214 Pa. 552 | Pa. | 1906
Opinion by
By an act of assembly approved January 27, 1806, 4 Sm. L. 268, 1 Purd. 1194, the officers of the land office of the state were directed to issue a warrant for airy unappropriated island in the rivers Delaware, Ohio and Allegheny under certain conditions and limitations prescribed in the act. Upon application made for a warrant, the land office was required to appoint three disinterested reputable persons to estimate and value the land in such island. These appraisers were required before entering upon the performance of their duties to take an oath that they would estimate and make a true valuation of the land per acre contained in the island, and that they were not interested in the purchase of any island in the river. They were required to value the land in the island by going upon it and having regard to the soil, wood, fisheries, other advantages and local situation; and they or any two of them having agreed on the real valuation per acre of the land contained in the island, were required to certify the same to
In pursuance of the above act of assembly, the secretary of the land office, on July 80, 1821, issued a warrant to Samuel Cochran, Esq., authorizing him to survey or cause to be surveyed to Thomas K. Wallace an island in the Delaware river, if not already appropriated, and to make return' to the land office for confirmation. This warrant recites that Wallace by an application in writing dated June 30, 1820, and filed in the land office, had requested to take up an island, “ situate in the river Delaware in Kingsessing Township, Philadelphia County, lying at the mouth of Schuylkill, near the upper end of Fort Island and opposite State Island, about one fourth of a mile southeast from said island.” The warrant also recites that the board of property issued an order on June 30, 1820, for the valuation of the island to three persons named therein, requesting them to appraise the island; that by the report of two of the appraisers in writing, dated July 4, 1821, the island was valued at $2.00 per acre, the one-third part of which was paid into the office of the state treasurer. In pursuance of the warrant, the deputy surveyor of Philadelphia county surveyed the-island on June 7, 1822, and returned the survey and draft of the island to the land office.
On August 14, 1821, the land office issued a patent to Wallace granting him “ a certain island, in the river Delaware, situate in Kingsessing Township, in the County of Philadelphia,” which is followed by a description of the island by courses and distances and a-statement that the island contained twenty-one and one-quarter acres. The patent recites that the island was surveyed in pursuance of a warrant dated July 30, 1821 and granted to Wallace.
Wallace’s title to the island became vested in Bastían and Laiferty, the latter of whom became the owner of the undivided one-third part thereof, which subsequently became vested in Samuel F. Houseman, the plaintiff.
This was an action of ejectment brought September 13,1899,
The plaintiff claims that the land described in the praecipe and writ, exclusive of the twenty-one and one-quarter acres, covered by the Wallace survey and patent, has been formed by gradual accretions to the island granted to Wallace, and that he is the owner, as shown by his title above recited, of the undivided one-third of the Wallace island and hence, of the undivided one-third of all the. additions thereto made by the accretions. The defendant company claims that Mud island included the twenty-one and one-quarter acre tract, and the land claimed by the plaintiff to be accretions to Cabin or Wallace island, that the Ashmead tract included a portion o‘f the land in dispute, and that the deed of the United States made in 1899, conveyed to the company the land described in the prsecipe and writ and claimed by the plaintiff. The defendant company contends that the land in dispute had always been a mud flat and had been separated from the other portion of Mud island by a ditch dug for the purpose of draining a certain portion of the mud flat, around which a dike had been constructed, and that in 1897 and 1898 the company had dumped mud and soil on it and thereby converted the flat into arable land.
The court below charged that to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict the jury must find: “That Wallace acquired title by the patent of 1822; that the title acquired by Wallace under that patent covered all the fast land in an entire island; that
The act of 1806, as we have seen, confers on the land office authority to issue a patent for an island in the Delaware river. It is contended, however, by the appellant that the appellee was
It is clear, we think, that under the authorities it must be presumed that all the necessary statutory prerequisites to give validity to the Wallace patent have been complied with by the land office. The patent shows that it was issued in pursuance of a warrant and survey. The warrant recites that the application was made pursuant to the provisions of the act of 1806 for an island in the Delaware river “ lying at the mouth of the Schuylkill, near the upper end of Fort Island; ” that the board of property issued an order for its appraisal by three appraisers ; that two of the appraisers had made a report that they had appraised the land at $2.00 per acre, a one-third part of which had been paid to the state treasurer. We think the warrant, survey and patent were prima facie evidence that the conditions of the act of 1806 had been fully observed by the officials of the land office, and that the land described therein was, in 1822, an island and patentable as such under the act of 1806.
The appellant company further contends that the location of the island was not fixed with certainty. This, however, was a question of fact and was for the jury. Fixing the location of the island was necessarily attended with difficulty under the circumstances and while the evidence possibly was not as explicit and convincing as might be desired, yet it was sufficient to justify a finding by the jury. In locating the Wallace tract the surveyors made use of the original survey of 1822, the Shallcross survey of 1851 on which the Ashmead patent was issued, the Miller survey of 1860 made for the United States government, and the Gillingham survey of 1891. Gillingham testified that Cabin island was bounded on the north by the old Back channel, on the east and south by the low-water line of the Delaware river, on the west by United States government property, and that “ the Schuylkill river and the Delaware river join just about ” the island. He located the Wallace tract within the lines of the land described in the writ. It is 'true, one of the surveyors testified that the Wallace patent gives no monuments on the ground by which the location of the island could be made, but the several surveys were
It is well settled that accretions or the gradual and imperceptible additions to an island become a part of the original land and that the title to the accretions is vested in the owner of the original island. The appellee claims that the land in dispute is accretions to the original Wallace island, and that he being the owner of the undivided one-third of the island has therefore like title to these accretions. Whether the land in dispute was accretions to the original island was purely a question of fact and was properly submitted to the jury.
The appellant complains that the charge was inadequate in not defining the issues submitted to the jury. We have alluded to the charge and what it submitted for the jury’s consideration, and we do not agree with appellant that it was inadequate in this respect. The learned judge pointed out the claims of the parties and distinctly told tire jury what facts they must find before they could render a verdict for the plaintiff. At least thirty-five requests for instructions covering the law on every disputed point in the case were presented to, and answered by, the court. If, therefore, the jury did not comprehend the issues submitted or the law applicable to the issues, it was not the fault of the learned trial judge.
The eighteenth assignment alleges the court erred in admitting in evidence the record of the suit of the International Navigation Company v. Perkins, which was an action of ejectment brought by the navigation company, the appellant here, against Perkins
It is conceded and the jury were instructed in answer to the appellant’s first point that if the land covered by the Wallace p'atent was embraced within the boundaries of Mud island, ceded by the state to the United States in 1795, or the accretions thereto, the plaintiff had no title to the land in dispute and could not recover. Under these instructions, the verdict establishes as a fact that the land sued for in this action was not a part of Mud island and that there is no outstanding title in the United States as the owner of that island. The appellant company, therefore, is compelled to rely on the Ashmead grant, a part of which was, as appears by the deed, conveyed to it by the United States in 1899. It did not include the island covered by the Wallace patent, and hence did not include the accretions’ to that island. If, therefore, the jury found that Wallace island was not a part of Mud island, and the evidence satisfied the jury that the land in dispute was accretions to Wallace island, the verdict was necessarily for the plaintiff.
If the Ashmead tract was part of Mud island, ceded to the United States in 1795, it may well be asked why the government purchased it from Ashmead, who subsequently acquired it by patent from the state. There would have been no necessity for such action by the government as it already had a good title to the land. The appellant’s explanation that it was done for the purpose of clearing the title is not sufficient. That is simply a theory with no evidence to support it. On the other hand, the deed to the appellant company shows that the land conveyed to it by the United States government was the gov
We have carefully examined and considered the questions raised on this record and find no reversible error. We may suggest that it would have facilitated our labors if copies of the colored plans in evidence had accompanied the paper-books.
The judgment is affirmed.