Munshower v. Patton
Munshower v. Patton
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The jury beiqg returned by the brother of the defendant, in error, plaintiff below,- a challenge was made to the array, and overruled and exception taken.
At the common law, this was good cause of challenge. The wisdom of our ancestors guarded the purity of the administration of justice from even the suspicion of partiality. The jurors returned, as well as. the officers who returned them, were, as far as human precaution could provide, to stand unprejudiced. Our own legislature intended to add further security, by the several laws directing the mode of selecting and returning jurors. The balloting for the jurors to be returned, as well as making out the list from which they are to be drawn, is to be conducted by the sheriff and commissioners of the county. It, therefore, would be no- cause of challenge that the sheriff Was related to one of the parties, so far as respected his uniting with the commissioners in making out the list, and the other measures preparatory to their summons. But there remains a very important duty to be performed by the sheriff alone, in which he has it in his power to exercise some partiality. He
There are several exceptions to the opinion of the court, which as the cause is to be sent back for trial, renders it proper for the court to consider the exceptiohs, and points made in the Common Pleas. The charge of the court is not altogether free from obscurity. Different interpretations have been put on it by the counsel,
The 2d and 3d specifications are the same, and if the court had instructed the jury, that where a man cleared over his patented or surveyed lands, and occupied a space by actual inclosure, comprehended within the settlement right of another, or the claim of ano? ther founded on settlement right, and continued in such possession for 21 years after such inceptive title, by entry on vacant unappropriated lands, and that such settler afterwards obtained a warrant calling for his improvement, that the act of limitations will only begin to run from the date of the warrant or time of improvement stated in the warrant, this would be error. For as I have said in sJohnson v. Irvine, I cannot see any case where limitation would be a bar, if not in this case. The actual occupation, however ■torrtious it might be, however destitute of the colour of title either in law or equity, gives a right to the extent of inclosure against all the world, but the state. If then a settler whose inceptive right to vacant lands commences with the origin of his settlement, suffers another to continue his occupation for 21 years, of lands which his inceptive right would reasonably include, he cannot shelter himself from the operation of the act. Where he takes out his warrant within 21 years, if he dates back his warrant to the time of his settlement, the limitation commences from that time. If he dates it as of a time posterior, or does not pay any interest on his warrant, this fraud on the state will not put him in a better state than if he acted honestly. It is clear to me, that the limitation against a settler runs from the inception of his settlement whatever may be the date of his warrant. This construction while it secures to the state her purchase money, gives to the possessor the benefit of his long continued and uninterrupted possession. To construe it otherwise, would give to a settlement right to vacant unappropriated lands, with undefined boundaries, a protection' beyond a patent whose boundaries are ascertained. I observe, the court in their charge throughout, say, that the time only runs from the date of the grant of the commonwealth, and explain their meaning of grant $, by grants they say, they mean all paper titles of every species, If it was the intention of the court to lay down the law to the jury, that the limitation commenced only from the paper inception of title under the state,' this would be error:
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MUNSHOWER and another against PATTON
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published