Register v. Haggin
Register v. Haggin
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Joseph and Nicholas Lewis on the 4th day of November, 1815, in virtue of part of a Virginia treasury warrant, No. 19,010, and part of an entry thereori, procured a survey of 137f acres of land in Nelson county, to be made by the surveyor of that county in their names; and on the 17th of that month, assigned the survey, by endorsement on the plat and certificate thereof, to Robert Haggin, vvbo lodged the said plat and certificate of survey in the office of the Register of the land office. Haggin, on the 30th day of October, 1816, applied at the land office, to the register thereof, for a grant thereon. The register refused to issue the grant; whereupon the said Haggin applied to the Franklin circuit court for, and obtained from that court, a mandamus nisi, directed to the register, returnable immediately. To which writ the register returned for cause of his refusal to issue the grant aforesaid, “that the act of the general assembly, approved February 10th, 1816, had not been complied with by the applicant;” and thereupon the court awarded a peremptory mandamus against the register — from which opinion of the court this appeal was taken.
The correctness of the opinion of the court below depends upon the sufficiency of the reason alledged by the register for his refusal. To ascertain the competency of that reason, the act of assembly referred to therein, must be examined, and an act supplemental thereto, on the same subject, approved at the same time. In the first section oflhe first act, it is provided, that no plat and certificate of survey, which purports to be made pursuant to, or by virtue of, «» entry upon a Virginia laud office treasury warranty made
These acts, in the consideration of this question, being in pari materia must be taken together, and, like the other enactments of the legislature, must be regarded as law, by all who, or whose cases come within their provisions; unless they be in violation of the constitutions of the state, or nation, or of the compact of separation between Virginia and Kentucky, which is considered as a part of the constitution of the state. In the 3d section of that compact it is provided, that all private rights and interests of lands within the district of Kentucky, derived from the laws of Virginia prior to such separation, shall remain valid and secure under the laws of the proposed sl ate, and shall be determined by the now existing laws of this state, (Virginia.) This section of the compact is selected by the court as the one between which, and the above acts of legislature, there might seem to exist a collision. The en-quiry is, does there exist a real collision? Under the laws existing in Virginia at the lime the compact was made, a private right to, or interest in, lands in the district of Kentucky, of the description contemplated by the two aforesaid acts, could not exist but in the case when an entry had-be tin made upon treasury warrant in the name of the pro- '
The right or interest of the proprietor was not to land generally in the district of Kentucky, but to the specific land embraced in, and contra listinguished from, the forest lands, by his entry, and whether he had a right, or interest to, and in that land, depends upon the validity of his entry, If his entry had the requisite specialty and precision, it invested him with the interest in, and right to, the land designated thereby, and embraced therein, and entitled him to have a survey made thereon, conformably thereto. The right to survey land, is not a general indiscriminate right, to survey generally and indiscriminately, but & specific right resulting from a valid entry previously made, to survey the identical land to, and in which, the locator had thereby acquired a right and interest; a survey per se, invests the person for whom it is made with no right to, or interest in, the land thereby embraced. It is only a mean whereby a preexisting right (under entry) is visibly bounded and marked; and connected with tile patent or grant which issues thereon, is record evidence afforded bv the government to the individual of the extent and dimension^of the land to, and in, which he had acquired by entry, a right and interest, the legislature, in the two aforesaid acts, professes not to interfere with, or impugn the rights or interests, which the locators of Virginia treasury warrants may have acquired in, orto lands in Kentucky, by virtue of entries thereon, under the laws of Virginia. They only restrain the proprietor thereof from transcending the circle of their rights and interests, and usurping those of others, or of the state. In doing this it is not conceived that they have, in the two aforesaid acts, either in matter or manner, violated the compact or constitutions aforesaid. They prescribe to t hose officers, the surveyor and register, certain modes of performing their duties, which do not narrow or diminish the rights or interests of those concerned. They say to the surveyor, survey the land of the applicant, but do not survey as his, the land of others, or of the state. To the applicant they say, instead of inferring from lapse of time, and your negligence, a forfeiture or abandonment by you of your right, we will still indulge you; and your interest in the land to its extent, shall be demarked by our officer, and you shall have a grant therefor; but you must enable us to do so by exhibiting your right, and designating the land which it embraces: instead
It is, therefore, considered by the court, that the order of the court below, awarding the mandamus, be reversed, set aside, and held for naught, and that the writs be quashed and the applicant dismissed, &c.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.