Sanborn v. Vance
Sanborn v. Vance
Opinion of the Court
Defendant, Vance, claims a wedge of land containing 10 acres and a fraction, on the St. Clair river, which was obtained in 1885 by one Coon under color of a homestead entry from the general land-office, and by him conveyed to Vance. Complainants claim that this entry and title are invalid, and that the land had been owned and possessed by their grantors and themselves for considerably over half a century, under grant and confirmation from the United States. They insist that defendant’s alleged title is a fraud on their rights, and inasmuch as he holds by an
The court below dismissed the bill, assigning no reason for it on the record. The claim is made here, and possibly may have prevailed below, that complainants had a full right to set up their claims in defense of the suit at law. Bat we do not think that this objection should prevail. While no doubt some of the important questions in the controversy might be tried at law, no complete remedy could be had in a court of law; and some equitable considerations exist, which render a. court of equity a proper tribunal to dispose of the entire merits. The case went to issue on the facts, and testimony is before us covering them all". We think there is no lack of jurisdiction in the matter.
The complainants represent the ownership of private claim No. 304 of the claims confirmed upon rights existing prior to 1796 in Michigan Territory, and established under various acts of Congress, passed to comply with the undertaking of the United States in Jay’s treaty of 1794. They also own that part of fractional section 7 in township 4 north, of range 17 east, which bordered on private claim 304, and was made fractional by the shape of that claim. Defendant, on the other hand, claims that the 10 acres of which he has procured a grant is a part of section 7, which was not originally set out in its subdivision, and was not discovered to exist, or not to have been disposed of, until just before Coon entered it.
In order to understand the real controversy it will be proper to refer to the surroundings of the entry of the private claim, as appearing in the records of the land commissioners. Complainants do not seek to go back of the action of the land-board for evidence of title, as it has been always held by the Supreme Court of the United States that all of the titles confirmed .must depend on the action of our own gov-
It appears from the proceedings connected with the private claim 304 that it formed a part of what was a much larger tract, claimed by or through Meldrum & Park,a firm of business men well known in the history of the Northwest. The origin of their title is not legally involved in this litigation, but as a matter of history,appearing in the congressional proceedings, it figured in the course of affairs which led to the congressional legislation under which these proceedings were had, and which was embodied in several successive laws, as each statute was found imperfect before all cases of right were covered. The preliminary reports laid before Congress show that Meldrum & Park were successors in the title of Governor Patrick Sinclair, who owned and used-the lands in connection with his mills on Pine river till 1782, and from whose grantee Meldrum & Park obtained it in 1784, and continued working it. See 1 American State Papers, “ Public Lands,” 176, 246. The title laid before the commissioners by John Mel-drum, to whom tract 304 was confirmed,- was based on grants
At the time when the private claims were acted on and confirmed in that region, the public surveys had not been made, and the claims were surveyed and marked on the ground independently of the township and section system. All of them bordered on the great streams or their branches, and, as far as possible, outer lines seem to have been so run as to bound a series of claims, either on one or two sides, by the same lines, usually parallel except in river bends. This was done to prevent confusion, and the consequence necessarily was in some cases to extend and in others to narrow the actual bounds of the confirmed tracts. The variances in this were no greater than are very common in the regular government surveys, which are often changed by imperfect instruments or careless observations, but where in all cases the rule is settled that the lines actually run and marked on the ground must prevail over any theoretical or paper platting, and small excesses or diminutions are disregarded. Hughes v. U. S.; Lindsey v. Hawes, and cases above.
On the thirtieth of August, 1808, the board of commissioners took up claim 304 for consideration. It was set forih in the application, as was usual, not by survey, but by general description, as follows:
“ One tract of 20 acres in front by 32 in depth, being about 640 acres, bounded on the north side by Pine river, on the south by the lands of Meidrum & Park, on the east by the river St. Olair, and on the west by the lands of Meidrum & Park.” 1 Public Lands, 396.
On the twenty-sixth of October, 1808, the consideration of
This survey was made by Aaron Greeley, the government surveyor appointed to survey all the private claims at that period. The commissioners had certified it under the same description by which it was claimed, and without fixing it at-the exact amount of 640 acres, except by estimation. When the original act of March 3, 1807, was passed for confirming lands to occupants claiming under rights existing in July,. 1796, it was provided that no one should get more than one tract, not exceeding 640 acres. But the injustice of this was recognized, as violating the intention of the treaty of 1794, and on April 25, 1808, this restriction to a single tract of 640 acres was repealed. 2 Laws TJ. S. 503. It appears from the action of the commissioners thereafter that they confirmed titles to the full extent of ownership ; but as most claims had already been presented in the shape of separate parcels, of about 640 acres, they were usually confirmed in that way, although covering in some instances many thousands of acres., There was no legal obstacle to confirming a tract, however large it might be, and a confirmation could not have been rendered void by the fact that in surveying it more than 640 acres was surveyed in one tract, when the power and intent both existed of giving it all to the rightful claimant.
In surveying this parcel Mr. Greeley bounded it on the north-and south sides by parallel lines coincident with the north and south lines of the adjoining confirmed claim, No. 306, to the west, and divided it from that claim by a liné at right angles The line upon the north side struck the St. Clair river at the mouth of Pine river, and the north-west corner included a number of acres lying on the north side of Pine river. That river was not meandered, and its course was not mentioned in the survey of the claims. The width
There is put in this record what purports to be a copy of a certificate of Mr. Greeley, which leaves out in the courses and distances the whole of the north line, but which in that respect corrects itself by giving the proper terminus at a post on the St. Clair river, near the mouth of Pine river, from which all the meander lines were run southwardly along the river St. Clair. The original survey certificate surrendered by the claimant Cannot apparently be found. But as there is no such mistake in any of the other recitals and certificates, it is quite evident that Mr. Greeley returned a true survey throughout, as no other means existed of getting at the lines actually referred to. In running the easterly and westerly lines he described them as north 80 deg. west, going west, and south 80 deg. east, running eastwardly. The true lines, as actually run and marked by posts and monuments on the ground, were north 76 deg. west, and south 76 deg. east. This probably arose from variation of the compass. It is of no consequence in the case in fact, as the lines are all identified. The posts at the various line termini were all identified by bearing trees or other signs, and no other posts appear to have been set or identified then or since. The last meander line post on the St. Clair river was at the south-east corner of 304, as claimed by complainants, and as followed in the other government surveys.
The record before us contains what purports to be a receipt
So far as this copy is concerned, it bears the same date as the patent, and was made a year and a half after the survey. If genuine, — of which there is no proof, — Mr. Greeley had at that time no function to perform on the subject. It appears conclusively that the survey was never changed or ordered to be changed. It is not improbable that some meddling busybody undertook to figure out the contents of the claim from the surveyor’s return alone, with no knowledge of the ground, and to cut down a supposed excess. But the statute required the claim to be surveyed, and made no provision for any such arbitrary theoretical change in a confirmed tract. If there was any departure from the terms of the confirmation it was on the north side of Pine river, and not on the south side of the tract, and any land left out-should have been in the north-west, and not the south-east, corner. But, as already stated, there was no legal reason why the tract confirmed should not include more than 640-acres, as the law stood when the confirmation was had.
It is also clear that, if the patent is to govern on courses and distances, there is not a single correct line in it, as the-lines vary four degrees on the ground as run. But the law, as before stated, has always required the survey and lines and monuments on the ground to be conclusive, and the paper
But the subsequent and uniform action of the land department contradicts the idea that the survey was ever changed.
By the land laws in force when that region was surveyed, the country was divided into townships running east from the meridian to the territorial boundary, and north or south of the base line, established as the starting points for surveying. The confirmed tracts of Meldrum & Park landstunning up and including the course of Pine river lay in townships 4 and 5 north, and ranges 16 and 17 east; or, in other words, they were located in four townships. When the township lines were run, it turned out that private claim 304 was so situated as to include the common converging corners of all of those townships, so that if it had not been in the way the laud it covered would have embraced parts of sections 1 and 12 in town 4 north, of range 16 east; section 7 in town 4 north, of range 17 east; section 36 in town 5 north, of range 16 east; and section 31 in township 5 north, of range 17 east. In this way, if this claim had stood alone', it would have made five sections fractional. But as, in connection with the other claims, it covered up entirely some government divisions, this particular claim rendered fractional only the sections along its south side, which were sect ons 1 and 12 in township 4 north, of range 16 east, and section 7 in town 4 north, of range 17 east. No attempt has-been made to disturb it, except on the easterly part of section 7.
When the regular linear township and sectional surveys were made in 1817 and 1818, it became necessary under the land laws to include in each section as surveyed all the land geographically belonging to it, unless already set apart in some other legal way. The easterly side of section 7 was cut into by St. Clair river, and the east line was therefore a meandered line on that river, and was run from the post set
In 1883 one Paldi who was engaged in surveying some priwate lands ou another part of the private claims, seems to •have stumbled on the local records indicating that the papers ■contained defective descriptions, and although the court below —erroneously, as we think — refused to allow him to be ■pressed on cross-examination as to his conduct in the matter, •the result was that without notice to any of the parties in possession, .and without any new survey, the general land-
This map “constructed” in the land-office in 1884 is nothing but a paper subdivision; and, had any actual survey been attempted, no doubt the parties in interest would have found means to protect their rights from this underhanded and fraudulent invasion.
The ease presents an aggravated instance of a class of wrongs which cannot be adequately remedied by ordinary civil redress. A possession which has probably lasted considerably more than a century, and which is shown conclusively to have dated back within 10 years of a century, was entitled under the acts of Congress to be confirmed in its full extent, and was so confirmed in fact, and officially surveyed. Such
The location of the Meldrum grant is not a difficult question, and is one purely of fact. We have no doubt it covered the land in dispute.
The decree below must be reversed, and a decree made-requiring defendant to release the land to complainants, and enjoining him perpetually from setting up any further claim to it. Costs of both courts will be decreed to complainants.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James M. Sanborn v. Samuel W. Vance
- Status
- Published