Coleman v. Henderson
Coleman v. Henderson
070rehearing
PETITION FOR REHEARING.
A strong feeling of disappointed hope; a firm conviction of the just ice and goodness of their cause, with a persuasion that the court have predicated the opinion delivered in this case, upon a mistaken view of important points in the case, must be the apology of the appellant’s counsel for troubling the court with a motion to which ihey feel themselves impelled by the strongest sense of duty. Indeed the review of an opinion involving interests of such importance as the present, if not a pleasing, it is hoped cannot be an irksome, duty with the court.
It will not be forgotten that the entry of Trabue for 1450 acres, the one alluded to by the expression 11 the above entry,” in that of the complainant, when surveyed in conformity with the opinion pronounced therein in the case of Trabue’s heirs and Lockhart’s, on one of its liues intersects Licking, another object called for in the complainant’s entry. This point of intersection is one from which, with the most unerring certainty, a locator or enquirer is furnished with means, for tracing the other objects in each direction for the ascertainment of the area contemplated by the complainant’s entry, and from this point pursuing on the one direction the group of objects described as constituting the area to be occupied by the complainant’s entry, you ascend Licking to the mouth of Gray’s run, and thence you ascend the run, which is another object of description: On the other side of the
The cal! in the complainant’s entry for the claim of Benjamin Hatcher, which seemed to the counsel for the appellant to constitute the only seeming obstacle to their success, (if the opinion of the court is correctly understood by them,) is strongly intimated if not in so many terms decided, as one which, of itself alone, ought, not to be fatal to the claim: It being expressly affirmed in the opinion delivered herein, ‘‘that Callaghan’s settlement is so far a“bove fray’s run, that lay the claims in any manner con-formably with their locations, and Hatcher’s will not extend to Gray’s run.” The affirmance of this proposition by the court, it seemed to the counsel for the appellant, was a sufficient, and ought to have been a final, sanction to: the validity of the claim. For it seems to the counsel for the appellant, that the inference afterwards drawn by the court in the opinion, that the call in Hatcher’s entry to lie
The court, in the opinion delivered, seem not to have decided the preliminary enquiry, ^whether Hatcher’s was a
TALBOT, POPE & BIBB.
But the court at a subsequent day of the term, Overruled the petition, and ordered the foregoing Opinion to stand unaltered and affirmed.
Hard. Rep. pa. 383, Craig & al. vs. Cogar.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This vi ns' a suit for land, in which the validity of the following entry was the question presented for determination:
“June 8th, 1780 — William Trabue enters 3000 acres of “land, to include the vacant land between M’Fall’s, Benj. “Hatcher, Gray’s run, the above entry and Licking.”
The entry referred to is an entry of 1450 acres, in the name of James Trabue, which lies a mile and a quarter below M’Fall’s land on Mill creek, a water of the south fork of Lieking. Gray’s run is also a branch of the south fork, running nearly parallel with, and some distance above, Mill creek. And Hatcher’s entry depends on Fleming’s, which dePen(L on Callaghan’s settlement: and Callaghan’s settle-js gq far a(j0Ve Gray’s run, that lay the claims in any manner conformably with their locations, and Hatcher’s n0^ ex*e°d 1° Gray’s run. But it calls for Fleming’s sou'h line, near the head of Gray's run. -
It was contended that the call for Hatcher is an imma-, tcrial call, inasmuch as that claim cannot be extended to Gray’s run. It would be difficult, indeed, to ascertain the precise position of Hatcher, if practicable at all to reduce ¡j precision by any rational and just construction. If l'le call in it, to lie near the head of Gray’s run, ivas susceptible of any possible effect, it would have been to deceive a locator of the land in contest, which lies far below. ®ut admitting that this entry should be totally disregarded, and still the entry in contest cannot be sustained; because, Rom the quantity of land lying between Gray’s run, Lick- ;( Mill an£¡ other claims called for, it is too uncertain as. to the part which was intended to be embraced, to extend this entry to that in dispute. The decree must be af5rraec| yyitb COSÍ.
Between M’Falls claim, James Trabue’s, Licking, Gray’s
Mr. Bibb, in discussing the propriety of rejecting the call for Hatcher, referred to the following cases as instances where vague and redundant calls had been rejected as inoperative:— '
“Lipscomb vs. Grubbs, 3 Bibb, 404; Brown vs. Crow, “Hard. 443, 448; Patterson vs. Bradford, Hard. 107; Bos-“worth vs. Maxwell, Hard. 205; Markham vs. M’Gee, “Hard 374; Kennedy vs. Bruce, 2 Bibb, 373; Speed vs. “Severe, 181; Evans’ heirs vs. Mansonls ex’ors, 1 Bibb, 5.”
And where an entry calls to adjoin the settlements and pre-emptions of B and C before the pre-emptions were located, that the call for the pre-emptions will be rejected and the entry attached to the settlements, he cited “Ward vs. Lee, ass’ee, fall term, 1808.”
The counsel for the appellant filed the following petition
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.