10 Watts 405 | Pa. | 1840
Before survey-made, such a warrant gives no interest in land: and if it did, the land could be sold only in the county. What then is the nature of such a warrant, or of the right conferred by it? It is a mere license-authority to do a particular thing for the warrantee’s benefit: it is an order to perform an act which may give him an estate in land, but in the mean time it is no more than a thing in action; and though equity might execute an agreement to transfer it, it is not assignable at law. Now at common law, a thing in action could not be seized in execution; and it will scarcely be pretended that a mere authority can. Could a marriage license, a lottery ticket, or a. tavern-keeper’s authority to retail, be levied and sold? These, though valuable, are so intimately
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.