Judges: Urner, Boyd, Briscoe, Thomas, Pattisos, Erhkr, Stocicbridge, Oeeutt, JJ-
Filed Date: 4/4/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
By a patent issued in 1891 the State of Maryland granted to Oliver S. Horsey a tract of marsh land containing 2,880 acres in Somerset County. The tract was patented as the "Resurvey on Broad Neck," but it is also known as "Cedar Island." It is part of an area surrounded by the waters of *Page 216 Tangier Sound, Little Annamessex River, Broad Creek and Pocomoke Sound, and is intersected by a number of creeks or inlets. The patent states that a special warrant of resurvey was obtained by the patentee under article 54 section 21 (now section 30) of the Code, which provides in part as follows: "Any person entitled to lands in fee simple and being in possession thereof and not desiring to add contiguous vacancy may obtain a warrant of resurvey from the land office * * *; and the surveyor of the county to whom such warrant shall be directed shall survey the lands to be affected thereby according to the possession and holding of the person obtaining such warrant, or those under whom he claims for the last twenty years, and shall take proof of such possession and holding." The certificate returned by the surveyor, as the patent recites, was accompanied by depositions, taken as required by section 32 of article 54 of the Code, showing that the applicant for the patent and those under whom he claimed ownership had held the resurveyed land in peaceable possession for the preceding twenty years. As authorized by the last cited section of the Code, in the absence of any objection after notice to the owners or occupiers of adjacent lands, the patent with which we are concerned in this case was issued in due course. Upon the death of Oliver S. Horsey, the patentee, which occurred in 1901, the Broad Neck or Cedar Island tract passed under a devise in his will to his grandson, Oliver Horsey, who conveyed it in 1921 to the Cedar Island Club, Incorporated. It has been used by the club as a game preserve. For the protection of the right of possession which it claims the club has brought this suit in trespass against the defendant, who, in disregard of its protest, persisted in hunting ducks on the land described in its deed. From a judgment for the plaintiff, entered on the verdict of a jury for nominal damages, the defendant has appealed.
The first question to be considered is raised by a demurrer to a plea on equitable grounds to the effect that the patent *Page 217
through which the plaintiff's title is said to have been derived was invalid because it includes "numerous islands in the waters of Pocomoke Sound and Tangier Sound not contiguous to Cedar Island, but separated therefrom by numerous navigable streams, and because the said patent covers large areas of valuable land or bottom covered by navigable waters contrary to the laws of the State," "and because the said patent is a fraud on the State of Maryland and contrary to the common law rights of its citizens." The demurrer to the plea was sustained. This ruling was clearly correct. The validity of the patent could not be thus disputed. If it be assumed that the defendant had an interest which might enable him to contest the patent, upon the grounds pleaded, a court of equity would be the appropriate tribunal for such a proceeding. This was definitely decided in Cook v. Carroll,
The defendant excepted to the granting of the plaintiff's first prayer, by which the jury were instructed that their verdict should be for the plaintiff corporation if they should find that it was in possession of the land described in the declaration, claiming title under the deed offered in evidence, and that the trespass alleged was in fact committed. It was proved without contradiction that on two occasions the defendant, in spite of warnings by the plaintiff's watchman, hunted ducks on the dryland within the lines of its deed. There was no claim of title by the defendant, and he did not testify in the case. The right of possession claimed by the plaintiff was under a conveyance which the evidence does not tend to impeach. The tract was guarded by a watchman who patrolled it several times a week and who lived there continuously, having quarters in a floating club house moored in one of the creeks. About $13,000 had been expended by the plaintiff in the construction of the club house, in the installation of permanent wooden ducking blinds at a number of places on the tract, and in the erection of an embankment for a fresh water pond. In view of the nature of the property and of the use and occupation to which it is adapted, the plaintiff may be regarded as having been in actual possession and thus entitled, independently of its proprietary right, to maintain a suit in trespass against one who entered without claim of title.Bloodsworth v. Murray,
The conclusion just stated has the effect also of sustaining the action of the trial court in refusing to withdraw the case from the jury. *Page 219
By the second prayer of the plaintiff, which was granted, the jury were directed to award at least nominal damages, if they found in favor of the plaintiff, even though the defendant's entry resulted in no substantial injury. There was no error in this instruction. In the case of Balto. O.R. Co. v. Boyd.,
Ten exceptions were taken to rulings on the admissibility of evidence. The first relates to the introduction of the plaintiff's title papers. They were properly admitted. The second and tenth are not mentioned in the appellant's brief, and we find no error in the rulings to which they refer. Testimony was admitted on the plaintiff's offer, contrary to the third exception, to the effect that the plaintiff never made any claim to the waters or beds of the navigable streams intersecting the tract to which it holds title. This was immaterial to the issue in the case, but it could not have caused the defendant any injury. The sixth and eighth exceptions were taken to the refusal of the court to admit testimony that the plaintiff claimed the right of control over the streams within its tract to the extent of permitting persons to fish in them only on condition of not interfering with the plaintiff's hunting privileges. It is clear that the decision of the case could not properly have been affected by such testimony, and there was no error in its exclusion.
The fourth, fifth, seventh and ninth exceptions were concerned with rejected proffers of the defendant to prove that the patentee through whom the plaintiff's title was derived never exercised any acts of ownership over the land, that it was not assessed to him for taxation until 1910, and that for twenty years there had been a common use of the island for hunting purposes. The proof of such facts would have been *Page 220 irrelevant in this case, in which the acts of trespass sued for were committed on land in the possession of the plaintiff under a title of record and there is no opposing claim of title by the defendant. It is the underlying theory of the defense that there was a public right of hunting on the tidewater marsh lands of Cedar Island. But the State by its patent recognized the tract as being properly subject to a pre-existing and continuing private ownership, to which the plaintiff has succeeded. The fact that the plaintiff's predecessor, to whom the patent was issued in 1891, permitted the resort of hunters to the land, would not justify a conclusion that he had abandoned the title which he had taken pains to have supported by the patent and which he made the subject of a specific devise in 1901 to his grandson who executed the deed under which the plaintiff is now seized of the property.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *Page 221