Pumphrey's Lessee v. Ashpaw
Pumphrey's Lessee v. Ashpaw
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.-’ After stating the facts he proceeded. The point in controversy is, how the first line of The Addition tv Goznell’s Chance ought to be run from the stone described as the place of beginning, whether according to a survey of Smith’s Forest made on the 25th of November 1796, (the day on which The Addition to Gozneli’s Chance was taken up,) with an allowance of forty five minutes for variation, as expressed in the certificate and grant, or according to the true location of Smith’s Forest-, as originally surveyed on the 6th of March 1694? There is no difficulty in expounding the grant of The Addition to Goznell’s Chance. The words, as now laid down with an allowance of forty-Jive minutes for variation, with reference to ¡smith's Forest, are not used to show the true location of that tract of land, but to describe the manner in which The Addition to Gozndl’s Chance was run when originally taken up. There is no ambiguity, latent or patent; the position ot the land, as it was originally laid down, is clearly described; and the question is not, how a general indefinite call (in the description of a junior,) to the lines of an elder tract of land, should be gratified, which need not be here examined; but whether the expressions in a grant, particularly designating the manner in which the land was originally surveyed, shall be held to control the location, or be altogether rejected.
As a general positron, nothing is more clear, than that the description contained in a grant shall govern, and that the land intended tobe conveyed, shall be ascertained and pass by the description so given, and no reason is perceived for distinguishing this from any other case.
It is not important what the true location of Smith’s Forest is, or what allowance for the variation of the magnetic needle would have been necessary and proper to ascertain its true location, when The Addition of Goznell’s Chance was surveyed — Whether forty-five minutes or forty-five degrees — The intention was, that the first line of The Addition to Goznell’s Chance should be regulated, not by what might be the true location of Smith’s Forest, but by a running of that tract of land on the 25th of November in the year 1796, with an allowance of forty-five Minutes for the variation of the needle, as distinguished from the original location; and to give to it any other location, would be, not only to defeat that intention, and entirely disregard the expressions of the grant, by which it is manifested, but also to depart from the actual original running of the land — And for what purpose? Surely not for the greater certainty; a specified allowance for the variation of the compass being clear of all doubt, and the true original location of Smith’s Forest, wholly uncertain, and
The only question arising in this cause, is, ■Whether those lines of The Addition to Goznell’s Chance, that call to run to, and with lines of Smith’s Forest, must run to, and be governed by, those lines, according to the original location of that tract.
The expressions in the certificate of The Addition to Goznell’s Chance, are running to the line of Smith’s Forest, as now laid down with an allowance of forty-five minutes for variation, and then running with several lines of that tract as laid down with the same variation. It is not recollected, that a question precisely like the one now before court has ever been submitted to its consideration. If The Addition to Goznell’s Chance must run to, and be governed by, the original location of Smith’s Forest, and the jury should find that location not to correspond with the location made of that tract by an allowance of forty five minutes for variation in the year ¡796, when The Addition to Goznell’s Chance, was taken up, then it follows that that, tract would have a different location than was plainly and expressly given to it when the survey was made, and the expressions of the certificate, os now run with forty five minutes for variation, must be rejected. If the jury should find the true location of Smith’s Forest to be as it was run in the year 1796, with the variation mentioned, then The Addition to Goznell’s Chance would correspond with the original location; but as the tract called for is, in the tract calling for it, described as then run in a particular manner j I am of opinion that The Addition to Goznell’s Chance ought not to have been confined to the true original location of Smith’s Forest, and that the court below erred in directing the jury that the true original location of Smith’s Forest must control The Addition to Goznell’s Chance. I therefore concur with this Court in pronouncing that the judgment of the Court below be reversed.
JUDGMENT REVERSED.
The course and distance do not correspond with the third line of Smith’s Forest reversed, and must be rejected, because the call is imperativo. Can the reason assigned by the surveyor for run-, ning that course and distance give the course and distance any ad* ditional weight, and entitle it to the preference to a peremptory and unequivocal call? Certainly not. It is no matter what motive or rea. son induced the surveyor to run that course and distance; if it does not agree with tile third line of Smith’s Forest, reversed, it must he rejected. These principles are settled and cannot be shaken.
Chase, Ch. J. withdrew from the bench at the argument and decision of this case; but afterwards furnished the Reporters with the following remarte» upon the opinion delivered by this Court.
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