Warren County v. Catchings
Warren County v. Catchings
Opinion of the Court
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
About ninety-five acres of land in the city of Vicksburg, including tbe lot in controversy, were patented to Vick and Glass in 1834. They, and those claiming under them, down to and including appellee, have had possession under claim of ownership undisputed for over eighty years. Before the patent to Vick and Glass, and at the time of the “articles of cession and agreement” between Georgia and the United States on April 24, 1802, the land belonging to one John Girault. Girault then bad' title in virtue of a British grant. By act of congress of March 3, 1803, the lands of tbe Georgia cession were authorized to be-sold, reserving, however, the sixteenth section in each township for the support of schools, and also providing that those holding under British and Spanish grants should be confirmed in their grants. These British and Spanish grants are also distinctly recognized in the acts of congress of March 27, 1804, March 2, 1805, and April 21, 1806. By this last act of April 21, 1806, it is declared that lands held by British grants “shall not be disposed of until otherwise directed by congress,” and that when a section 16 falls within such a grant “the secretary of the treasury shall locate another section in lieu thereof for the use of schools,” etc.
The title of Girault was confirmed by congress June 30, 1812,
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Warren County v. Thomas C. Catchings
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Public Lands. Sixteenth section. School lands. Lands in lieu. Location. British grants. Where the title of a grantee in a British grant was confirmed by an act of congress, the secretary of the treasury was thereafter without power to locate the granted land as school lands, in lieu , of a sixteenth section; such a location was absolutely void and not validated by the government’s subsequent acquisition of title to the land.