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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 198   View pdf image (33K)
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198 LAND-HOLDER'S ASSISTANT.

the condition that the surplus, if any, should be paid or
accounted for; but, although the proclamation of 1756,
immediately to be inserted, will show that the proprietary had
in no manner given up his claim to surplus land, I find
that the petitioners for warrants of resurvey seldom say any
thing about surplus after the year 1747, and I believe that,
notwithstanding the final effort just referred to, the
proprietary's pretensions in this particular became after the
failure of the surplus warrants in 1738, by degrees, less and
less respected, until they were brought to a state, which
enabled the present government, upon succeeding to the
proprietary rights, without any violent change, to give a
quietus upon the article of surplus land in grants. As to the
justice of the proprietary's claim in this respect, I shall let it
rest upon the grounds set forth in his proclamations, only
remarking that the argument against it, drawn from the words
" more or less" in patents, which, taken literally, would
seem to preclude any future accountability for excess, as well
as any allowance for deficiency, had been early, and
repeatedly declared by the first and second proprietaries to intend
according to the rule they thought proper to adopt on that
subject, ten in the hundred over or under, and no more. Why
this established interpretation of the words in question, was
never cited in the proclamations respecting surplus, I cannot
judge, as it can scarcely be supposed that the fourth
proprietary was not apprized of the public acts and regulations
of his predecessors. There does however appear to have
been a wonderful ignorance or uncertainty both in England
and in the province concerning the conditions of plantation,
and other documents and authorities relative to land affairs.¾
Frequent instances and proofs of this appear in the council
records, including those of the upper house of assembly,
from the year 1692 downwards. Whether from this or other
causes there seems to have been a good deal of (a) feebleness

(a) It is not to be inferred from this that the governors and principal
officers of the three last proprietaries were deficient in energy or ability, for
there are many proofs to the contrary, nor is it to be supposed that the
proprietaries themselves did not understand their affairs and their
interests. The question of surplus land was extremely important to them,
but the repetition of proclamations of the same tenor, though it might
frighten a few individuals into compliance, served to demonstrate to the
more discerning, that the coercive means of the government were not
equal to its objects, and, so, to fortify their resistance to the claim. It
appears therefore that the measures of this latter period in respect to
surplus were ill taken, and the only reason that can be assigned for it is
that the proprietaries above mentioned all came to the succession in their
non-age, and that their respective guardians either through the want of
a clear knowledge of the past transactions and the actual state of the
province, or as not possessing in the idea of the people a power much to
be respected, did not keep up a strong and uninterrupted hold upon
surplus land, but left the claim to the support of these occasiona1 proclamations.
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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 198   View pdf image (33K)
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