Lessee of Davis v. Keefer
Lessee of Davis v. Keefer
Opinion of the Court
delivered a charge to the jury, of which the following is the substance.
I deem it necessary to state two positions which have been taken by the defendants’ counsel, and to neither of which I can subscribe. I hold neither to be law to the extent in which they have been laid down. 1. It is contended that a warrant must describe the land “xoith all certainty,” so as to amount to a survey, or the plaintiff cannot recover after three years, as it is said was determined in Northumberland in the case of a location. It is to be regretted that gentlemen of the bar will not take accurate notes of trials, and yet will cite the cases as authority. I have before heard of the case in Northumberland, and have no hesitation in saying, there must have been some circumstauees which are not stated, or it is not law. If the location described the land with such reasonable certainty, as that it could not be laid on other land with propriety, this is all the certainty that the law requires. 2. Again it is stated, that as every settler and improver of land, has a right to three hundred acres, and as Clark had only 219 acres surveyed on his warrant of 200 acres, he is entitled to as much more as will make up the 300, and therefore his additional warrant, though subsequent to that of Gantz, is entitled to the preference to Gantz, supposing his warrant exactly located. This I deny in the extent laid down. I agree that every settler is entitled to 300 acres, if there be so much unappropriated land convenient to his settlement, and he chooses to take out a wazrrant for so much. But he is not obliged to take 300 acres ; he may take less; and if he does take a warrant for less, and has it fairly and duly surveyed without any fraud, deception or misrepresentation by the adverse warrantee, he is bouzzd by that quantity, and cannot after azzother person has obtained a warrant for the adjoining land, take out a subsequent warrant for it. This is the settled rule of law, and it is necessary to adhere to it, to render property secure. "Wez’e the rule contended for the law of the land, much property would be in danger; for any first settler, havizzg taken out a warrant for less than his settlement entitled him to, because he did not think moz’e land was thezi worth paying for, and having had that warrant duly surveyed and returned, might at any time
The only case forming any kind of exception to the rule which I have stated, which I recollect or ever heard of, was tried in York county Circuit Court, before Judge Bracken-ridge and myself. The names of the parties Í do not remember. The defendant had early taken out a warrant for a small piece of land, say sixty or seventy acres. In surveying it, he was obliged to leave out one half or one third of the land within the boundaries of which he had settled, with his neighbors all around him. The principal part of an orchard, planted many years before, part of his buildings, part of his cleared fields which he had farmed for many years, and which he still continued to farm as usual, were left out of the survey. The plaintiff took a warrant for the land so left out. I do not remember whether the first warrantee had taken out afterwards an additional warrant, but we both held that the plaintiff’s warrant had been obtained by surprise, within the meaning of the act of assembly. The quantity surveyed on the first warrant, and the quantity left out, not amounting together to near 300 acres, say not above 150, we thought that this case not being within the reason of the rule, was not within the meaning of it. No rational man could suppose that the defendant would leave out his orchard, buildings, and improvements, without which the part taken in would have been of small value; and yet until all the circumstances were explained, it was supposed by those who heard it stated, that we had laid down the rule as it is contended for by the defendants now, and that our decision was contrary to law. I believe some of our colleagues stated this apprehension. This case was an exception to, and proves the general rule which I have stated.
Gantz’s warrant was for 100 acres, bounded on the south by land of James Clark, &e. When he came to survey it, Clark had not then ascertained his boundary; and it was agreed between Clark, Gantz, and Henderson, that Clark •should take out a warrant and have his land surveyed by Henderson, who was then to survey Gantz’s warrant. Where *was he to survey it? Certainly according to its location, adjoining Clark, as he had chosen to limit his boundary; Clark at the time of survey claimed no more.
Hpon this charge the jury found for the plaintiff; and his Honor having overruled a motion for a new trial, the defendants appealed to this Court, where the case was now argued by Waits and Duncan for the defendants, and by Brown and J, Biddle for the plaintiff.
After stating the facts, delivered his opinion as follows.
The plaintiff has the elder warrant, and the defendants the elder survey. As to Clark’s original improvement which was entitled to precedence, it cannot affect the present question, because having deliberately ascertained the extent of his right, by a survey, there can be no pretence for saying, *that he could afterwards extend his limits. The r*igg owner of an improvement right was entitled to three L hundred acres; but he was not obliged to take so much, he might take as much less as he pleased. There may be an exception to the principle I have laid down, where the owner of the improvement has ascertained the limits of his claim, by lines made by consent between him and his neighbors, prior to his survey, and afterwards being unable to pay for
Judgment affirmed.
[Cited in 6 S. & R. 202 ; 10 id. 218 ; 12 id. 126 ; 2 R. 237 ; 3 W. 468 ; 4 id. 445 ; 7 id. 256 ; 3 Wh. 271; 1 J. 117 ; 1 H. 359. Reviewed and distinguished in 3 P. & W. 309.]
Reference
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- The Lessee of Davis against Keefer and others
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