Thе facts of the case are fully stated in the opinion of the Court, delivered by
This writ of error is prosecuted to reverse a judgment of the circuit court for West Tennessee. An action of ejectment was prosecuted by Neal in that court, to recover the possession of six hundred and forty acres of land. The issue was joined, and at the trial, the defendant relied upon the statute of limitations, and prayed certain instructions of the court to the jury. Instructions were given, as stated in the following bill of exceptions.
“ In the trial, the plaintiff, introduced in evidence a' grant from the state of North Carolina, dated , to *293 Willoughby 'Williams, for the land in controversy, and deduced a r'egúlar chain of conveyances to plaintiff’s lessor, and pro.ved defendant in possession of the land in question at the time suit was brought; defendant introduсed a deed from Andrew Jackson to Edward Dillon, and proved that the defendant held by a lease from Dillon; and also in support of Dillon’s title, intro* duced evidence tending to prove that persons claiming under and for Dillon, had been more than seven years in possession of the premises in dispute, adverse to the plaintiffs: upon which the court charged the jury, that according to the present state of decision in the Supreme Court of the United States, they could not charge that defendant’s title was made good by the statute of limitations.”
The decision of the point raised by the bill of exceptions in this case, is one of great importance; both as it respects the amount of property which may be affected by it, and the principle which it involves.
In the case of Patton’s Lessee v. Easton, which was brought to this court by writ of error in 1816, the same question, which was raised by the bill of exceptions, was then decidéd.But it is contended, that under the peculiar circumstances of the case now before the court, they ought not to feel themselves bound by their former decision. This court, in the case of Powell’s Lessee v. Green,
The question involves, in the first place, the construction of the-statutes of limitations‘passed in 1715 and in 1797. The former was adopted by the state "of Tennessee, from North Carolina; the third section of which proyides,M that no person or persons, or their heirs, which hereafter shall have any right or title to any lands, tenements or hereditaments, shall thereunto enter or make claim, but within seven years after his, her or their right оr title shall descend or accrue; and in default thereof, such person or persons, so not entering or making default, shall be utterly excluded and disabled from any entry or claim thereafter to be made. ” The fourth section provides, after enumerating certain disabilities, and the time within which suit must be brought, after they shall cease, that “ all possessions held without suing such claim as aforesaid, shall *294 be a perpetual bar against all, and all manner of persons whatever, that the expectation of heirs may not, in a short time, leave much land unpossessed, and titles so perplexed that no man will know from whom to take or buy land.”
In the year 1797, the legislature, in order to settle the “true construction of the existing laws respecting seven years’ possession,” enact “ that in all cases, wherever any person or persоns shall have had seven years’ peaceable possession of any land, by virtue of a grant or deed of conveyance founded upon a grant, and ,no legal claim by suit in law, by such, set up to said land, within the above term, that then, and in that case, the person or persons so holding possession as aforesaid, shall be entitled to hold possession in preference to all other claimants; such quаntity of land as shall be specified in his, her or their said grant or deed of conveyance, iounded on a grant as aforesaid.” This act further provides, that those who neglect, for the term of seven years, to assert their claim, shall be barred.
This court, in the conclusion of their opinion in the case of Patton’s Lessee v. Easton, say, “ this question, too, has at length, been decided in the supreme court of the stаte. Subsequent to the division of opinion on this question in the circuit court, two cases have been decided in the supreme court for the state of Tennessee, which have settled the construction of the act of 1797. It has beemdecided, that a possession of seven years is a .bar only when, held “under a grant, or a deed founded on a grant.” The deed must be connected with the grant. This court concurs in that opinion, A deed cannot be “founded on a grant,” which gives a title not derived' in law or equity from that grant, and the words, founded bn a- grant, are foo important to be discarded.”
The two decided cases to which reference is made above, are Lillard v. Elliot, and Douglass v. Bledsoe’s Heirs. These cases were decided in the year 1815; and this court considered, that they settled the construction of the statute of. 1797. But it is now made to appear that these decisions-were made under such circumstances, that they were never considered, in the state of Tennessee, as fully settling the construction of the act.
In the case of Lillard v. Elliot, it seems but two judges concurred on the point, the court being composed of four; and in *295 the case of Weatherhead v. Douglass, there was great contrariety of opinion among the judges, on the point of either legal or equitablе connexion. The question was frequently raised before the supreme court of Tennessee; but the construction of the two statutes , of limitations was neyer considered as finally settled until 1825, when the case of Gray and Reeder v. Darby’s Lessee was decided.
In this cause, an elaborate review of the cases which, had arisen under the statute, is taken, and the construction of both statutes was given, that it is not neсessary, to entitle an individual to the.benefits of the'statutes, that he should show a connected title, either legal or equitable. That .if he prove an adverse possession of seven years under a deed, bfefore suit is brought, and show that the land has been granted, he brings himself within the statutes.
Since this decision the Jaw has been considered as settled in Tennessee, and there has been so general an acquiesсence in all the courts of the state, that the point is not now raised or discussed. This construction has become a rule of property in the state, and numerous suits involving title have been settled by it.
Had this been the settled construction of thesé statutes when the decision was made by this court, in the case of Patton’s Lessee v. Easton, there can be ho doubt, that that opinion would have conformed to it. But the question is now raised, whether this court will adhere.to its own decision, made under the circumstances stated, or yield to that .of the judicial tribunals of Tennessee. This point has never before been directly decided by this court, on a question of general importance. The cases are numerous where the court have adopted the constructions given to.the. statute of a state by its supreme,judicial tribunal; but it has nеver been decided, that this court will overrule their own adjudication, establishing an important rule of property, where it has been founded on the construction of a statute made in conformity to the decisions of the state at the time, so as to conform to a different construction adopted after-wards by the.state.
This is a question of grave import, and should be approached with great deliberаtion: It is deeply interesting, in every point of view in which it may be considered. As a rule of *296 property, it is important; and equally so, as it regards the system under which the powers of this tribunal are exercised.
It may be proper to examine in wrhat light the decisions of the state courts, in giving a construction to their own statutes, have been considered by this court.
In the case of M’Keen v. Delaney’s Lessee, reported in
The chief justice, in giving the opinion of the court in the case of Bodley v. Taylor,
In the case of Taylor v. Brown,
This court, in laying down the requisites of a valid entry, in the case of Massie v. Watts,
In
The supreme court holds in the highest respect decisions of state courts upon local laws forming rules of property,
In
Quotations might be multiplied, but the aboye will show that this court have uniformly adopted thé decisions of the state tribunals, respectively, in the construction of their statutes. That this has been done as a mаtter of principle, 'in all cases where the decision of a state court has become a rule, of property.
In a great majority of the causes brought before the federal tribunals, they are called to enforce the laws of the states. *298 The rights of parties are determined under those laws, and it would bé a strange perversion of principle, if the judicial exposition of those laws, by the state tribunals, Should be disregarded. These expositions constituid the law, and fix the rule of property! Rights are acquired under, this rule, and it regulates all the transactions which come within its scope.
It is admitted in the argument, that this court, in giving a construction to a local law, will be influenced by the decisions of the local tribunals': but, it is eontertded, that when such a construction shall be given in Conformity top those decisions, it must be considered finaL That if the state shall change the rule, it does not comport either with , the consistency or dignity of this tribunal to adopt the change. Such a course, it is insisted, would recognise in the state courts a.power to revise the decisions of this court, and -fix the rule of property differently.from its solemn adjudications. That-the federal court when sitting within' a slate, is the court of that state, being so constituted by the constitution and laws of the union; and as such, has an equal right, with the state courts to fix the construction of the local law.
On,'all questions arising under the constitution and. laws of the union, this oourt may- exercise a revising power;- ai d its decisions are final, and obligatory on all-other judicial tribunals, state as well as federal. A state tribunal has a right to examine any' such questions and .to determine them, but its' decision must conform - to that of the suрreme court,-or the corrective power may be exercised. But the case is very different where a question arises under a local law. The decision of this question, by the highest judicial tribunal of a state, should be*considered as final by this court; not because the state tribunal, in such a case, has any power to bind this court; but because, in the language of the court, in the case of Shelby et al. v. Gray,
The. same reason which influences this court to adopt the construction given to the local'law, in the first instance, is not less strong in favour of following-it in the second, if‘the state tribunals should change the construction.' A reference is here made not to. a single adjudication, but to a series of decisions *299 Which shall settle the rule. Are not the injurious effects Oft the interests of the citizens of a state, as great, in refusing to adopt the change of construction, as in refusing to adopt the first construction. A refusal in the one case as well as in the other, has the effect to establish, in the state, two rules of property.
Would not a change in the construction of a law of the United States, by this tribunal, be obligatory on the state courts? Thе statute, as last expounded, would be the law of the union; and why may not the same effect be given to' the-last exposition, of a local law by the state court? The exposition forms a part of the local law, and is binding on all the people of the state, and its inferior judicial tribunals. It is emphatically the law.of the state; which the federal court, while sitting within, the state, and this court, when a case is brought befоre them, are called to.enforce. If the rule as settled should prove inconvenient or injurious to.the public interests, the legislature of the state may modify the law or repeal it.
If the construction of the highest* judicial tribunal of a state form a part of its statute law, as much as an enactment by the legislature, how can this court make a distinction between them? There could be no hesitation in so. modifying оur decisions .as to conform to any legislative alteration in a statute; and why should not the same rule apply, where the judicial branch of the state government, in the exercise of its acknowledged functions, should, by construction, give a different effect to a statute, from what had at first been given to it. The charge of inconsistency might be made with more force and propriety against the federal tribunals fоr a disregard of this rule, than by conforming to it. They profess to be bound by the loeal law; arid yet they reject the exposition of that law, which forms a part of it. It is no answer to this objection, that a different exposition was formerly given to the £ict which was adopted by the federal court.. The inquiry is, what is the settled law of the state at the time the decision is made. This constitutes the rule of property within the state, by which thе rights of litigant parties must be determined.
As the federal tribunals profess to be governed by this rule, they can never. act inconsistently by enforcing it. If they *300 change their decision^ it is. because the rule on which that decision was founded has been changed.
The case under consideration illustrates the propriety and necessity of this' rule. It is now the settled'law of Tennessee, that an adverse possession • of seven years under a deed for land that has been granted, will give a valid title. . But, .by. the decision of this court, such-a possession, under such evidence'of right, will not give a valid title. In addition to the. above requisites, this'court have .'decided that the tenant' must connect his deed with a grant. «It therefore follows, that the occupant whose title is protected under, the statutes, before a state tribunal, is unprotected by them, beforе the federal court. The plaintiff in ejectment, after being defeated in his action before a state court, on the above construction, to insure success has only to bring an action in the federal court. This may be easily done by a change of his residence, or a bona fide conveyance of the land.
Here is á judicial conflict, arising from two rules of property in the same state, and the сonsequences are riot only deeply injurious to the citizens'of the-state, but calculated to engender th.e most lasting discontents. It is therefore essential to the interests of .the country, and to' the harmony of the judicial action of the federal and state governments, that there should be but one rule of property in' a state.
In several of: the states, the English statute of limitations has been adopted, with' vаrious modifications; but in the saving clause, the expression “beyond the seas,” is retained. These words in some of the states are construed to mean “ out of the state,” aBd in others a literal construction has been given to them.
In the case of Murray’s Lessee v. Baker et al.
As it appears to this court, that the construction of the statutes of limitations is now well settled, differently from what was supposed to be the rule at the time this* court decided the case of Patton’s Lessee v. Easton, and the case of Powell’s Lessee v. Green; and as the instructions of the circuit court were governed by these decisions, and not by the settled law of the state; the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remаnded for further proceedings.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record, from the circuit court of the United States for the district of West Tennessee, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is ordered and adjudged by this Court, that the judgment of the said circuit court in this cause be, and the same is hereby remanded to the said circuit court, with directions to award a venire facias de noyo.
