5 Rawle 348 | Pa. | 1835
The legislature undoubtedly contemplated a survey in rectangular figures, because the surveyors were required to mark the number of each lot on the northwestern corner tree of the survey; a direction which could not well have been executed, had not the lots been laid off in squares or parallelograms corresponding in a degree to the cardinal points of the compass. The lots consequently being alike as regards course,distance, and superficial content; and there being neither warrant nor owne.r, as in ordinary cases, to answer the purposes of designation, the whole being surveyed together with a view to distribution after the surveys should be returned and connected in a general draught; it was necessary to have the individual lots distinguished by names or numbers either written on the general draught or marked on objects, permanently attached to the lots themselves. The legislature thought proper not to choose between these two methods, but to adopt both; and accordingly the number was directed to be marked on the general draught to serve as a register of the drawing and patenting, and also on a particular comer tree, to identify the subject of the grant. Thus, in' the twelfth section of the act of 1785 by which the proceedings were directed, it was provided that “ when a sufficient number of lots shall be surveyed and returned to the Surveyor General, he shall cause a draught to be laid down of.the whole, noting on each the number thereof; which shall be kept by the Supreme Executive Council till all the applications agreeable to this act shall have been satisfied; and afterwards shall be safely deposited in the office of the master of the rolls, as a public record, to serve to all intents and purposes in lieu of recording the patents.” And by the thirteenth section “ the Supreme Executive council shall insert in the general draught and within each lot, the name and rank of the person for whom it was drawn.” Thus the office to be performed by the general draught is explicitly told. Then by the tenth section: “In running the boundary lines of the lots, the surveyors, respectively, shall cause the same to be well defined by marking the trees on the lines at small distances,'and particularly the angles and corners; and on the northwestern corner trees, shall be marked in roman figures, the number of the lot; and if the said corner should be a post, then the said number to be marked on a tree in said lot most contiguous thereto.” And from this the office of the numbered corner tree, is equally apparent. The general draught constitutes no part of the title; and so far were the legislature from meaning to permit it to control the work on the ground, that it was not even evidence of the relative situation of the lots till it was made so by the supplementary act of the 24th of March, 1818; and even then, only when the original marks on the ground should not be found. In the order
In regard to the argument that the patent passes nothing but what is included in the metes and bounds set out, it is sufficient to remark, that although the prescribed form of the patent requires the bounds to be inserted, yet this is merely for the purpose of description and not to restrict the operation of the instrument. A grant by name or number, where the boundaries have been previously ascertained, passes the whole; and even where the subject-matter is erroneously described, the variance is immaterial where the particular tract can be identified : as in Stewart v. Shoenfelt, 13 Serg. & Rawle, 360, where the land was found to lie in a different township, and Grant v. Eddy, 2 Yeates, 148, where it lay in a different county. The objection would equally hold in respect of any other species of title, where the land marks should include more than the bounds set forth. Were it to prevail here, the soldier would be deprived of the
The direction of the judge, that the number of the corner tree controls every thing, was therefore an accurate exposition of'the law. In arriving at this conclusion it weighs much, that it coincides with the opinion which has been uniformly held in this part of the state by the bench and by the bar, and acted upon by the people. ' Whatever therefore might be the propriety of it on abstract grounds, it has acquired much of the inviolability of a rule of property, and ought not now to be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed.
The opinion in this case was delivered at Pittsburgh, October 3, 1899.