Lessee of Creps v. Wilkinson
Lessee of Creps v. Wilkinson
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
It will be remembered that when this lot was sold, in 1817, the credit system for the purchase money of public lands, was in operation. Our government had, at all times, been a lenient creditor. It has never been its policy to enforce the forfeiture of land against purchasers, with any degree of strictness. A system of relief laws was early adopted, and times of payment were extended by various regulations, until, the general act of March, 1821, abolishing all sales upon credit. By this act debtors for lands were classified, and a forfeiture not,
Such were the rights of the purchaser at the time of the grant to the State of Ohio. The terms of section 1 are lai’ge enough to embrace the lot in question; but section 3 relates to lots “which may have been sold,” and secures to the State of Ohio the net avails only of such lots at a minimum ¡Drice, implying that the land itself was not conveyed, but remained in the United States. The grant took its whole effect at its date, and conveyed only those lands “which had not been sold,” not those in which individuals had an interest, and which might afterward revert to the United States by forfeiture. At the time of the grant the United States recognized an interest in the original purchaser, which they assumed to protect, and evidently did not mean to convey to the state. Judgment lor the plaintiff.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lessee of Joseph Creps v. David Wilkinson
- Status
- Published