules and
practice of the court of chancery should substantially govern in
conducting the suit to a final issue.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 735-739. The Court, on reexamining the subject, is fully
satisfied with the decision.
In a controversy where two sovereign states are contesting the
boundary between them, it is the duty of the Court to mould the
rules of chancery practice and pleading in such a manner as to
bring the case to a final hearing on its merits. It is too
important in its character, and the interests concerned too great,
to be decided upon the mere technical principles of chancery
pleading.
In ordinary cases between individuals, the court of chancery has
always exercised an equitable discretion in relation to its rules
of pleading whenever it has been found necessary to do so for the
purposes of justice. In a case in which two sovereign states are
contesting a question of boundary, the most liberal principles of
practice and pleading ought unquestionably to be adopted, in order
to enable both parties to present their respective claims in their
full strength. If a plea put in by the defendant may in any degree
embarrass the complainant in bringing out the proofs of his claim
on which he relies, the case ought not to be disposed of on such an
issue. Undoubtedly the defendant must have the full benefit of the
defense which the plea discloses, but, at the same time, the
proceedings ought to be so ordered as to give the complainant a
full hearing on the whole of his case.
According to the rules of pleading in the chancery courts, if
the plea is unexceptionable in its form and character, the
complainant must either set it down for argument or he must reply
to it, and put in issue the facts relied on in the plea. If he
elects to proceed in the manner first mentioned, and sets down the
plea for argument, he then admits the truth of all the facts stated
in the plea, and merely denies their sufficiency in point of law to
prevent the recovery. If, on the other hand, he replies to the
plea, and denies the truth of the facts therein stated, he admits
that if the particular facts stated in the plea are true, they are
then sufficient in law to bar his recovery, and if they are proved
to be true, the bill must be dismissed, without a reference to the
equity arising from any other facts stated in the bill.
If a plea upon argument is ruled to be sufficient in law to bar
the recovery of the complainant, the court of chancery would,
according to its uniform practice, allow him to amend, and put in
issue, by a proper replication, the truth of the facts stated in
the plea. But in either case, the controversy would turn altogether
upon the facts stated in the plea, if the plea is permitted to
stand. It is the strict and technical character of those rules of
pleading, and the danger of injustice often arising from them,
which has given rise to the equitable discretion always exercised
by the courts of chancery in relation to pleas. In many cases, when
they are not overruled, the court will not permit them to have the
full effect of a plea, and will, in some cases, leave to the
defendant the benefit of it at the hearing, and in others will
order it to stand for an answer, as, in the judgment of the court,
may best subserve the purposes of justice.
The State of Rhode Island, in a bill against the State of
Massachusetts, for the settlement of the boundary between the
states, had set forth certain facts on which she relied in support
of her claim for the decision of the Supreme Court, that the
boundary claimed by the State of Massachusetts was not the true
line of division between the states, according
Page 39 U. S. 211
to their respective charters. To this bill the State of
Massachusetts put in a plea and answer, which the counsel for the
State of Rhode Island deemed to be insufficient. On a question
whether the plea and answer were insufficient, the Court held that
as, if the Court proceeded to decide the case upon the plea, it
must assume without any proof on either side, that the facts stated
in the plea are correctly stated, and incorrectly set forth in the
bill, then it would be deciding the case upon such an issue as
would strike out the very gist of the complainant's case, and
exclude the facts upon which the whole equity is founded, if the
complainant has any. The Court held that it would be unjust to the
complainant not to give an opportunity of being heard according to
the real state of the case, between the parties, and to shut out
from consideration the many facts on which he relies to maintain
his suit.
It is a general rule that a plea ought not to contain more
defenses than one. Various facts can never be pleaded in one plea
unless they are all conducive to the single point on which the
defendant means to rest his defense.
The plea of the State of Massachusetts, after setting forth
various proceedings which preceded and followed the execution of
certain agreements with Rhode Island, conducing to show the
obligatory and conclusive effect of those agreements upon both
states, as an accord and compromise of a disputed right; proceeded
to aver that Massachusetts had occupied and exercised jurisdiction
and sovereignty, according to the agreement, to this present time,
and then sets up as a defense that the State of Massachusetts had
occupied and exercised jurisdiction over the territory from that
time up to the present. The defendants then plead the agreements of
1710 and 1718, and unmolested possession
from that time, in bar to the whole bill of the complainant. The
Court held that this plea is twofold:
1. An accord and compromise of a disputed right.
2. Prescription, or an unmolested possession from the time of
the agreement.
These two defenses are entirely distinct and separate, and
depend upon different principles. Here are two defenses
in the same plea, contrary to the established rules of pleading.
The accord and compromise, and the title by prescription united in
this plea, render it multifarious, and it ought to be overruled on
this account.
This case was before the Court at January term, 1838. The State
of Rhode Island in 1832 had filed a bill against the State of
Massachusetts for the settlement of the boundary between the two
states, to which bill Mr. Webster, at January term, 1834, appeared
for the defendant, and on his motion the cause was continued until
the following term, when a plea and answer were filed by him, as
the counsel for Massachusetts. Before January term, 1837, the State
of Rhode Island filed a replication to the plea and answer of the
defendant, at the same time giving notice of a motion to withdraw
the same.
At January term, 1838, the counsel for Massachusetts moved to
dismiss the bill filed by the State of Rhode Island on the ground
that the Court had no jurisdiction of the cause.
This motion was argued by Mr. Austin, the Attorney General of
Massachusetts, and by Mr. Webster, for Massachusetts, and by Mr.
Hazard and Mr. Southard, for the State of Rhode Island, and was
overruled.
Afterwards, at the same term, Mr. Webster, on behalf of the
State of Massachusetts, as her attorney and counsel in court, moved
for leave to withdraw the plea filed in the case on the part of
Massachusetts, and also the appearance which had been entered for
the state. Mr. Hazard moved for leave to withdraw the general
replication to the plea of the defendant in bar, and to amend the
original bill.
Page 39 U. S. 212
The Court, after argument, ordered that if the counsel on behalf
of Massachusetts shall elect to withdraw the appearance before
entered, that leave be given for the same, and the State of Rhode
Island may proceed
ex parte. But if the appearance be not
withdrawn, that then, as no testimony has been taken, the parties
be allowed to withdraw or amend the pleadings under such order as
the Court may hereafter make. 12 Pet. 756.
At January term, 1839, Mr. Southard, on behalf of the State of
Rhode Island, stated that the bill filed by the state had been
amended, and moved that a rule be granted on the State of
Massachusetts to answer in a short time, so that the cause might be
disposed of during the term.
The Court, the bill of the State of Rhode Island having been
amended the second day of the term, ordered that the State of
Massachusetts should be allowed until the first Monday in August,
1839, to elect whether the state will withdraw its appearance,
pursuant to the leave granted at January term, 1838, and if
withdrawn within that time, the State of Rhode Island should be,
thereupon, at liberty to proceed
ex parte. If the
appearance of the State of Massachusetts should not be withdrawn
before the first Monday in August 1839, the state to answer the
amended bill before the second day of January, 1840.
38
U. S. 13 Pet. 23.
The amendments made by the complainants in the bill were,
chiefly, the insertion, by reference to reports of the
commissioners of the colony of Massachusetts to the government of
Massachusetts, while a colony, on 13 April, 1750, and on 21
February, 1792, to the Legislature of the State of Massachusetts,
appointed by an act of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, passed on
8 March, 1791, "for ascertaining the boundary line between this
commonwealth and the State of Rhode Island."
The report of April 13, 1750, states that the commissioners on
the part of the colony of Massachusetts met the gentlemen appointed
on behalf of the colony of Rhode Island on 10 April, 1750, "and
spent part of that and the next succeeding day in debating on said
affair with those gentlemen," and produced the agreement of 1710,
1711.
"Sundry plans, &c., were offered to run and review with them
the said line, but they refused to go, or join us herein, but
insisted on our going with them to a certain place on Charles
River, in Wrentham, from which they a few months since measured
three miles south, and then extended a west line with the variation
west, to the west bounds of that colony, as they claim as the west
bounds of that colony, as they informed us, which bounds they claim
as their north bounds, and is about four or five miles northward
from Woodward and Saffrey's station."
The report also states
"That on the return of the commissioners to the place of
meeting, the Rhode Island commissioners not having accompanied the
Massachusetts commissioners to the station, they found them at the
original place of meeting, who desired the commissioners would
adjourn to a second meeting, which was assented to, and the meeting
fixed at
Page 39 U. S. 213
the same place, in October following, in case their respective
governments consented thereto."
The second report was made by "The commissioners on the part of
Massachusetts, to the Legislature of that state, Feb. 21,
1792."
It is stated to be a report
"That the commissioners appointed by an Act of the Legislature
of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, passed on 8 March, 1791, for
ascertaining the boundary line between this commonwealth and the
State of Rhode Island, have carefully attended the services
assigned them, and take leave to report their doings."
The report states
"That on 15 August, 1791, we, by agreement, met the
commissioners from the State of Rhode Island, at Wrentham in this
commonwealth, and after exchanging the powers under which we
severally acted, we proceeded to discuss the subject that gave rise
to our appointments, in the course of which it appeared that the
State of Rhode Island, from their construction of this expression,
'three miles south of Charles River, or of any and every part
thereof,' in the ancient charter of the colony of Massachusetts,
and as the south bounds of the same, claim near three miles north
upon this commonwealth, than the present line of jurisdiction
between the two governments; the commissioners of the commonwealth,
from the circumstance that the branch, now called Charles River,
and from which the claim of the State of Rhode Island would run
three miles south to ascertain the south boundary of the
commonwealth, could not have been known by the name of Charles at
the time of granting the Massachusetts charter in 1621, and from
this line being ascertained and fixed at a different place by
commissioners chosen by the colonies of Massachusetts and New
Plymouth in 1667, at a time when the intentions of the grantor and
grantees must have been known, are convinced that the claim of the
State of Rhode Island is ill founded; but to complete, if possible,
the intentions of our appointments, and that the disputes between
the governments might be amicably adjusted, we united with the
commissioners of the State of Rhode Island, in the agreement as in
number one."
"In examining and comparing the charter of the two governments,
granted by the successive Kings of England, under which both claim,
it appears that the first charter to the colony of Massachusetts
was granted by King James the First, in 1621, and resigned a
certain territory to that colony, bounded by an east and west line,
which was to be three miles south of Charles River, or of any and
every part thereof; the same expression is also used for limiting a
part of the bounds of the old colony of Plymouth, and was probably
copied from their charter into the Massachusetts, to prevent an
interference of claims; the same line is adopted in the charter
from King Charles the Second, to the colony of Rhode Island,
granted in 1663, and is their northern boundary. The erection of a
third government, referring to the same bounds, seems to have
rendered it necessary for Plymouth and Massachusetts to ascertain
their bounds; accordingly those two governments, in 1664, appointed
commissioners
Page 39 U. S. 214
to survey the most southern branch of the Charles River, and to
lay off from thence three miles due south as their boundary line by
charter; this was accordingly done, and they fixed upon a large
tree, then known and since noted by the name of the Angle tree, as
the north line of Plymouth, and the south line of
Massachusetts."
"The knowledge and name of the place is preserved, and the
commonwealth, in order to perpetuate it, have erected in the place
of the tree, the remains of which are now to be seen, an handsome
stone monument, which bears the name of Angle tree, and is
explained by suitable inscriptions on the different faces of it.
This the commissioners apprehend to have been the true and original
boundary, and is three miles south of the most southerly waters of
Charles River. It does not appear that the colony of Rhode Island
ever expressed any dissatisfaction respecting their northern
boundary until 1716, or thereabouts, which finally ended in the
appointment of commissioners by both governments in 1718, who fixed
a new station about two miles north of the Angle tree, and which
was called after the surveyors, 'Woodward and Saffrey's Station.'
This place is well known, although no records of it have been
preserved, or the proceedings of the commissioners ratified by
either government; yet the line drawn from it has been practiced
upon as the line of jurisdiction between the governments from that
to the present time. This commonwealth then lost two miles in width
along the northern line of Rhode Island, and seems to have
acquiesced in the agreement upon principles of generosity."
"The ancient charter of New Plymouth and Rhode Island were
irregularly bounded on one another; the former, as was supposed, by
the shores of the Narraganset Bay, the latter by three miles east
of those shores; this interference of boundary, however, appears
not to have given any discontent, as the date of the charter of New
Plymouth was prior to that of Rhode Island; and the peaceful
jurisdiction to the shores of Narraganset bay, was enjoyed not only
by the old colony of Plymouth, but by Massachusetts (after these
two colonies were united by the charter of 1691) down to the year
1730, at which time the colony of Rhode Island passed an act
claiming the jurisdiction of the territory on their eastern
boundary, granted to them, by charter, in this act and in the
subsequent dispute and determination of the subject, not a claim,
nor the intimation of one, but that their northern boundary was
satisfactory, as established in 1718. In 1740, the King of Great
Britain, who was then the sovereign of these states, appointed
commissioners to hear and determine the dispute then existing
between the governments, who, after hearing the parties, came to
the determination as in number two, by which the extent of Rhode
Island charter was allowed, and the jurisdiction of Massachusetts
cut off from the shores of Narraganset bay. This judgment,
unexpected by either party, was disapproved of by both, and they
accordingly appealed to the King in council, where, however, it was
ratified in 1746. As soon as this information was received by the
colony of Rhode Island, they proceeded to appoint their
Page 39 U. S. 215
commissioners, and assigned the time of meeting for them to
begin running the lines that had thus been determined, and they
gave information thereof to the governor of this their province;
but the legislature not being convened until some time after the
period affixed for the Rhode Island commissioners to begin the
survey, they thought it unnecessary for them to join in the
commission. These lines we perambulated in company with the
commissioners of the State of Rhode Island, and excepting one or
two stations between Providence and Bristol, which were well
ascertained, we found that they had encroached upon this common
wealth from one-quarter to three-quarters of a mile in width. We
were attended by suitable persons, approved by both parties, for
making the necessary observations and surveys. Here, probably, all
further dispute relative to boundary lines with the colony of Rhode
Island would have forever ended had it not have been for the rage
of political parties at this time within the colony, one of which,
to effect a decided majority, was extremely anxious for an
extension of northern jurisdiction."
"Influenced by these motives, and perhaps in some measure by
their late success, they in 1740 brought forward a new claim for
extending their northern boundary beyond the line established in
1718, and to support that claim they appointed commissioners in
1750 to examine what is now called Charles River, and from the most
southern part of the same, to survey off three miles as the
boundary of Massachusetts, agreeably to their charter. A plan of
this survey was laid before us, and copy of it herewith presented.
We have inserted our own survey of what we conceive to be the most
southern part of Charles River, as intended by the charter, above
Whiting's Pond, and the position of the Angle Tree. It may not be
unnecessary to observe that at the southern head of what we call
Charles River is a place known by a large chestnut tree; thence the
stream descends to Whiting's Pond, where it forms a considerable
lake, and afterwards resuming its proper shape (and now known by
the name of Mill River or Brook), pursues its course in a northerly
direction till it joins that stream which is known by the name of
Charles River, the confluence of the two streams six miles more
northerly than the chestnut tree at the southern head of Charles;
after perambulating the bounds now practiced upon, and ascertaining
their deviations from the stations to which they ought to have been
fixed, and learning the principles upon which Rhode Island supports
her claims and the extent of them, we adjourned to the 5th day of
December last, then to meet at Providence, in the State of Rhode
Island, at which time and place we met with the commissioners from
Rhode Island, and after fully discussing the several claims and
endeavoring to conciliate the difference between the two states
agreeably to the powers of our commission, we were convinced that
no agreement can be made at present with them unless we yield a
valuable territory to which they have no claim, and which we hold
not only by repeated charters but by the agreement of the State of
Rhode Island in 1718, and so far from its appearing
Page 39 U. S. 216
that encroachments have been made by this commonwealth on that
state, that the contrary is notoriously the fact."
The counsel of the State of Massachusetts, after January term,
1839, and in conformity with the order and leave of the Court then
given, filed a plea and answer to the amended bill of the State of
Rhode Island. The plea and answer were the same in all important
particulars as that originally filed at January term, 1834. The
plea and answer conclude
"And the defendant saith that there is no other matter or thing
in the complainant's said bill of complaint contained, material for
this defendant to make answer unto, and to which said defendant has
not already pleaded and answered as aforesaid, all which matters
and things pleaded and answered, as aforesaid, the defendant is
ready to verify and maintain as the court shall order. Wherefore
said defendant prays to be hence dismissed, with costs."
All the matters in the bill, material in this case, and in the
plea and answer, with the exception of the amendments given on
pages
39 U. S.
213-215,
ante, are stated fully in the report
of the case in
37 U. S. 12 Pet.
657, and in the opinion of the Court delivered at this term, by MR.
CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY.
Page 39 U. S. 251
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
When this case was last before the Court, Massachusetts had not
made her election whether she would continue her appearance to the
suit or withdraw it according to the leave previously granted. She
has since that time made her election by putting in her plea to the
amended bill of the complainant, and both parties are now regularly
before the Court.
In the present stage of the case, the question is upon the
sufficiency of the plea as a bar to the relief sought by the
complainant's bill. The object of the bill is to establish the
boundary between the two states according to their respective
charters, and to be restored to the right of jurisdiction and
sovereignty over that portion of her
Page 39 U. S. 252
territory of which she alleges that Massachusetts has unjustly
deprived her.
The bill states the various charters from the Crown to the
colonies of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, from 1621, to 1691, and
avers that by virtue of the charter of Rhode Island, the boundary
between her and Massachusetts was a line run east and west three
miles south of Charles River or any or every part thereof; that the
place of the said line being unsettled and in dispute between the
two colonies, commissioners were mutually appointed to ascertain
and settle it; that these commissioners met in 1710; and that the
commissioners of Massachusetts then represented that a certain
Nathaniel Woodward and Solomon Saffrey had, a long time before,
ascertained the point three miles south of Charles River and had
set up a stake there, and that the commissioners of Rhode Island,
relying on these representations and believing them to be true,
entered into the agreement of 1710, which is recited at large in
the bill and which adopts the place marked by Woodward and Saffrey
as the commencement of the line between Massachusetts and Rhode
Island.
The bill further states that no mark, stake, or monument at that
time existed, and that the persons who consented to the pretended
agreement did not go to the place where it was alleged to have been
set up, nor make any survey, nor take any measures to ascertain
whether the place was, in fact, three miles and no more south of
Charles River.
That the said agreement was never assented to or ratified by the
colony or the State of Rhode Island, and that the tract of one mile
in breadth, referred to in the agreement, was never conveyed to or
enjoyed by the Town of Providence, or the colony of Rhode Island,
and that no persons appointed by the governor and council of the
said two governments of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, within the
space of six months from the date of the agreement, or at any other
time, showed the line of Woodward and Saffrey, or raised or renewed
any marks, stakes, or other memorials, according to the terms of
the said pretended agreement.
The bill then proceeds to state the continuance of the
controversy about the boundary and the appointment of commissioners
by both colonies in 1717 and 1718; that they met in 1718, and that
the like representations, as those charged to have taken place at
the former meeting of the commissioners, were again made by the
commissioners of Massachusetts; that they were again believed by
the commissioners of Rhode Island, and the agreement of 22 October,
1718, executed by them under that mistake. This agreement is set
out at length. The complainants aver that the commissioners did not
go to the place where the stake was alleged to have been set up or
make any survey in relation to this agreement. These averments are,
in substance, the same with those made in relation to the agreement
of 1710. The bill then sets out an order of the General Assembly of
Rhode Island directing the return of the commissioners
Page 39 U. S. 253
to be accepted and placed to record on the colony book, but the
complainants aver that the last mentioned agreement was never
ratified by either Rhode Island or Massachusetts.
The bill then sets out the running of the line under the belief
on the part of the Rhode Island commissioners that it was only
three miles south of Charles River, when it was in fact more than
seven; sets out at large their report of the running, which is
dated May 14, 1719, and that the return was approved by the General
Assembly of Rhode Island; but the bill avers that the persons who
signed that report were never authorized by Rhode Island to run,
agree upon, or report said line, and had no legal authority to act
in the premises, and that Massachusetts, about the time last
mentioned, wrongfully possessed herself of the disputed territory
and has held it ever since.
The bill further states that the line run as aforesaid was never
established by any act binding upon the complainant; on the
contrary, she has always claimed that the true dividing line was
three miles south of Charles River, that she has never acquiesced
in the claim of Massachusetts to a different line, and that the
claim of Rhode Island was publicly and frequently urged by the
colony, and by the freemen and inhabitants thereof; that all the
proceedings of Rhode Island before mentioned were founded on the
mistaken belief that the stake set up by Woodward and Saffrey, and
the line run as aforesaid, was only three miles south of Charles
River; that this mistaken belief continued until about 1749; that
controversies existing during that period between the citizens of
the two colonies in relation to the boundary, Rhode Island, in the
year last mentioned, appointed certain persons to run the line,
when it became manifest that the line run as above mentioned in
1719 was more than three miles south of Charles River.
The bill then states the negotiations and other proceedings of
the two colonies in relation to this boundary; that commissioners
were appointed on both sides to run the line; that it was actually
run, as now claimed by the complainant, by the commissioners of
Rhode Island, in the absence of the commissioners of Massachusetts,
who refused to attend. All of these things are particularly set out
in the bill, and also that Rhode Island attempted to obtain the
decision of the King in council, and the failure is accounted for
by the poverty of the colony at that time and the war which shortly
afterwards broke out between France and England; that the war of
the Revolution, which soon followed, interrupted and defeated the
attempt to obtain the decision of the King in council; that in
1782, the Legislature of Rhode Island again took up the subject,
and appointed a committee which reported in favor of the claim now
made by the complainant; that in 1791, the two states mutually
appointed commissioners to adjust this boundary, who met together
in that year, and at that meeting the commissioners on the part of
Massachusetts acknowledged, and also set forth in their report
subsequently made to the legislature, that the pretended agreement
of 1719, hereinbefore mentioned, has never been ratified either by
Massachusetts
Page 39 U. S. 254
or Rhode Island, which report was accepted by the legislature;
that the commissioners of the two states, being unable to agree
upon the boundary, entered into a written agreement, which is set
out in the bill, recommending to the two states to submit the
matter to indifferent men of the neighboring states; or to unite in
an application to Congress to settle the same agreeably to the
respective charters, and the Constitution of the United States;
that the said commissioners, in 1792, reported their proceedings to
their respective states, and the agreement made by them as
aforesaid; which said reports were received and accepted by the
Legislatures of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, the one made to
Massachusetts being set out at large, as an exhibit to
complainant's bill; that other commissioners were afterwards
appointed on both sides, and were continued until the year 1818;
that they had several meetings, but were unable to agree upon and
settle the line.
The bill then charges that Massachusetts has wrongfully
continued to hold possession and exercise jurisdiction within the
charter boundary of Rhode Island; that the agreements of 1710 and
1718 were unfair and inequitable and executed by mistake, as before
mentioned; that the line as run is not in a west course from the
place of beginning, but is south of a west course, thus taking in a
part of Rhode Island, even according to the point alleged to have
been ascertained and marked by Woodward and Saffrey; that the
agreements of 1710 and 1718 hereinbefore mentioned were never
ratified by Massachusetts or Rhode Island, and if they had been so
ratified by the colonies, they would not have been binding without
the consent of the King in council, which was never given to either
of them.
And the bill concludes with an averment that Rhode Island has
uniformly resisted the claim of Massachusetts; has never claimed or
admitted any other boundary than the one according to the charter,
and prays for an answer to all the matters charged and to sundry
special interrogatories put in the bill, and that the northern
boundary of the state may be ascertained and established and Rhode
Island restored to the exercise and enjoyment of her rights of
jurisdiction and sovereignty over the territory to which she is
entitled by her charter limits.
To this bill Massachusetts has put in her plea and answer, in
which she sets forth that in the year 1642, for the purpose of
ascertaining and establishing her true southern boundary, a station
or monument was erected at a point then believed to be on the true
and real boundary line of the said colony, and a line continued
therefrom westwardly to Connecticut River; that the said station or
monument then became and ever since has been well known and
notorious, and then was and ever since has been called Woodward and
Saffrey's station; that Massachusetts afterwards held and possessed
jurisdiction up to this line, and while she so held and possessed
it, about the year 1709, a dispute arose between the two
governments of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, respecting this
Page 39 U. S. 255
boundary line, and commissioners were appointed by both colonies
to settle it, and that whatever they should agree upon should
forever after be taken to be the stated lines and bounds; that the
commissioners met pursuant to their authority and entered into the
agreement of 1710, which is set out at large.
The plea then avers that the whole merits of the complainant's
claim, was heard, tried, and determined by this judgment and
agreement of the commissioners; that the agreement was fair, legal,
and binding between the parties, and was in all respects a valid
and effectual settlement of the matter in controversy, and was had
and made without fraud, covin, or misrepresentation and with a full
and equal knowledge of all the circumstances by both parties, and
that the same is still in full force, no way waived, abandoned, or
relinquished; that Woodward and Saffrey's station was then well
known, and the place where it was fixed a matter of common
notoriety, and the line run therefrom capable of being shown and
ascertained, and the marks, stakes, and memorials there, are easily
capable of being discovered and renewed, and that the defendant has
held and possessed the land, property, and jurisdiction according
to the said station and the line running therefrom from the date of
the said agreement to the present time without hindrance or
molestation. The plea then sets forth the proceedings of
Massachusetts and Rhode Island in 1717, appointing commissioners to
settle the boundary; the meeting of these commissioners, and their
agreement in 1718, which is set out at large in the plea, and which
the defendant avers was accepted by Rhode Island and caused to be
duly recorded, and that the same was thereby ratified and
confirmed.
The plea further avers that no false representations were made
on this occasion by the commissioners of Massachusetts; that the
agreement was concluded in good faith, with a full and equal
knowledge of all the circumstances by the respective parties, and
that the same has never been rescinded or abandoned; that it was
made in pursuance of the first agreement before mentioned in 1709
and in completion thereof; the plea then sets out at large the
report made by the commissioners in 1719, stating the manner in
which the line was run, and avers that the report was approved by
the General Assembly of Rhode Island on 16 June, 1719, and that
from the date of said agreement to the present time, Massachusetts
has possessed all the territory and exercised jurisdiction over the
same north of the said line as prescribed in the said agreements of
October, 1718, without hindrance or molestation.
The plea then says:
"And the said defendant doth plead the said agreement of January
19, 1710, and the said agreement in pursuance and confirmation
thereof of 22 October, 1718, and unmolested possession according to
the same from the date of the said agreements in bar to the whole
bill of complaint of the said complainant and against any other or
further relief therein, and doth pray the judgment of the court,
whether the said defendant
Page 39 U. S. 256
ought further to answer the said bill, and that said defendant
may be dismissed with costs in this behalf sustained."
Then follows an answer in support of the plea, which it is
unnecessary to repeat. The plea was set down for argument upon the
motion of the complainant, and the question now to be decided is
whether this plea is a bar to the complainant's bill.
In the view we have taken of the subject, it has become
necessary to set out in much detail the contents both of the bill
and the plea in order to show the principles on which the opinion
of the Court is founded. The controversy concerns altogether the
southern boundary of Massachusetts and the northern boundary of
Rhode Island. The bill sets out the judgment given in 1684 in the
Court of Chancery of England, declaring the original charter of
Massachusetts to be vacated, and that the enrollment of the same
should be cancelled, and also sets forth the letters patent
afterwards granted to Massachusetts by William and Mary in 1691,
which was subsequent to the charter of Rhode Island. How far this
fact may or may not be material it would not be proper for us now
to inquire. We advert to it merely to show the character of the
controversy. The complainant insists in her bill that Massachusetts
has encroached upon her, and instead of coming three miles south of
Charles River for the southern line, the one to which she claims
and holds is more than seven. The defendant, it will be observed,
does not, in her plea deny that the charter line of Massachusetts
is such as the complainant describes; nor does the defendant deny
that the line to which Massachusetts now holds and to which she
insists that she has a right to hold is four miles further south
than that described in the charter; but she relies upon the
circumstances set forth in her plea and answer as conclusive proofs
of her right as against the complainant at this time, whatever may
have been the true boundary line between them according to the
terms of the original charters.
The case to be determined is one of peculiar character, and
altogether unknown in the ordinary course of judicial proceedings.
It is a question of boundary between two sovereign states,
litigated in a court of justice, and we have no precedents to guide
us in the forms and modes of proceeding, by which a controversy of
this description can most conveniently, and with justice to the
parties, be brought to a final hearing. The subject was however
fully considered at January term, 1838, when a motion was made by
the defendant to dismiss this bill. Upon that occasion the Court
determined to frame its proceedings according to those which had
been adopted in the English courts in cases most analogous to this
where the boundaries of great political bodies had been brought
into question. And acting upon this principle, it was then decided
that the rules and practice of the court of chancery should govern
in conducting this suit to a final issue. The reasoning upon which
that decision was founded is fully stated in the opinion then
delivered,
Page 39 U. S. 257
and upon reexamining the subject we are quite satisfied as to
the correctness of this decision.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 735,
37 U. S.
739.
The proceedings in this case will therefore be regulated by the
rules and usages of the Court of Chancery. Yet in a controversy
where two sovereign states are contesting the boundary between
them, it will be the duty of the court to mould the rules of
chancery practice and pleading in such a manner as to bring this
case to a final hearing on its real merits. It is too important in
its character, and the interests concerned too great, to be decided
upon the mere technical principles of chancery pleading. And if it
appears that the plea put in by the defendant may in any degree
embarrass the complainant in bringing out the proofs of her claim
on which she relies, the case ought not to be disposed of on such
an issue. Undoubtedly the defendant must have the full benefit of
the defense which the plea discloses, but at the same time the
proceedings ought to be so ordered as to give the complainant a
full hearing upon the whole of her case. In ordinary cases between
individuals, the court of chancery has always exercised an
equitable discretion in relation to its rules of pleading whenever
it has been found necessary to do so for the purposes of justice.
And in a case like the present, the most liberal principles of
practice and pleading ought unquestionably to be adopted in order
to enable both parties to present their respective claims in their
full strength.
According to the rules of pleading in the chancery court, if the
plea is unexceptionable in its form and character, the complainant
must either set it down for argument or he must reply to it and put
in issue the facts relied on in the plea. If he elects to proceed
in the manner first mentioned, and sets down the plea for argument,
he then admits the truth of all the facts stated in the plea and
merely denies their sufficiency in point of law to prevent his
recovery. If, on the other hand, he replies to the plea and denies
the truth of the facts therein stated, he then admits that if the
particular facts stated in the plea are true, they are then
sufficient in law to bar his recovery, and if they are proved to be
true, the bill must be dismissed without reference to the equity
arising from any other facts stated in the bill.
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 472. Undoubtedly, if a plea upon argument is ruled to be
sufficient in law to bar the recovery of the complainant, the court
of chancery would, according to its uniform practice, allow him to
amend, and to put in issue, by a proper replication, the truth of
the facts stated in the plea. But in either case, the controversy
would turn altogether upon the facts stated in the plea, if the
plea is permitted to stand. It is the strict and technical
character of these rules of pleading, and the danger of injustice
often arising from them, which has given rise to the equitable
discretion always exercised by the court of chancery in relation to
pleas. In many cases, where they are not overruled, the court will
not permit them to have the full effect of a plea, and will in some
cases save to the defendant the benefit of it at the hearing, and
in others
Page 39 U. S. 258
will order it to stand for an answer, as in the judgment of the
court may best subserve the purposes of justice.
In the opinion of this Court, it was evident from the argument
we have heard that if the plea stands, the case must be finally
disposed of upon an issue highly disadvantageous to Rhode Island.
For by setting down the plea for argument, that state is compelled
to admit the truth of all the facts stated in it, many of which are
directly at variance with the allegations contained in the bill.
Thus, for example, the complainant avers that the persons who
signed, in her behalf, the agreement of May 14, 1719, had no legal
authority to act in the premises. In the plea and answer of the
defendant, it is averred that they had authority. The bill charges
that the Rhode Island commissioners acted under a mistake; that the
commissioners of Massachusetts represented to them that the stake
set up by Woodward and Saffrey was only three miles south of
Charles River; and that they believed the representation, and acted
upon it, when in truth the stake was seven miles south of that
river. The plea on the contrary avers that the agreement was made
with a full and equal knowledge of all the circumstances by the
respective parties. There are differences also between the bill and
the plea in relation to the nature and character of the possession
held by Massachusetts of the disputed territory.
If we proceed to decide the case upon the plea, we must assume,
without any proof on either side, that the facts above mentioned
are correctly stated in the plea, and incorrectly set forth in the
bill. This is the rule of the chancery law. Yet it is evident that
by deciding the case upon such an issue, we should shut out the
very gist of the complainant's case and exclude the facts upon
which her whole equity is founded, if she has any. Because if we
assume, as we must do in this state of the pleading, that the
agreements, which are admitted on both sides to have been made,
were made by persons having competent authority to make them and
who had full knowledge of all the circumstances, and that
Massachusetts had quietly and peaceably enjoyed the territory under
this agreement for more than a century, everyone, we presume, would
admit that the claim of Rhode Island to unsettle this boundary at
this late day was utterly groundless and untenable. Yet this is the
attitude in which Rhode Island must stand upon the issue framed by
the plea; the allegations in her bill, above mentioned, must be
rejected as erroneous without giving her an opportunity of proving
them, and her claim to this territory must be decided upon a
statement of facts the truth of which she utterly denies, and which
she offers to prove are entirely erroneous if the Court will
consent to hear her testimony. We do not mean to say that the facts
stated in the bill, if proved to be true, will entitle the
complainant to recover. That point is not before us in the present
state of the pleadings, and we give no opinion on the merits of
this controversy. But certainly it would be unjust to the
complainant not to give her an opportunity of being
Page 39 U. S. 259
heard according to the real state of the case between the
parties and to shut out from consideration the very facts upon
which she relies to maintain her suit.
If the complainant takes issue on the facts stated in the plea,
her condition would be equally unfavorable. For there are many
facts upon which the complainant evidently relies as material which
are altogether unnoticed in the plea and upon which, therefore, no
issue would be framed. And if the complainant were to adopt this
alternative, she would admit, according to the chancery rules of
pleading, that all of the allegations contained in her bill were
immaterial and of no importance except those noticed in the plea,
and that if the facts averred in the plea turned out to be true,
the complainant had no right to recover, whatever equities might be
found in the other allegations in the bill and whatever proofs she
might be ready to adduce in support of these allegations.
In either alternative, therefore, it would be manifestly unjust
to the complainant to decide this controversy upon the plea, and if
it was deemed good in form and substance, so far as the case is
already presented to the Court, we still should not finally decide
the controversy on this plea, but save the benefit of it to the
hearing, and give the complainant as well as the defendant the
opportunity of bringing forward all the merits of his case. But the
plea put in by the defendant cannot be sustained even if this were
to be treated as a suit between individuals and tried by the
ordinary rules of chancery pleading. It is multifarious, and on
that account ought to be overruled.
It is a general rule that a plea ought not to contain more
defenses than one. Various facts, therefore, can never be pleaded
in one plea unless they are all conducive to a single point on
which the defendant means to rest his defense. This principle is so
well established that it is unnecessary to refer to many adjudged
cases to support it. It is fully stated by Lord Hardwicke in 1 Atk.
54 in the following words:
"The defense proper for a plea must be such as reduces the cause
to a particular point and from thence creates a bar to the suit and
is to save the parties expense in examination, and it is not every
good defense in equity that is likewise good as a plea, for where
the defense consists of a variety of circumstances, there is no use
of a plea; the examination must still be at large, and the effect
of allowing such a plea will be that the court will give its
judgment on the circumstances of the case before they are made out
by proof."
The defendant, after stating the various proceedings
hereinbefore mentioned which preceded and followed the execution of
the agreements on which he relies, all of which conduce to a single
point -- that is, to show the obligatory and conclusive effect of
those agreements upon both of the states as an accord and
compromise of a disputed right, deliberately made and with full
knowledge on both sides, proceeds to aver
"that the defendant has occupied and exercised jurisdiction, and
enjoyed all rights and sovereignty according
Page 39 U. S. 260
to the same, from the date hereof to the present time."
And he then sums up his defense in the following words:
"And the said defendant doth plead the said agreement of 19
January, 1710, and the said agreement in pursuance and confirmation
thereof of 22 October, 1718, and unmolested possession according to
the same from the date of the said agreements, in bar to the whole
bill of complaint of the said complainant and against any further
or other reliefs therein."
The defense set up by this plea is twofold:
1. That there was an accord and compromise of a disputed
right.
2. Prescription, or an unmolested possession from the time of
the agreement -- that is, of more than one hundred years.
These two defenses are entirely distinct, and depend upon
different principles. If what the defendant alleges be true, then
the agreements themselves conclude the controversy. For if, as the
plea avers, there was a dispute between these two colonies in
respect to the boundary between them, and that dispute was settled
by persons duly authorized to bind the respective parties, and if,
as stated in the plea, the agreement of October, 1718, to run the
line from the stake set up by Woodward and Saffrey was accepted,
ratified, and confirmed by Rhode Island, and if the running of the
line afterwards in 1719 pursuant to such agreement was also
approved by Rhode Island, then there can no longer be any
controversy between them. They must on both sides be bound by the
accord and compromise of those whom they had authorized to bind
them, and whose conduct they afterwards approved, provided the
settlement was made, as the plea alleges, with a full and equal
knowledge of all the circumstances. The various facts stated by the
defendant in relation to these agreements contribute to support
them and conduce to establish this point of his defense. And
assuming that the plea and answer are true in all these statements,
then an accord and compromise is established which was obligatory
upon the parties from the moment it was finally ratified. And
taking everything averred by the defendant on this point of the
defense to be correct, Rhode Island would have been as effectually
barred as she is at the present moment if she had commenced this
controversy within a month after the accord was made. The lapse of
time is not at all necessary to give validity to such a settlement
or to support the defense founded upon it. It is a matter entirely
distinct from it, and if it has any operation in the cause, it is
another defense, and one of a different character. It is not an
accord and compromise of a doubtful right -- it is
prescription.
Rhode Island, indeed, avers that the possession was constantly
disputed on her part, and efforts made from time to time to regain
it, and that it has always been an open question since the error in
the line was first discovered down to the present time. But as we
have already remarked when the plea is set down for argument, the
statements contained in it are admitted to be true. And according
to the allegations there made, this long possession was unmolested.
In that state of the fact, separated from all the averments
Page 39 U. S. 261
of Rhode Island, the possession of more than one hundred years
would become a rightful one by prescription, even if it had begun
in wrong and injustice. The acquiescence of the adjoining state for
such a lapse of time would be conclusive evidence that she assented
to the possession thus held, and had determined to relinquish her
claims. The possession, therefore, if a defense at all, is a
separate and complete one of itself, and forms no part of the
accord and agreement alleged in the plea. Here, then, are two
defenses in the same plea, contrary to the established rules of
pleading.
A few cases will illustrate these principles and show what
constitutes duplicity in pleading. In the case of
Whitebread v.
Brockhurst, 1 Br.Ch. 404, where to a bill for a specific
performance of an agreement the defendant put in a plea which
averred two facts -- first, that there was no agreement in writing,
and secondly that there had been no acts done in part performance.
Lord Thurlow overruled the plea as double, it containing two
different points, and therefore proper for an answer. And in
delivering his opinion on that occasion, he says
"the use of a plea here is to save time, expense, and vexation;
therefore, if one point will put an end to the whole cause, it is
important to the administration of justice that it should be
pleaded; but if you are to state many matters, the answer is the
most commodious form to do it in."
We are aware that this decision has been questioned. But it is
quoted with approbation, and recognized as authority in 7 Johns.Ch.
216, where Chancellor Kent, speaking of the case of
Whitebread
v. Brockhurst, says,
"the reasoning of Lord Thurlow is supposed to be weighty and
decisive, and since that time it has been the constant language of
the court that the plea must reduce the defense to a single point,
and that a defendant can never plead double."
Again, in the case of
Claridge v. Hoare, 14 Ves. 65,
66, Lord Eldon, in speaking of the case of
Beachcroft v.
Beachcroft, where it had been held that the plea of a release,
with an averment that it had been acted upon, was multifarious,
expressed his doubts of that decision upon the ground that the
release was effectual without being acted upon, and the latter
averment might have been rejected as surplusage. The reasoning of
Lord Eldon shows that if the second averment would have been a good
point of defense, the plea would have been bad. The acting upon the
release, in
Beachcroft v. Beachcroft, was altogether
unimportant, and could not, if true, affect the rights of the
parties. But not so as to the possession here pleaded. If true, as
pleaded, it is of itself a defense, and could not therefore be
rejected as surplusage. The case of
Corporation of London v.
Corporation of Liverpool, 3 Anst. 738, also illustrates and
supports the principle we have stated. It is unnecessary, however,
to multiply cases on this subject. They are all collected together
in Story's equity Pleading where the subject is very fully
examined. We hold it to be perfectly clear that in the case of an
individual, the plea of a release and of the statute of
Page 39 U. S. 262
limitations, or of an award and the statute of limitations,
could not be united in the same plea. And if so, it would seem
irresistibly to follow that the accord and compromise, and the
title by prescription, united in this plea, render it multifarious,
and that it ought to be overruled on that account.
We have carefully avoided expressing any opinion upon the merits
of this controversy, and have confined ourselves to the case as
presented to the Court by the pleadings. The facts stated in the
bill and not noticed in the plea are not yet admitted or denied,
and consequently we do not know in what form the case may
ultimately come here for decision.
In the case of
Rowe v. Tweed, 15 Ves. 377, 378, Lord
Eldon remarks that "the office of a plea generally is not to deny
the equity, but to bring forward a fact which, if true, displaces
it." A plea, therefore, in general presupposes that the bill
contains equitable matter which the defendant by his plea seeks to
displace. It is according to this principle of equity pleading that
we have treated the case before us. If a defendant supposes that
there is no equity in the bill, his appropriate answer to it is a
demurrer, which brings forward at once the whole case for argument.
The case of
Milligan v.
Mitchell, 3 Cranch 220,
7 U. S. 228,
illustrates this rule and shows that the defense here taken was
more proper for an answer or demurrer than a plea.
The course determined on recommends itself strongly to the
court, because it appears to be the only mode in which full justice
can be done to both parties. Each will now be able to come to the
final hearing upon the real merits of their respective claims
unembarrassed by any technical rules. Such unquestionably is the
attitude in which the parties ought to be placed in relation to
each other. If the defendant supposes that the bill does not
disclose a case which entitles Rhode Island to the relief she
seeks, the whole subject can be brought to a hearing by a demurrer
to the bill. If it is supposed that any facts are misconceived by
the complainants, and therefore erroneously stated, the defendants
can put these in issue by answering the bill. The whole case is
open, and upon the rule to answer which the court will lay upon the
defendant, Massachusetts is entirely at liberty to demur or answer,
as she may deem best for her own interests.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN.
The Massachusetts charter was granted by King Charles the First,
and is dated 4 March, 1628. It conveyed to Sir Henry Rosewell and
others
"all that part of New England in America which lies and extends
between a great river, there commonly called Monomack, alias
Merimac, and a certain other river called Charles River, &c.,
and also all and singular those lands and hereditaments whatsoever,
lying within the space of three English miles on the south part of
the said Charles River, or of any or every part thereof,"
&c.
Page 39 U. S. 263
On 8 July, 1663, King Charles the Second granted the charter of
Rhode Island,
"bounded on the west, or westerly, to the middle or channel of a
river there, commonly called and known by the name of Pawcatuck
River, and so along the said river, as the greater or middle stream
thereof reaches or lies up into the north country; northward unto
the head thereof, and from thence by a straight line drawn due
north until it meets with the south line of the Massachusetts; and
on the north or northerly by the aforesaid south or southerly line
of the Massachusetts Colony or Plantations,"
&c.
The line which limits Massachusetts on the south and Rhode
Island on the north is the subject matter of controversy in this
case. The bill states that for many years after the Rhode Island
charter was granted, the northern part of the colony, adjoining
Massachusetts, remained wild and uncultivated, and the land was of
little value; that a short time previous to the year one thousand
seven hundred and nine, a dispute arose respecting the northern
boundary; and that Massachusetts appointed one Joseph Dudley on her
part, and the General Assembly of Rhode Island appointed and
empowered one Joseph Jenckes on her part, to ascertain and settle
the disputed line; that these persons met, together with one
Nathaniel Paine, one Nathaniel Blagrove, and one Samuel Thaxter, of
Massachusetts, and one Jonathan Sprague and one Samuel Wilkinson of
Rhode Island, at Roxbury, in Massachusetts, 19 January, 1710, and
that the said Joseph Dudley, Nathaniel Paine Nathaniel Blagrove,
and Samuel Thaxter represented to the said Jenckes, Sprague and
Wilkinson that one Nathaniel Woodward and one Solomon Saffrey, who
they also represented to be skillful and approved artists, had,
before that time, that is to say, in 1642, ascertained the point or
place, three English miles south of the river called Charles River,
or of any or every part thereof, and had there set up a stake, and
that Jenckes, Sprague, and Wilkinson, relying on their
representations, and believing the point or place to have been
ascertained, and that it was three English miles, and no more,
south of Charles River or of any or every part thereof; the said
Dudley and Jenckes, in the presence of and with the advice of the
other persons named, signed and sealed a certain writing, called an
agreement, that the boundary should be run from the stake set up by
Woodward and Saffrey.
And the complainant states that no stake or monument at that
time existed by which could be ascertained the place where it was
set up by Woodward and Saffrey; that the agreement was entered into
without going to the place of beginning and without ascertaining
whether it was not more than three miles south of Charles River,
and whether the line was run as stated in the agreement.
That neither the colony nor the State of Rhode Island has ever
assented to or confirmed the agreement, nor has the Town of
Providence nor the colony enjoyed the tract of land specified in
the agreement of one mile in breadth, north of Woodward and
Saffrey's line; that this line was not shown nor run in six months
after the
Page 39 U. S. 264
agreement; nor were any marks, stakes, or other memorials made
to identify the place of beginning.
That this controversy respecting the line continued, and that
Massachusetts, on 18h June, 1717, enacted an order in the words
following:
"The season of the year having been such, this spring, that the
committee appointed in November last to run the line between this
government and the government of Rhode Island could not attend the
service, ordered that the honorable Nathaniel Paine Esquire, Samuel
Thaxter, Esquire, and John Chandler, Esquire, be a committee to
join with such as the said government of Rhode Island shall
empower, to proceed in and perfect the running and settling the
line between this province and the said colony, pursuant to the
agreement lately made for that end by commissioners of both
governments,"
&c. And on 16 November, 1717, the General court of
Massachusetts resolved that Nathaniel Blagrove, Esquire, be added
to the committee. And afterwards, the general court resolved
that
"Whereas this house is informed that the government of Rhode
Island have fully empowered the committee which they have appointed
to run the line between this province and that government to agree,
compromise, and issue the governments on that affair and finally
settle the dividing boundary:"
"Resolved, that if the said committee shall attend that service,
so empowered, that the committee appointed by this Court to join in
running the said line be also vested with like powers, and are
hereby fully empowered to agree, compromise, and issue the
difference between the governments in the said affair and to make a
full and final settlement of the line between that government and
this."
That on 17 June, 1718, the Assembly of Rhode Island passed the
following act:
"Whereas the committee appointed and empowered by the general
assembly of this colony, at their sessions on the first Wednesday
of May, 1717, to perfect and settle the line between the said
colony and the Province of Massachusetts Bay, were bound up or
restricted to an agreement made at Roxbury between Colonel Dudley
and Major Jenckes . . . so as the matter in difference between the
two colonies, as to the stating and settling the said line hath
been retarded, to the considerable charge of the colony, this
assembly, taking the premises under consideration, do hereby enact,
constitute, and appoint Major Joseph Jenckes, Major Randal Holding,
Major Thomas Fry, Captain Samuel Wilkinson, and Mr. John Mumford,
surveyor, a committee to treat and agree with such gentlemen as are
or may be appointed and commissioned by Massachusetts to settle the
line. . . ."
That on 2 October, 1718, the commissioners on both sides met at
Rehoboth and after discussing the subject, entered into an
agreement under their hands and seals "that the stake set up by
Woodward and Saffrey, in 1642, upon Wrentham plain be the station
or commencement of the line,"
&c.
The complainant alleges that this agreement was also entered
into without examination of the place where the stake was
originally set
Page 39 U. S. 265
up, and without ascertaining whether the place was not more than
three English miles south of Charles River or of any or every part
thereof. That the Rhode Island commissioners believed the
statements made to them on this subject by the commissioners of
Massachusetts.
The Rhode Island commissioners made a return of their
proceedings to their legislature, which accepted it and ordered it
to be recorded.
On 12 May, 1719, the commissioners on both sides ran the line,
beginning at the place where it was supposed the stake had been
erected by Woodward and Saffrey, but which stake was not found, and
was more than seven miles from Charles River or any or every part
thereof. The commissioners made a return of their survey, which was
received and approved of by the Legislature of Rhode Island. But
the complainant alleges that the persons making the survey were not
authorized to act in the premises by Rhode Island. And the bill
states the line was never confirmed by Rhode Island; that the
colony maintained that the true line was to begin three miles south
of Charles River, and the complainant avers that all the above
proceedings and agreements were founded upon the belief that the
point or place three English miles south of Charles River, or of
any or every part thereof, had been correctly and truly ascertained
by Woodward and Saffrey.
In the year 1750, the General Assembly of Rhode Island passed an
act authorizing the boundary line to be run and appointing certain
persons to perform this duty. In the preamble to this act it is
stated that the line never has been settled and run according to
the royal charter and that divers persons have set forth their
right to the assembly to be under the jurisdiction of Rhode Island
instead of that of Massachusetts. The commissioners appointed by
this act were authorized to meet any commissioners appointed by
Massachusetts and to settle the boundary and run the line. But if
Massachusetts should decline to act, then the Rhode Island
commissioners were required to run the line agreeably to the
charter and make return of their proceedings.
It is stated in the bill that commissioners were appointed by
Massachusetts, but they declined to meet the commissioners of Rhode
Island, who, after waiting two days near the place of beginning,
proceeded,
ex parte, to run the line and make return
thereof.
This report was accepted by the assembly, and the commissioners
were continued in office.
The bill then states that the Massachusetts commissioners,
appointed as above, made a report of their proceedings to the
council, 13 April, 1750.
The bill further states that remonstrances were made to
Massachusetts against its exercise of jurisdiction over the country
within the chartered limits of Rhode Island so long as the royal
government continued; that unsuccessful attempts were made to bring
the subject before the King in council, but the population of
Rhode
Page 39 U. S. 266
Island being small and her means limited and war between England
and France having soon after taken place interposed insurmountable
obstacles.
In the year 1782, on the petition of a large number of the
inhabitants residing within the controverted limits, the Assembly
of Rhode Island made a report in favor of its claim.
In the year 1791, the bill states, the Legislature of
Massachusetts passed an act, duly appointing Walter Spooner, Elisha
Mayard, and David Cobb, commissioners, for ascertaining the
boundary line between the said State of Massachusetts and the State
of Rhode Island, and that in the same year, the Rhode Island
Assembly passed an act appointing William Bradford, Jabez Bowen,
and Moses Brown commissioners for ascertaining the boundary. These
commissioners met at Wrentham, in Massachusetts, in 1791, but they
could not agree on the line. They however agreed in writing to
measure from Charles River three miles south, as claimed by each
state, as the place of beginning, and to recommend to their
respective governments to have the dispute adjusted by a reference
of it to disinterested persons or by application to Congress.
These commissioners reported their proceedings to their
respective states, and the bill further states that in the year
1809, the parties again appointed commissioners, who continued in
office until 1818, but they were not able to settle the line.
The State of Massachusetts pleads in bar to the bill, that in
1642, for the purpose of ascertaining and establishing the true
southern boundary line of the colony of Massachusetts, a station or
monument was erected and fixed at a point then taken and believed
to be on the true and real boundary line of said colony, and a line
continued therefrom westerly to Connecticut River, which said
monument or station then became and ever since has been well known
and notorious, and then was and ever since has been called Woodward
and Saffrey's Station on Wrentham plains, and after fixing of said
station and running the line aforesaid, and after the granting of
the charter of Rhode Island, and while all the territory north of
said station and line was claimed, held, and possessed and
jurisdiction over the same exercised and enjoyed by Massachusetts
as parcel of her own territory,
viz., in the year 1709,
disputes having arisen between the two governments respecting the
said boundary line, under an act of the assembly, the Governor of
Rhode Island colony appointed Major Joseph Jenckes to meet with his
Excellency, Colonel Joseph Dudley, Governor of Massachusetts, to
settle the boundary, and it was declared that what they should
agree upon should be forever after deemed the true boundary.
These persons met at Roxbury in January 1710. 1711, and after a
full discussion of the subject, agreed that
"The stake set up by Nathaniel Woodward and Solomon Saffrey,
skillful and approved artists, in the year 1642, and since that
often renewed, in the latitude of forty-one degrees and fifty-five
minutes, being three English miles distant southward from the
southernmost part of the river called
Page 39 U. S. 267
Charles River, agreeably to the letters patent for the
Massachusetts province, be allowed on both sides the commencement
of the line between Massachusetts and the colony of Rhode Island,
and to be continued between the two governments, &c., as is
deciphered in the plan and tract of that line by Nathaniel Woodward
and Solomon Saffrey, now shown forth to us, and is remaining on
record in the Massachusetts government."
"And whereas, upon presumption, by mistake or ignorance of that
line, the inhabitants of the Town of Providence, in the colony of
Rhode Island, have surveyed and laid out several lots and divisions
of land to the northward of Woodward and Saffrey's line aforesaid,
on the Massachusetts side, it is agreed that there shall be and
remain unto the said Town of Providence and inhabitants of the
government of Rhode Island a certain tract of land of one mile in
breadth to the northward of said line, as described and platted,
beginning from the great River of Pautucket, and so to proceed at
the north side of the said patent line of equal breadth until it
come to the place where Providence west line cuts the said patent
line, supposed to contain five thousand acres, be the same more or
less, the soil whereof shall be and remain to the Town of
Providence, or others, according to the disposition thereof to be
made by the government of Rhode Island aforesaid. Nevertheless, to
continue and remain within the jurisdiction of Massachusetts."
"And it was agreed that persons to be appointed respectively by
the two governments should attend the first good season within six
months to show the ancient line of Woodward and Saffrey and to
raise and renew the marks and memorials of the same."
This agreement was signed and sealed by Dudley and Jenckes in
the presence and by the advice of Nathaniel Paine Nathaniel
Blagrove, and Samuel Thaxter, on the part of Massachusetts, and by
Jonathan Sprague and Samuel Wilkinson on the part of Rhode
Island.
"And the said defendant avers that the whole real and true
merits of said complainant's supposed cause or causes of action
were fully heard, tried, and determined by the said Jenckes and
Dudley; that the said agreement was fair, legal, and binding
between the parties, and was in all respects and all particulars a
valid and effectual settlement of the matter in controversy, and
was had and made without covin, fraud, or misrepresentation; and
with a full and equal knowledge of all circumstances, by both
parties."
And the plea further avers that 18 June, 1718, in order to
perfect and complete the running and settling of the line in
pursuance of the above agreement, Nathaniel Paine Samuel Thaxter,
and John Chandler, were appointed a committee by Massachusetts, to
which was afterwards added the name of Nathaniel Blagrove, to unite
with a committee that should be appointed by Rhode Island for that
purpose. And they were fully empowered to agree and compromise the
dispute. And Rhode Island adopted in its assembly
Page 39 U. S. 268
the following act:
"Whereas, the committee appointed and empowered by the general
assembly of this colony in May, 1718, to perfect and settle the
line between the said colony and that of Massachusetts, were bound
up or restricted to an agreement made at Roxbury between Colonel
Dudley and Major Jenckes, &c., so as the matter in difference
between the two colonies, as to the stating and settling the said
line, hath been retarded, &c. And the assembly hereby enact,
constitute, and appoint Major Joseph Jenckes, Major Randal Holding,
Major Thomas Fry, Captain Samuel Wilkinson, and Mr. John Mumford,
surveyor, a committee to treat and agree with the committee of
Massachusetts, and full power was given to settle and compromise
the controversy respecting the line. The said committees having met
at Rehoboth, in Massachusetts, entered into an agreement under seal
that the stake set up by Woodward and Saffrey in 1642 upon Wrentham
plains be the station from which to begin the line which shall
divide the two governments,"
&c.
This agreement, on 29 October, 1718, was accepted by the General
Assembly of Rhode Island and recorded, and was thereby certified
and confirmed by the same. And the plea avers that said Paine
Blagrove and Thaxter, or either of them, made no false
representation whatsoever to the commissioners of Rhode Island, but
that the agreement was done and concluded fairly and in good faith,
with a full and equal knowledge of all the circumstances, by the
respective parties.
The plea states that the Massachusetts commissioners made a
report of their proceedings in regard to the place of beginning and
the running of the line which was approved by the legislature. And
that from the date of said agreements to the present time,
Massachusetts has possessed and enjoyed all the territory, and
exercised jurisdiction over the same, north of the said line, and
that the place where the stake was set up by Woodward and Saffrey
is well known, and has ever been notorious since the stake was set
up. And the aforesaid agreements, and the unmolested possession
according to the same, are pleaded in bar.
And the defendant, not waiving said plea, pleaded as aforesaid,
but relying and insisting on the same by way of answer in support
of said plea, and to everything alleged in said bill to show that
the said agreements ought not to stand and be allowed as good and
conclusive against the parties and a valid and effectual bar,
&c., saith that the said agreements, &c., were fair and
legal, obtained without fraud or misrepresentation, and with a full
and equal knowledge of all circumstances in both parties, and that
it was a valid and effectual settlement of the matter in
controversy, and that it never has been in any way rescinded,
abandoned, or relinquished.
This case having assumed the forms of a chancery proceeding, the
established rules of chancery pleading must govern it. In this mode
the points for decision are raised, but the court, in deciding the
questions involved, may apply principles of the common law,
Page 39 U. S. 269
of chancery or of national law as they shall deem the
circumstances of the case require.
The plea sets up certain agreements in bar of the relief prayed
for which substantially appear upon the face of the bill, and it is
insisted that in such case, a demurrer, and not a plea in bar, is
the proper mode of defense; that the great object of the bill is to
set aside these agreements, and that under such circumstances they
cannot be pleaded in bar.
On general principles it would seem to be unreasonable that the
complainant, by stating the matter in bar in his bill, should
prevent the respondent from pleading it. And such is not the
established rule in chancery pleading.
A plea is a special answer to the bill, and generally sets up
matter in bar which does not appear in the bill, but this is not
always the case.
An award may be pleaded to a bill to set aside the award and
open the account. Mit. 260. 2 Atk. 501. 3 Atk. 529, 644.
If the plaintiff or a person under whom he claims has released
the subject of his demand, the defendants may plead the release in
bar of the bill, and this will apply to a bill praying that the
release may be set aside. Mit. 261. 1 Atk. 294. 6 Madd. 166. 2 Sch.
& Lefr. 721. 3 P.Wms. 315.
If a bill be brought to impeach a decree, on the ground of fraud
used in obtaining it, the decree may be pleaded in bar of the suit.
3 Bro.P.C. 558. 2 Eq.Ca.Ab. 177. 7 Viner.Ab. 398. 3 P.Wms. 95.
These authorities show that a plea in bar may embrace matters
stated in the bill. Where the matters in defense are fully stated
in the bill, and it contains no allegations which it is necessary
to deny by a plea, and by an answer, in support of the plea, a
demurrer should be filed.
A question in this case is made whether the plea is not
multifarious, and consequently bad.
The rules which govern a special plea at law are substantially
the same as apply to a plea in chancery. It must be single and not
double. Its office is to bring forward a fact which may be the
result of a combination of circumstances and which, if true, bars
the relief prayed for in the bill. 15 Ves. 377. A plea, in order to
be good, must be either an allegation or a denial of some leading
fact or of matters which, taken collectively, make out some general
fact, which is a complete defense. Story's Eq.Pl. 497. 4 Sim. 161.
7 Johns.Ch. 214. Beames' Pl. in Eq. 10. But although a defense
offered by way of plea should consist of a great variety of
circumstances, yet if they all tend to a single point, the plea may
be good. Thus, a plea of title derived from the person under whom
the plaintiff claims may be a good plea though consisting of a
great variety of circumstances, for the title is a single point to
which the cause is reduced by the plea. So a plea of conveyance,
fine, and nonclaim would be good as amounting to one title.
Cooper's Eq.Pl. 225.
Page 39 U. S. 270
Beames' Pl. in Eq. 18. Mit. Eq.Pl. 296. The result of all the
authorities is that various facts may be pleaded if they conduce to
a single point on which the defendant means to rest his defense.
And by this rule the plea in this case must be tested.
The defendant pleads in bar to the right asserted in the bill,
the establishment of the Woodward and Saffrey station, as the place
where the contested boundary line is to commence and from which it
was in fact run. And to support this, the agreements of 1710 and
1718 are relied on, and also the unmolested possession according to
the same.
These agreements and the unmolested possession according to them
are facts and circumstances which conduce to prove the right or
title asserted in the plea. They are consistent with each other,
and can in no correct sense be considered as tending to establish
distinctive grounds of title.
The two agreements are substantially the same, and the
unmolested possession, according to the agreements, is a
consequence which naturally follows and tends very strongly to
confirm them.
The important fact asserted in the plea is that the controversy
was amicably adjusted between the parties by the establishment of
the line, and there is not a fact or circumstance averred in the
plea which does not go to support this main fact. This plea then
cannot be multifarious. The point relied on is single and distinct
although it is established by a variety of facts and
circumstances.
Mere surplusage will not render a plea multifarious or double.
Beames' Pl. in Eq. 19, 20. In Story's Eq.Pl., n. 3, it is remarked
what constitutes duplicity or multifariousness in a plea is
sometimes a matter of great nicety upon the footing of authority. A
plea cannot contain two distinct matters of defense, for if more
than one defense be admitted, it is well observed, there may be as
many grounds of defense stated in a plea as in an answer, and this
would defeat the object of the plea.
Where in a bill praying a conveyance for four estates, the
defendant put in a plea of a fine as to one estate and in the same
plea he put in a disclaimer as to the other estates, the plea was
overruled, for the disclaimer was wholly disconnected with the plea
of the fine, and the plea was therefore double. Facts inconsistent
with each other cannot be pleaded, for this would set up two
defenses. But where the facts, however numerous, all conduce to
establish one point, as in the plea under consideration, it is not
multifarious. Story's Eq.Pl. 499.
This plea goes to the whole bill, and the matter in bar is
clearly and distinctly averred. These averments must be sufficient
to support the plea, and exclude intendments against the pleader. 2
Ves. 245. 2 Sch. & Lef. 727. 18 Ves. 182.
The defendant has filed an answer in support of his plea, and
this is necessary where there are equitable circumstances stated in
the bill, in favor of the plaintiff's case against the matter
pleaded. These allegations in the bill must be denied by way of
answer, as
Page 39 U. S. 271
well as by averments in the plea. 6 Ves. 594. 2 Ves. & B.
364. In such case the answer must be full and clear or it will not
be effectual to support the plea, for the court will intend the
matters so charged against the pleader unless they are fully and
clearly denied. But if they are, in substance, fully and clearly
denied, it may be sufficient to support the plea, although all the
circumstances charged in the bill may not be precisely answered.
Mit. 298, 299. 2 Atk. 241. 1 Sim. & Stu. 568. 5 Bro.Pl.Ch.
561.
The answer goes to the whole bill, and it denies all fraud,
misrepresentation, or unfairness, and every allegation in the bill
which goes to show that the agreements set forth in the plea should
not be binding and conclusive on the parties.
A question is made whether this answer, which goes to the whole
bill and denies the same facts as are denied in the plea, does not
overrule the plea.
This objection seems to derive some support from certain
decisions made in the Exchequer and which have been, somewhat
loosely, copied into some of the elementary treatises on chancery
pleading. But these decisions have never been sanctioned by the
High court of chancery in England, whose rules of practice have
been adopted by this Court.
The rule is that the answer must not be broader than the plea,
but must, in support of the plea, deny fraud and all equitable
circumstances alleged in the bill, which are also by a general
averment denied by the plea.
The answer, when filed in support of the plea, forms no part of
the defense. It is evidence which the plaintiff has a right to
require, and to use to invalidate the defense made by the plea. 6
Ves. 597. In a note in Mit. 240 it is said
"That in the cases in the Court of Exchequer, it seems to have
been supposed that the answer in support of the plea overruled the
plea. But an answer can only overrule a plea where it applies to
matter which the defendant, by his plea, declines to answer,
demanding the judgment of the court whether, by reason of the
matter stated in the plea, he ought to be compelled to answer so
much of the bill."
If the plea goes only to a part of the bill and prays the
judgment of the court whether he shall be compelled to answer the
other part, and the answer goes to the whole bill, the answer,
being broader than the plea, overrules it. For the answer is to the
part of the bill which it is the object of the plea not to
answer.
As this plea extends to the whole bill, it is essential to its
validity that such facts should be averred in it as shall make a
complete defense. But it is not necessary in the plea to notice
every allegation in the bill which does not involve the facts that
constitute the bar.
Where the plea does not cover the whole bill, as where it only
sets upon a matter in bar to a part of the relief sought in the
bill, the other part of the bill must be answered. In the case
under consideration,
Page 39 U. S. 272
the answer in support of the plea is not broader than the plea,
and consequently does not overrule it.
I come now to examine the great question in the case, and that
is whether the matter in bar, set out in the plea, constitutes a
good defense to the bill.
In entering upon this subject, it may not be improper to notice
the hardship complained of by the plaintiff's counsel in setting up
the defense by a special plea.
It is said that the ground assumed is narrow and technical, and
excludes the full merits of the controversy from being examined.
That no opportunity is afforded the plaintiff to prove the mistake
by the commissioners in agreeing to Woodward and Saffrey's station
as the place where the boundary line was to begin and which is the
main ground on which the bill prays for relief.
It is true, a plea somewhat narrows the ground of controversy.
Whilst it must contain all the facts material to a complete
defense, it need not be extended to all the allegations of the
bill. And the plaintiff may either take issue on the plea or admit
the truth of it by setting it down for hearing, as has been done in
this case.
The office of a plea is to reduce the cause to a single point,
and thus prevent the expense and trouble of an examination at
large. But the matters stated in the bill which are not denied by
the plea are admitted to be true. The case of the plaintiff then,
as now to be considered, is as full and as strong as it is
presented in the bill, where not denied by the plea. The averments
of the plea are admitted to be true, and the question is whether
those averments, counteracted by any allegations in the bill, not
denied by the plea, constitute a bar to the right asserted by the
plaintiff.
The plea states that in the year 1642, Woodward and Saffrey
erected a station or monument at a point then taken and believed to
be on the true and real boundary of Massachusetts on the south. And
that in 1710, this station was agreed to be the true boundary, and
the place from which the line should be run, by Dudley and Jenckes,
commissioners appointed by Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and who
were authorized to settle and establish the line. And that
afterwards, in the year 1718, other commissioners were appointed by
Massachusetts and Rhode Island, to whom ample powers were given to
compromise and settle forever the boundary, and who established the
same place of beginning. And that the report made to Rhode Island
by its commissioners, setting forth the agreement, was accepted by
its legislature and duly recorded and ratified.
And the plea avers that the Massachusetts commissioners were
guilty of no fraud or misrepresentation, and that both agreements
were entered into with perfect fairness and in good faith, and with
full and equal knowledge by the parties. That the claims of the
plaintiff, as set forth in the bill, were fully heard, discussed,
and settled. And that Massachusetts has retained possession and
exercised
Page 39 U. S. 273
jurisdiction over the country north of the line thus established
until the present time.
These are the facts, substantially, on which the defendant
relies as a bar to the plaintiff's bill.
The principal ground of relief alleged in the bill is the
mistake in fixing the place from which the line was to run more
than seven miles south of Charles River, whereas by the charter of
Massachusetts, it was to be but three miles south of that
river.
By the charter, the boundary was declared to be "three English
miles south of any or every part of Charles River."
Some doubt may arise from this phraseology whether the three
English miles are to be measured from the source of the southern
branches of Charles River or from the main channel of the river.
And it would seem from the establishment of the Woodward and
Saffrey station and other acts done in reference to this boundary
shortly after the date of the charter, and when its language was at
least as well understood as at present, that the measurement was
understood not to be required from the body of the river. At that
early day the country was a wilderness, and the land was of but
little value, so that Massachusetts could have felt no very strong
interest in establishing the line farther south than was authorized
by the charter.
The bill alleges a mistake in this distance from the river of
the Woodward and Saffrey station by the commissioners of Rhode
Island in both of the agreements respecting the boundary, and this
mistake is not denied by the plea. But in the language of the plea
these agreements are now to be considered as having been fairly
made in good faith, without fraud or misrepresentation by the
Massachusetts commissioners, and with an equal and full knowledge
of the facts and circumstances of the case. And the inquiry is
whether a mistake committed under such circumstances affords a
sufficient ground on which to set aside the agreements.
I will first consider the principles of this case as they would
apply to a controversy between individuals respecting a common
boundary.
The mistake of a fact, unless it operates as a surprise or fraud
on the ignorant party, affords no ground for relief in chancery. 1
Story's Eq. 160. 2 Ball & Beatt. 179, 180. 4 Bro.Ch. 158. 6
Ves. 24.
The ground of relief in such cases is not the mistake or
ignorance of material facts alone, but the unconscientious
advantage taken of the party by the concealment of them. For if the
parties act fairly and it is not a case where one is bound to
communicate the facts to the other upon the ground of confidence or
otherwise, the court will not interfere. 1 Story's Eq. 160. 9 Ves.
275.
It is essential, in order to set aside such a transaction, not
only that an advantage should be taken but it must arise from some
obligation in the party to make the discovery; not an obligation
in
Page 39 U. S. 274
point of morals only, but of legal duty. 2 Bro.Ch. 420. 1
Har.Eq. b. 1, ch. 3, 4, note n.
Equity will not relieve where the means of information are open
to both parties and where each is presumed to exercise his own
judgment.
15 U. S. 2 Wheat.
178. Where an agreement for the composition of a cause is fairly
made between parties with their eyes open, and rightly informed, a
court of equity will not overhaul it, though there has been a great
mistake in the exercise of judgment. 1 Ves. 408. 1 Story's Eq.
163.
In like manner, where the fact is equally unknown to both
parties, or where each has equal and adequate means of information,
or where the fact is doubtful from its own nature, in every such
case if the parties have acted with entire good faith, a court of
equity will not interpose. For in such cases the equity is deemed
equal between the parties, and when it is so, a court of equity
will not interfere. 1 Pow. on Con. 200. 1 Madd.Ch.Pr. 62-64. 1
Story's Eq. 163.
The principles recognized by these authorities apply in all
their force and conclusiveness to the case under consideration. A
greater number of authorities might be cited, but it cannot be
necessary. The principles stated are founded on reason and the
fitness of things, and they have been sanctioned by a uniform
course of adjudication.
If these rules are to be respected, and the mistake alleged in
the bill had occurred under precisely the same circumstances
between individuals, it would seem to be clear that there would be
no ground for relief.
A controversy exists between individuals respecting a common
boundary. One party claims that the line should begin at a certain
point, and the other at a different one. Arbitrators are appointed,
with full powers to settle and compromise the dispute, who
establish the point as claimed by one of the parties. Some
dissatisfaction is subsequently manifested by the unsuccessful
party, and seven years after the first reference, a second one is
made to other persons, who are vested with ample powers to settle
and compromise the controversy, and they do settle it in exact
conformity to the first award, and this second award is reported to
the principals, who sanction it. In addition to this, the line or
place of beginning established by the arbitrators is the place
claimed by the successful party as his line, more than seventy-five
years before the second award and more than twenty years before the
other party had any interest in the boundary. And the conduct of
the arbitrators is free from any imputation of fraud or unfairness,
all having equal and full knowledge of the matter in dispute, which
was fully and fairly discussed and understood and finally
determined.
A case under these circumstances between individuals, to say
nothing of the lapse of time and acquiescence since the award,
Page 39 U. S. 275
would not seem to be very strongly recommended to the equitable
interposition of the court on the ground that the arbitrators
mistook a fact -- a mistake not induced by the opposite party or by
misrepresentation, but into which the arbitrators of the
unsuccessful party had innocently fallen, having as full a
knowledge of the whole merits of the case as the arbitrators chosen
by the other party.
Relief which should set aside the award, and open up the
controversy under such circumstances would create a new head of
equity.
The mistake is admitted, because it is not denied by the plea,
and this may be said to be a technical advantage of the plaintiff.
For if the fact of mistake were to be tested by the circumstances
of the case, it would be difficult to come to the conclusion that a
mistake had really occurred. If it were admitted to have taken
place in the first award, it would require no small degree of
credulity to believe that it again occurred in the second award,
made seven years after the first one and after much dissatisfaction
had been manifested against the first award. This dissatisfaction
could only have arisen from the supposed fact that the boundary had
been established too far south.
But as the case is now considered, the mistake alleged is
admitted, but admitted under all the averments of the plea.
If the Woodward and Saffrey station be as many miles south of
Charles River as alleged in the bill, it would seem to be a more
reasonable supposition that it was agreed to under a construction
of the charter or on the principles of compromise than through
mistake. But the mistake being admitted, still, as between
individuals, there would be no sufficient ground for the
interposition of a court of equity.
And if relief could not be given between individuals, can it be
decreed under the same circumstances as between sovereign states.
There are equitable considerations which would seem to apply with
greater force to controversies between individuals than to those
which arise between states. Among states, there is a higher agency,
greater deliberation, and a more imposing form of procedure in the
adjustment of differences than takes place between private
individuals. Between the former, from the nature of the proceeding,
mistakes of fact seldom occur, and when they do happen it is rather
a question of policy that of right whether they shall be
corrected.
I am inclined to think with the counsel on both sides that the
great question in this case should not be decided by the rules for
the settlement of private rights.
The high litigant parties, and the nature of the controversy,
give an elevation and dignity to the cause which can never belong
to differences between individuals. It may be a simple matter to
determine where a line shall be run, but when such determination
may draw after it a change of sovereign power over a district
of
Page 39 U. S. 276
country and many thousand citizens, the principles involved must
be considered as of the highest magnitude. The question is national
in its character, and it is fit and proper that it should be
decided by those broad and liberal principles which constitute the
code of national law.
Vattel, in his treatise, 277, says
"When sovereigns cannot agree about their pretensions, and are
nevertheless desirous of preserving or restoring peace, they
sometimes submit the decision of their disputes to arbitrators
chosen by common agreement. When once the contending parties have
entered into articles of arbitration, they are bound to abide by
the sentence of the arbitrators; they have engaged to do this, and
the faith of treaties should be religiously observed."
And again:
"In order to obviate all difficulty and cut off every pretext of
which fraud might make a handle, it is necessary that the
arbitration articles should precisely specify the subject in
dispute, the respective and opposite pretensions of the parties,
the demands of the one and the objections of the other. These
constitute the whole of what is submitted to the decision of the
arbitrators, and it is upon these points alone that the parties
promise to abide by their judgment. If, then, their sentence be
confined within these precise bounds, the disputants must acquiesce
in it. They cannot say that it is manifestly unjust, since it is
pronounced on a question which they have themselves rendered
doubtful by the discordance of their claims and which has been
referred, as such, to the decision of the arbitrators. Before they
can pretend to evade such a sentence, they should prove by
incontestable facts that it was the offspring of corruption or
flagrant partiality."
And again, in page 178, he says,
"Arbitration is a very reasonable mode, and one that is
perfectly conformable to the law of nations, for the decision of
every dispute which does not directly interest the safety of the
nation. Though the claim of justice may be mistaken by the
arbitrators, it is still more to be feared that it will be
overpowered in an appeal to the sword."
The author well observes that the Helvetic Republic, by a wise
adherence to this mode of adjusting controversies among themselves,
and with foreign countries, has secured its liberty, and made
itself respectable throughout Europe.
These principles have been established by the common consent of
the civilized world. And where they are invoked in the settlement
of disputes between states and the proceeding is characterized by
fairness and good faith, it ought not to be set aside -- and indeed
cannot be -- without, in the language of Vattel, proving by the
clearest evidence that the award was the offspring of corruption or
flagrant partiality. And if the determination of the arbitrators
has the sanction of time as well as of principle, it is believed
that history affords no instance where it has not been considered
as absolutely binding on the parties. The peace of nations and the
prosperity of mankind require that compacts thus formed should be
held sacred.
Page 39 U. S. 277
The pretensions of Massachusetts in favor of the line as
established by both arbitrations commenced in 1642, and no other
jurisdiction had been at any time exercised over the country north
of this line. It was claimed before Rhode Island had a political
existence. The elements of which it was afterwards composed, were,
at the time this right was first asserted, mingled with the parent
colony of Massachusetts, and with other communities and nations.
And after they became embodied and organized under the charter of
1663, it was nearly half a century before there seems to have been
any dispute respecting this boundary.
Nearly two centuries have elapsed since the claim of
Massachusetts to this line was set up, and more than a hundred and
twenty years since the controversy was settled by the commissioners
or arbitrators chosen by the parties, and, as averred in the plea,
specially sanctioned and confirmed by Rhode Island.
Is time to have no influence in this case, on the agreements of
the parties? It covers with its peaceful mantle stale disputes
between individuals. And so strong is its influence that fraud,
which vitiates all human transactions, cannot be reached when
covered by great lapse of time.
Has a treaty ever been set aside on the ground of mistake? Has
it ever been contended that after its ratification by the high
contracting parties, either could look behind the treaty and object
to it because the negotiators had mistaken a fact? It is believed
that such a pretension would be new in the history of diplomacy.
The treaty must speak for itself, and under its provisions must the
rights of the parties be ascertained.
In the first treaty of limits between this country and Great
Britain it is a fact not now questioned that a mistake of many
miles was made in establishing our northern boundary. But this has
afforded to Great Britain no occasion of remonstrance or
complaint.
Our own government on a recent occasion declined an acquiescence
in the decision of the King of the Netherlands in relation to this
same boundary. But in his letter of July 21, 1832, to the
representative of Great Britain in this country, the Secretary of
State said, in relation to the resolution of the Senate against the
decision, that it was adopted under the conviction that "the
arbiter had not decided the question submitted to him, or had
decided it in a manner not authorized by the submission."
"It is not," he adds,
"the intention of the undersigned to enter into an investigation
of the argument which has led to this conclusion. The decision of
the Senate precludes it, and the object of this communication
renders it unnecessary, but it may be proper to add that no
question could have arisen as to the validity of the decision had
the sovereign arbiter determined on and designated any boundary as
that which was intended by the treaty of 1783."
This view by the Secretary of the binding effect of the decision
if it had been made on the point submitted to the arbiter is in
accordance
Page 39 U. S. 278
with the principles of national law, and has a direct and most
forcible application to the case under consideration.
No objection is made by Rhode Island that the arbitrators
exceeded their powers. No such objection can be made. Their powers
were ample, and their proceedings both in 1710, and in 1718, seem
to have been characterized by great dignity and deliberation.
The complainant, it is true, was dissatisfied with the first
decision, establishing Woodward and Saffrey's station, and by
remonstrances induced the appointment of the second commission in
1717, which in the following year confirmed in all respects the
first decision. Notwithstanding these remonstrances against the
first decision, it would seem from the bill that until 1749, the
complainant believed that Woodward and Saffrey's station was only
three English miles south of Charles River, and was consequently
the true point from which the line should be run. This being the
case, as the bill does not state the precise ground of
dissatisfaction at the first report, it cannot well be
imagined.
Rhode Island, it seems, from time to time, by remonstrances in
the form of resolutions and otherwise and by the appointment of
commissioners, signified its dissatisfaction at the boundary as
established in 1710 and 1718. Massachusetts, as it was bound in
comity to do, listened to these expressions by Rhode Island and
more than once appointed commissioners on the subject. But whether
we look to the averments in the plea or to the statements in the
bill, the defendant never seems to have done anything which could
impair the force of the agreements.
The bill states various facts, such as the little value of the
land bounding on the disputed line for many years, the sparseness
of the population, the want of means, and the intervention of war,
as reasons why Rhode Island did not bring this controversy before
the King in council under the colonial government.
It appears from the exhibits accompanying the bill that in 1740,
there being a dispute between Massachusetts and Rhode Island
whether the former could exercise its jurisdiction to the shores of
the Narraganset Bay, the King of Great Britain appointed
commissioners to settle the controversy who decided against
Massachusetts. This decision was confirmed, on an appeal from the
commissioners, by the King and council.
So long as the colonial government continued, this mode of
redress, so successfully invoked by the complainant in the above
instance, remained open. The Articles of Confederation formed by
the new government made special provision for the settlement of
disputed boundaries between states. And when these were revoked by
the adoption of the Constitution, the tribunal at last appealed to
was open, and has ever remained ready to hear and decide the
controversy.
Giving full weight to all the allegations in the bill which go
to
Page 39 U. S. 279
excuse the delays of Rhode Island in asserting its claim, it is
still difficult to say that the claim remains unaffected by the
unmolested possession of Massachusetts according to the agreements.
Rhode Island, it is true, is small in territory and weak in
numerical force, but it has always stood high in moral power and
intellectual endowment, and the tribunals which, since the
commencement of the controversy, have been open to hear its
complaint have been tribunals of reason, of justice, and of
established law.
The arguments of the counsel for the complainant, zealous and
able as they were, rested mainly on the hardship and injustice of
deciding this controversy on the pleadings as they now stand. The
mistake is admitted, and what is there else in the bill, taken in
connection with all the facts and circumstances, which can give the
case of the complainant a more imposing form. No fraud is imputed;
the sealed agreements, now and ever, must speak the same language;
the effect of time will remain, and the excuses alleged in the bill
for delay can scarcely have, under any form of pleading, greater
effect than may be given to them as the case now stands. I speak
not of the volume of evidence which may be thrown into the case by
a change of the pleadings, but of the leading and indisputable
facts which must, under any form of procedure, have a controlling
influence in the decision. Believing, as I do, that in admitting
the truth of the plea, Rhode Island has done nothing prejudicial to
her interests, and that in the present attitude of the case, its
substantial merits are before us, I feel bound to pronounce a
different opinion from that which has been given by a majority of
my brother judges. Taking the facts of the plea, and giving due
weight to all the allegations of the bill not denied by the plea, I
am led to the conclusion that the bar is complete. In coming to
this conclusion, I feel no want of respect for the State of Rhode
Island, which has become so illustrious in our history by its
enterprise, its intelligence, and its patriotism.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON.
The facts and pleadings have been so fully stated by my brethren
as to require from me only a brief notice of the conclusions my
mind has come to on the points in controversy.
The defense, in the form of an incongruous plea, must set up
matter in bar, which, if true, renders immaterial every other fact
alleged in the bill; be these as they may, the defense must be
conclusive of the controversy, and every necessary averment to
sustain the matter pleaded in bar must also be made in an answer
covering the plea, which cannot be permitted to stand unsupported
by an answer. This is the familiar and settled practice of the High
Court of Chancery in England, and adopted by rule in the courts of
the United States.
In form, it is believed, the plea and answer in this cause are
accurate in a high degree in regard to the matter pleaded and
the
Page 39 U. S. 280
averments necessary to give it effect in the sense it is relied
on as a bar, unless the defense set up is double.
It is insisted the plea is multifarious because it relies on two
defenses: first the compacts, and second the possession and
occupation of the territory claimed by the plaintiff for more than
a century.
The facts pleaded must be conductive to a single point of
defense, and the question is are the compacts, the making of the
line in part execution of them, and the taking and holding
possession in other part, and complete execution of them, combined
facts and circumstances conducing to establish the single point
relied on in defense? That is that the line run from Woodward and
Saffrey's station was the true boundary, established by, and marked
in execution of, the compacts, and that by the compacts Rhode
Island is estopped to deny its validity. And I think the
circumstances pleaded are so connected as not to vitiate the
plea.
If it is bad, it must therefore be so on its merits involving
the obligatory force of the compacts. That they are
prima
facie conclusive of the boundary is admitted, but the bill
alleges they were made in mistake, and the line run and marked, and
possession surrendered to Massachusetts, in mistake of a prominent
fact: that Rhode Island then believed the station, and the line run
from it, three miles south of Charles River, whereas subsequent
observation and examination had ascertained it to be much further
south -- that is, about seven miles.
The Massachusetts charter calls for a line to be drawn east and
west, "three miles south of the waters of said Charles River or of
any or of every part thereof," and the plea, in substance, avers,
the charter was construed, and the line settled by the compacts,
without misrepresentation on the part of Massachusetts and with
full and equal knowledge of all circumstances by both parties.
The plea having been set down for argument without an issue,
must for the present be taken as true, and the averments taken as
admitted that the parties entered into the compacts and established
the boundary with full and equal knowledge of all the circumstances
of law and fact involved in the controversy as it then existed and
now exists. And in the face of the compacts thus made, can Rhode
Island be heard to allege the existence of a mistake in the
boundary established by them and marked by the mutual commissioners
and as the joint act of both parties? Under the circumstances, to
open the controversy, and let in proof of a mistake at this day to
overthrow a solemn treaty made between two independent governments
is deemed by me inadmissible, not to say dangerous. And I think the
matters pleaded (if true) a good defense. If this compromise and
solemn establishment of a boundary made a century ago can be
impeached on the ground of a mistake so palpable and easy of
detection, cannot every other made by the states be brought before
this Court on a similar assumption, usually much better founded,
especially where degrees of latitude
Page 39 U. S. 281
are called for as boundaries? If the parties, "with full and
equal knowledge of all circumstances," compromised and settled a
doubtful construction of the Massachusetts charter, and in which
they were engaged nearly ten years, why should this Court go
further into the matter, at the hazard of encouraging litigation in
so many other quarters?
I will for the present refrain from entering into the inquiry
how far such a mistake of law, in construing a private instrument,
could be inquired into be a court of chancery in a suit between man
and man, nor what help the mistake of law (if any exists) could
derive from the facts apparent by the bill, unless the statement of
the proposition should suggest the answer.
Nor will I attempt to draw the marked line of distinction
between such private agreement and a public treaty by state with
state in regard to the difficulty of going into matters of mistake,
usually not predicable of a treaty.
On consideration of the plea filed in this case by the
defendant, and of the arguments of counsel thereupon had, as well
in support of as against the said plea, it is now here ordered by
this Court that the said plea be and the same is hereby overruled,
and it is further now here ordered by this Court that the defendant
answer the bill of complaint, as amended, on or before the first
day of the next term.
* MR. JUSTICE STORY did not sit in this case.