Estell v. Bricksburg Land & Improvement Co.
Estell v. Bricksburg Land & Improvement Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The issue in this case was whether the defendants had title to the premises on which the trespass was committed. The title which the defendants ■set up was an including survey from the proprietor to Jesse Richards, dated May 26th, 1815. To invalidate this title the plaintiff exhibited a duly certified copy of a return to the “heirs or assigns” of Edward Byllinge, bearing date the 29th of March, 1750. The question of fact tried before the jury was, whether this latter survey embraced the loeus in quo, and .this question has been re-opened on the argument o# the present motion for a new trial. I have read the evidence on this subject with care, and I shall dispose of this branch of ■the case with the remark that there is nothing in the testimony to show that the jury have not reached a correct conclusion.
The remaining topic, and-the one with which the argument
Prom this citation it is clear, therefore, that the survey and return did not constitute a conveyance, for behind these was the warrant which authorized them, and which originally used to be proved in court making up the chain of a proprietary title. The warrant here referred to was ordered to be issued by the council of proprietors, and was the first step in the appointment of a dividend of the common property to one of themselves, or to a grantee of an original owner. The mode of passing these titles is thus described by Judge Elmer, in his learned and interesting note to the title surveys, (Nix. Dig. 935): “Regular deeds of conveyance were made (formerly by lease and release, in modern times by deeds of bargain and sale,) either of a fractional part or of a specified number of acres. A proprietor, or a grantee under him, upon presenting his title to the council, obtains an order for a warrant, which is signed by the clerk and recorded, and which authorizes the surveyor-general, or his deputy, to survey a specified number of acres from any of the unappropriated lands. By virtue of this warrant, a deputy surveyor, who is a sworn officer, runs out a survey, including any number of acres not exceeding the number specified, as the owner chooses to have it, wherever it is supposed other surveys do not cover the ground. The deputy having returned his survey, reciting the warrant and the deductions of the title, with a map, to the surveyor-general, he certifies it to the council, .and being by them inspected and approved, it is ordered to be recorded.” Formerly, the practice was to prove this series of acts in making out a title in court, but afterwards the courts took judicial notice of the original grants, and now, by the act of 1787, section three, it is declared that after a survey has been
It is evident, 1 think, from the foregoing summary of the course of proceeding with regard to the distribution of their lands by the proprietors, that the recorded return of the survey is not a deed, but an instrument entirely unknown to the common law. It is not to be tested or construed by the rules applicable to conveyance, but it appears to be an acknowledgment of the common owners that a certain portion of the joint estate has been assigned to one of the original proprietors, or to an assignee of such proprietor. The certainty of the party to whom the title lias been passed, is to be ascertained not from the record of the survey, but from the deed of the proprietor, in those cases in which he has parted with the title. The office of the survey and return is ful iy discharged when it shows that a parcel of designated land lias been set apart in severalty, under the title of one of the original holders; to whose benefit such allotment enures, is a matter to be settled, if a stranger claim by the ordinary proofs. But the statute, already cited, of 1787, makes the record of the survey a conclusive bar to all claim upon such property on the part of the proprietors. In this case the record shows that these premises were set apart under the title of Edward Byllinge, who was one of the original proprietors, and a party to the quintipartite deed, which made division of the lands held in common between the East and Vest Jersey proprietors. That record, by force of the statute, precludes the proprietors from claiming any right to the tract embraced in it, and the consequence is, it ineontrovertibly shows that when the survey to Jesse Richards was made, his grantors were not the owners of these premises. The defendants, on the issue raised, have not succeeded in establishing their case. The verdict cannot be disturbed.
Rule discharged.
Rev., p. 599.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ROBERT ESTELL v. THE BRICKSBURG LAND AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY
- Status
- Published