The distinction between trespass and disseisin may be modified
by statute as properly as it may be established by common law.
Nothing in the Fourteenth Amendment hinders a state from enacting
that, in future ,the doing of such overt acts of ownership as are
possible on wild lands, under a recorded deed showing that the
actor claims title coupled with the payment of taxes, the owner not
paying any meanwhile or doing any act indicative of ownership,
shall constitute a disseisin which, if continued long enough, shall
bar an action for the land; nor is such an act unconstitutional
because it fixes the period at twenty years and allows it to become
operative as to suits commenced five years after its enactment, as
it would be within the power of the legislature to fix the entire
period of limitation at five years, and the owner would have an
opportunity to defeat the disseisin by asserting ownership within
that time; such a statute would not be construed as permitting suit
to be barred by a period of twenty years' inactivity prior to the
enactment of the statute if acts of ownership were exercised
thereafter.
If a state statute, as construed by the state court, is
constitutional, this Court follows that construction.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 201 U. S. 365
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of trover for logs, brought by the plaintiff
in error in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine. The defendant
admitted carrying off the logs, but set up title to the land on
which they were cut, one-half, in itself and one-half in its
licensors. At the trial, the plaintiff proved a
prima
facie title to an undivided interest in the land. The
defendant relied upon the Maine Public Laws of 1895, c. 162, §
1. With regard to that, the chief justice, presiding, instructed
the jury that, if the defendant and its licensors, respectively,
had satisfied the conditions of § 1, it was entitled to a
verdict. A verdict was found for the defendant on that ground. The
ruling was taken to the full court on exceptions and a motion for a
new trial. At the argument there, it was urged that the statute, if
applicable to the plaintiff, was contrary to the Fourteenth
Amendment, and void. But the court, adverting to the question,
decided the contrary, and the defendant had
Page 201 U. S. 366
judgment. 98 Me. 268. The case then was brought to this
Court.
The material sections of the act of 1895 are as follows:
"SEC. 1. When the state has taxed wild land, and the state
treasurer has deeded it, or part of it, for nonpayment of tax, by
deed purporting to convey the interest of the state by forfeiture
for such nonpayment, and his records show that the grantee, his
heirs or assigns, has paid the state and county taxes thereon, or
on his acres or interest therein, as stated in the deed,
continuously for the twenty years subsequent to such deed, and when
a person claims under a recorded deed describing wild lands taxed
by the state, and the state treasurer's record shows that he has,
by himself or by his predecessors under such deed, paid the state
and county taxes thereon, or on his acres or interest therein, as
stated in the deed, continuously for twenty years subsequent to
recording such deed, and whenever, in either case, it appears that
the person claiming under such a deed, and those under whom he
claims, have, during such period, held such exclusive, peaceable,
continuous, and adverse possession thereof as comports with the
ordinary management of wild lands in Maine, and it further appears
that, during such period, no former owner, or person claiming under
him, has paid any such tax, or any assessment by the county
commissioners, or done any other act indicative of ownership, no
action shall be maintained by a former owner or those claiming
under him to recover such land or to avoid such deed unless
commenced within said twenty years, or before January 1, 1900. Such
payment shall give such grantee or person claiming as aforesaid,
his heirs or assigns, a right of entry and seisin in the whole or
such part, in common and undivided, of the whole tract as the deed
states, or as the number of acres in the deed is to the number of
acres assessed."
"SEC. 4. This act shall not apply to actions between cotenants,
nor to actions now pending in court, nor to those commenced before
January 1, 1900. "
Page 201 U. S. 367
The defendant and his licensors claimed under the second branch
of the statute. They held under recorded warranty deeds describing
wild lands taxed by the state, running back for more than twenty
years, and although it must be taken that the first deed of the
series was executed by owners of a part interest only, that deed
naturally was held by the state courts to be a repudiation of the
tenancy in common and to lay a foundation for the working of the
act. With that question we have nothing to do. The state
treasurer's record showed that the defendant, its licensors, and
those under whom they claim had paid the taxes thereon continuously
down to the bringing of this suit. The same persons had held such
exclusive, peaceable continuous, and adverse possession of the land
as comports with the ordinary management of wild lands in Maine,
and during the same period no former owner had paid any tax or done
any other act indicative of ownership. These facts are admitted or
must be assumed to be established by the verdict. This action was
brought in 1902 for acts done from 1900 to 1902, after the time
allowed by § 4 had run. The question is whether the statute is
constitutional as applied to such a case.
Before considering the construction of the statute, we will deal
with an objection which seems to be made to it, even if solely
prospective, as we subsequently shall explain. Suppose that the law
gives no effect whatever to acts done before its passage -- still
it is suggested that, when it went into operation, the plaintiff,
but for its provision, would have been in constructive possession,
and the statute purported at once to disseise him and to put him to
an action to recover the land. But, so far as the statute is
prospective, it merely enacts, subject to the qualification in
§ 4, of which we shall speak in a moment, that certain acts,
if done in the future, shall constitute a disseisin, and that the
disseisin, if continued for the due time, shall ripen into title.
The distinction between trespass and disseisin may be modified by
statute as properly as it may be established by common law. Also
statutes of limitation
Page 201 U. S. 368
may be passed where formerly there were none. So far as the
Fourteenth Amendment is concerned, there is nothing to hinder a
state from enacting that in future the doing of such overt acts of
ownership as are possible on wild land, under a recorded deed which
shows that the actor claims title, coupled with payment of the
taxes, the owner meantime not paying them and doing no act
indicative of ownership, shall constitute a disseisin, or that such
disseisin, if continued long enough, shall bar an action for the
land. We think it unnecessary to cite the state decisions on
similar statutes or to argue that proposition at greater length.
See Leffingwell v.
Warren, 2 Black 599.
The main argument for the plaintiff is that if, as was the fact,
the defendant had maintained the statutory occupation for the
twenty years before the passage of the act, the statute purported
retrospectively to give it the title, or, if the statute did not go
to that length, that at least it counted the fifteen years
preceding the enactment with the five following it to January 1,
1900, in order to make up the twenty years required by § 1 in
any suit brought after that date. The former, more extreme
suggestion is answered by § 4. By the words of that section,
the statute did not apply to actions brought before January 1,
1900. Therefore, if, but for the statute, the plaintiff would have
had a constructive seisin and might have declared in trespass, he
still had it during five years, and might have declared in the same
way.
The only matter requiring analysis is the question of the former
owner's position after January 1, 1900, when the act applied. The
action then required to be brought by the former owner is an action
"to recover such land, or to avoid such deed." An action to recover
the land presupposes that the former owner still is out by a
continuance up to the time when the suit is brought of the acts and
omissions of the parties concerned respectively which are made to
constitute a disseisin. The requirement that the statutory
disseisin should continue until the action was brought is further
shown by
Page 201 U. S. 369
the word "said" in the phrase "unless commenced within said
twenty years," to which "or before January 1, 1900," is the
alternative. Said twenty years are the years during which the
disseisor has been paying taxes and holding possession. If, between
1895 and 1900, the former owner had been paying the taxes and doing
acts indicative of ownership, he would be seised by the very terms
of the statute. He would have no occasion to sue, and we hardly
understand it to be suggested that he could be sued on the strength
of a disseisin satisfying the statute during the twenty years
before it was passed, but ending in 1895. If such a suggestion
should be made, it would be disposed of by recalling again that,
for five years after the enactment, for purposes of suit, at least,
he stood constructively seised by force of § 4 whenever, apart
from the statute, he would not have been disseised. Of course,
therefore, he was not disseised retrospectively before the date of
the act. It is still more absurd to suppose that the act meant
that, if he had paid the taxes and done acts of ownership, so that
he was not merely constructively, but actually, seised during the
five years, his title was to vanish when that time had elapsed.
The discussion is narrowed, then, to the consideration of an
action begun, as this was, after January 1, 1900, when the
defendant has held that statutory possession for the five years
following the act and for fifteen years before. If the plaintiff
had brought a real action instead of the present suit, he would
have been barred if the statute is good. The plaintiff says that
the counting of the fifteen years before the enactment makes the
statute bad. But suppose that the statute had enacted simply that,
if the conditions of § 1 should be maintained from the date of
the act until January 1, 1900, and no action brought, the former
owner should be barred, there can be no question that it would have
been valid. It was not and could not be argued that a statute of
limitations allowing nearly five years would be unreasonably short.
Turner v. New York, 168 U. S. 90;
Terry v. Anderson, 95 U. S. 628.
Page 201 U. S. 370
But, if such a statute would be constitutional, the requirement
of a continuance of similar conditions for a time before the
statute long enough to make twenty continuous years when taken with
the five years following it was a pure advantage to the plaintiff,
a further condition which did him only good. It was not argued that
the statute was invalid because a less time was allowed to persons
in the plaintiff's position than to those whose twenty years should
begin to run after the statute went into effect. Similar provisions
are common, and seem to have been before the court in
Terry v.
Anderson and
Turner v. New York, supra, and in
Koshkonong v. Burton, 104 U. S. 668.
Some objection was made to the effect given to a tax deed in the
first part of the section. But that is not before us. We see
nothing to indicate an intent to go beyond the law.
Marx v.
Hanthorn, 148 U. S. 172. As
to the possibility that the taxes may have been assessed unlawfully
or the recorded deed under which the defendant claims forged, it is
admitted that such matters might be proved. As they are public
facts, give color to the overt acts done upon the land, and must be
accompanied by a necessarily conscious omission of the plaintiff to
pay taxes or do any acts of ownership, we see nothing to hinder the
legislature making them sufficient,
prima facie at least,
to set the statute running and to put the former owners to a
suit.
The act, as we construe it, does not infringe the Fourteenth
Amendment. We understand our construction to agree with that
adopted by the Supreme Judicial Court of the state. That court says
of the statute:
"It is not only not retrospective, but it is distinctly made
prospective only in its operation, and the reasonable period of
five years after the date of the enactment is allowed, during which
all controversies respecting such titles might be adjusted
according to 'the principles and the nature of those facts by means
of which those titles had existed' before the passage of the
act."
Of course, if the statute, as construed by the state court, is
constitutional, we follow its
Page 201 U. S. 371
construction.
Tampa Water Works Co. v. Tampa,
199 U. S. 241,
199 U. S. 243.
We have made some little analysis of the words simply because the
state court went into no detail.
Judgment affirmed.