18 U.S. 359 | SCOTUS | 1820
Lead Opinion
delivered the opi-
nion of the Court. This was an ejectment brought in the Circuit Court of the United States, for the District of West Tennessee. The plaintiff made title, under a grant from the State of Tennessee, dated in 1808, which comprehended the land in controversy.
The defendants claimed under a patent from the State of North Carolina, dated in 1794, containing the following description of the land granted, viz. <{ A tract of land containing 5,000 acres, lying and being in our middle district, on the west fork of Cane Creek, the waters of Elk river, beginning at a hiccory running north 1000 poles to a white oak, then east 800 poles to a stake, then south 1000 poles to a stake, thence west 800 poles to the beginning, as per plat hereunto annexed doth appear.”
For the purpose of designating the land described in this grant, the defendants then gave in evidence the plat and certificate of survey annexed thereto, a certified copy of the entry on which the grant was
Upon this evidence, the counsel for the plaintiff requested the Court to inform the jury, that the said demarcation was not sufficient in law to locate the grant to the spot included in the said lines; and that the locality of the said lines could not legally be ascertained, either by the plat annexed to the grant, or by the entry or general plan ; but the Court instructed the jury, that the said demarcation, entry, and general plan, might be used by them for that purpose.
The counsel for the, plaintiffs excepted to this direction of the Court; and, a verdict and judgment having been given for the defendants, the cause is brought by writ of error before this Court.
As the first patentee was a fair purchaser of the quantity of land specified in his grant, and has placed his warrant, which was the evidence of that pur
It is contended, that the Circuit Court erred, 1st. Because the grant, under which the defendants claim, is absolutely void for uncertainty; and, consequently, no testimony whatsoever ought to have been admitted to give it locality.
That disposition, which all Courts ought to feel, . to support a grant fairly made for a valuable consideration, receives additional force from the situation in which the titles to land in Tennessee are placed; and the Courts of that State have invariably carried construction as far as could be justified to effect this purpose.
It is undoubtedly essential to the validity of a grant, that there should be a thing granted, which must be so described as to be capable of being distinguished from other things of the same kind. But it is not necessary that the grant itself should contain such a description as, without the aid of extrinsic testimony, to ascertain precisely what is conveyed. Almost all grants of land call for natural objects which must be proved by testimony consistent with the grant, but not found in it. Cane Creek, and its west fork, are to be proved by witnesses. .So
Now suppose this grant to have been founded on actual survey; suppose the surveyor and chain carriers to go to the hiccory claimed by the defendants as their beginning, to show it marked as a beginning, to trace a line of marked trees from this beginning around the land, and to prove that this is the very land which was surveyed for the person in whose favour the grant issued. In such a case, the right of the defendants to hold the land would scarcely be questioned. Yet if the patent was void upon its face, these circumstances could not make it good. The grant purports to have been made on an actual survey: and the non-existence of that survey, though it may increase the difficulty of ascertaining the land granted, does not change the face of the instru - ment.
It has been said, that this patent does not call for a marked hiccory, and, therefore, no' means exist of distinguishing it from any other hiccory. But it may have been marked by the surveyor, as ’ corner trees are generally marked, without noticing the fact in the grant; and it is identity, not notoriety, which is the subject of inquiry.
We think, then, that testimony might exist to give locality to this grant, and, therefore, that it is not void on its face for uncertainty.
2d. We are next to inquire, whether improper testimony was admitted, and whether the Court misdirected the jury.
It has been determined in this Court, that the plat and certificate of survey, annexed to the patent, maybe given in evidence ; and it has been determined in the Courts of Tennessee, that a copy of the entry on which the survey was made is also admissible. In admitting these papers, then, there was no error. But the Court also admitted what is called a general plan, and a survey made prior to the plaintiff’s entry of the land as claimed by the defendants.
The bill of exceptions does not so describe this general plan, as to enable the Court to say, with certainty, what it is. If it is a plan made by authority, in conformity with any act of the legislature, it may be submitted, with other evidence, to the consideration of a jury, to avail, as much as it may, in ascertaining boundary. But the Court has also permitted what is denominated a demarcation, which we um derstand to be a private survey made by direction of a party interested under the grant, and assented to by the defendants, to be given in evidence.
The legislature of Tennessee has certainly not supposed that any individual possessed this power of fixing vagrant grants. In the act of 1807, ch. 2. they have enacted, that any person claiming under a grant from the State of North Carolina, issued “ On a good and valid warrant, the locality of which said grant cannot be ascertained, on account of the vagueness of the calls by the surveyor, or from the calls and corners of the said survey becoming lost or destroyed, or on account of the surveyor and chain carriers being deceased, so that the marks and corners cannot be established, shall be entitled to obtain a grant for the same quantity of land called for in said grant.”
This liberal provision would have been totally unnecessary if the grantee might have remedied every uncertainty in his patent by his own act. If under his patent he might survey any vacant land he chose, the privilege of obtaining a new patent would be a very useless one.
In this case, Judge White was of opinion, that the land was ascertained by the calls of the patent, without resorting to the survey and marks made subsequent to its emanation. Both his argument, and his language, in coming to this conclusion, indicate the opinion that Buchanan’s claim to the land in controversy depended on it. After having come to this conclusion, howevér, he throws oilt some hints calculated to suggest the idea, that these modern marks might possibly have been considered, had the case required it, as the renewal of ancient ones which had been destroyed. But these hints seem rather to have been intended to alarm those who were taking up land held by others under. ancient grants, whose boundaries were not accurately defined, except by those modem marks, than to give any positive opinion on the point. At any rate, these suggestions were made in a case where the patent, as construed by the Judge, called to adjoin the upper line of another tract, and its general position was, consequently, ascertained. In such a case, where the body of the land was placed, its particular boundaries might be ascertained by testimony which would not be deem
Judge Overton, who also sat in this cause, gave more importance to the marks newly made; yet5i his opinion too seems to be founded on the fact, that the body of the land was fixed by the description contained in the patent. “ Before the plaintiffs made their entry,” he said, “ new marks for a corner were shown, running from which the courses of the_ grant,'land'would be included, sufficiently notorious in point of conformity with the calls of the grant. The general description, both of the entry and the grant, reasonably agrees with the locality of the land by these new marks.” He then argues, that these new marks may be considered as replacing others which had been originally made.
The case, however, did not depend on this point, audit was not decided. Had it ever been decided, this Court would have felt much difficulty in considering a decision admitting marks as auxiliary evidence to prove precise boundary, in a case where the patent was admitted to contain a description sufficiently certain to place the body of the land, as authority for the admission of marks made by the party himself, in a case where the patent only places the land on a stream, with the length of which we are unacquainted.
We think, then, that the Circuit Court erred in instructing this jury, that they might use this demarcation for the purpose of ascertaining the land contained in the grant under which the defendants claimed, and f®r this error the judgment must be reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissented. The principal difficulties in this case, arise from the equivocal nature of the language in which the bill of exceptions .g eXpressed In that part of it which details the evidence offered, the words are, “ that in 1806, or early in 1807, a corner hiccory, and a white oak, and lines around said tract, as now claimed and represented in said plat, were marked The word marked, may be taken either as an adjective, or a participle, and in. the former sense it would mean, it was then a marked line. If this be its proper sense, it is impossible to doubt that the evidence was altogether unexceptionable. In this sense, I am inclined to think, the word ought to be taken, from reference to the context. For, one general object was to prove notoriety, or notice to the plaintiff, in order to affect him with the charge of obstinacy or folly in running a line which had already been surveyed. And the same inference results from its being stated a few lines after, “ that no proof was given of any lines or corners having been marked before 1806 A passage which would have been nugatory, if the word marked had been used as a participle of the verb to mark; for, the affirmance of thé action at a specified time, would hhve implied a negation as to apy other time.
But taking this word with its grammatical effect as a participle, then an ambiguity arises on a comparison of the charge prayed and the charge given, as expressed in the subsequent part of the bill of exceptions. For, the prayer is, that the judge instruct the jury, that said demarcation was not in law
If the instruction prayed was, that the demarcation, as it is called, considering it as the act of an indifferent person, had not the effect of an original survey, in defining, or laying off to the defendant the land which it embraced, there cannot be a doubt, that he was entitled to that charge, and it was error in the Court not to have given it. But I am of opinion, that it cannot be so understood; for, there is no refusal to give the instruction prayed, and a different instruction given ; but the words of the instruction are calculated to express a direct negation of the proposition maintained by the plaintiff. It is obvious, from the language of the charge, that the Court considers the instruction prayed, as in the same degree applicable to every item of the evidence tendered ; and I am, therefore, sanctioned in assuming, that the. charge did not go to the legaf effect of the demarcation, but asserted, that evidence of its having-been made, and where it ,was made, with reference to the conflicting lines of the parties, was proper to' go to the jury. Under this view of the subject, I
I cannot subscribe to the opinion, that the idea is for a moment to be tolerated, that there is any thing fictitious or unreal in the plat attached to the solemn grant of the State. It. bears upon its face the only evidence which ought to be required, and evidence, in my opinion, which ought not to be contradicted, that a survey actually was made. Nor are marked trees or boundaries indispensable to such a survey ; though the lines had been traced out on the soil, or stepped off to the grantee, the grant would attach to the designated spot with all the force that would have been given to it by a fence or a wall. Identity is the only question to be decided by a jury, and if they can be satisfied that the land held by the defendant is the same land which was granted to him, it is all that should be required. At least, early
it will be perceived, that the sufficiency of the evidence in this case to establish the locus in quo, is not the question. If the verdict was founded on evidence which could not support it, that might have been considered below, on a motion for a new trial. But the single question which the case presents is, whether the evidence here tendered was proper circumstantial evidence to go to the jury, in order to establish the locus in quo. The answer of the Court is,- that it may be used for that purpose. And, in my opinion, unless it ought to have been rejected altogether on the ground of invalidity of the grant, it was all properly admitted for that purpose ; not on the idea that the demarcation operated at all in conveying the estate, but as a necessary preliminary to the whole evidence. Respecting the entry, there can be no doubt; and all the rest was calculated to prove that thesé lines were marked at an early day, and en-grafted upon a general survey of the county, made under an act of the legislature, for the purpose of exhibiting the relative position of ¿states claimed in the county. This showed the early and continued claim of the defendant; and whether his possession was of the same land which had been granted to him by the State, remained for the jury to decide, upon such evidence as the nature of the case required. Facts may have existed in their own knowledge, of the
We know the manner in which this country has been sold and settled, and the necessity of yielding a liberal acquiescence to the claims of eárly grants. So strongly am I impressed with this opinion,' that I see no reason why a grant may not have the effect of a standing warrant of survey, as long as the land, purporting to have been surveyed, shall remain unoccupied. It is doing no injury to the individual right: and the State having received a compensation, and pledged itself for the conveyance of a certain quantity of land, sustains no injury, where the survey is reasonable, and bearing a subsequent conformity to the grant and survey under which, the claim is asserted.
In the case before us, if is obvious that the survey offered in evidence was made with reference to the Creek, as traced upon the original plat. It does not, it is true, conform to the entry in commencing at the mouth- of the west fork, which is obviously the true construction of the entry, but it embraces the mouth of the wdst fork, and conforms to natural objects. And this appears to be sufficient under the decisions of this Court, and the liberal principles admitted in Tennessee in surveying upon entries. (M'Ivers’ Lessee v. Walker and Lassiter, 9 Crunch, 173, and 2 Ten. Rep. 66. et passim.) At least, I presume the evidence in this case was all properly used toward establishing the right to that part of
It has been urged, that this idea precludes the necessity of those statutory provisions of Tennessee^ which pérmit the- holders of grants on which the lands cannot be located to lay their warrants upon other land.
I confess I cannot see the force of this argument; for it is hot contended, that an individual survey will give any strength to a title otherwise defective, or cure any. inherent vice in the original survey. If the plat attached to the grant has reference to nothing from which its locality can be determined, it is not pretended, that an individual, or private survey, will make it better. On the contrary, the defence is founded upon the supposition, that the cases provided, for by those laws, is not this case • that the land admits of being identified^ and is that which the defendant has marked pff. It would be curious if other Courts should decide that the defendant’s case, was not provided for because it had locality, while we are deciding, that it is provided for because it has no locality. He would then have no consolation-for the necessity of abandoning his “ dulcíaarm,” and becoming the.<£ novus hospesn of som$ other resting plage.
Judgment reversed.