Forster v. M'Divit
Forster v. M'Divit
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The first error assigned is an exception to the answer given by the court below to the 11th point submitted by the plaintiffs. By this point the court were requested to instruct the jury, “ if they believed that the small field at the east end of the Joseph Long survey was cleared and enclosed as far back as 1812, and continued in grain and grass up to 1817 or 1818, and that a portion of the fence remained round the field, and grass grew in it up to 1823, upon which the cattle of Mr Livingston as well as others fed, and that Livingston never gave any notice, either to Wilson or the assessors, that he had abandoned the field, and that the field was again cultivated in 1824, then there was no abandonment of the field, and the Long tract, on which it was, could not be treated as unseated land in and during the years 1820, 1821, 1822, 1823 and 1824.” The court, however, refused to give this instruction to the jury, but told them, “ there was no time fixed by law that land should be unoccupied, to authorize its being taxed as unseated. But if they believed that Thomas Wilson, who claimed to be the owner of the land at the time, had abandoned his settlement, improvement and cultivation of it, and it was not
This answer of the court we consider perfectly correct throughout. Whether the ordinary use and occupation of the small field, which, according to the evidence, had been neglected and suffered to commence its return to a wild state, to say the least of it, from the year 1817 to that of 1823 or 1824, had been abandoned or not by Wilson and his tenants, was a question of fact depending so much upon the intention of Wilson, as to make it not only proper, but necessary for the court to submit it to the jury, to be determined by them as a question of fact. This the court did; and, in doing so, we also think that the instruction given by them to the jury, in relation to the question, was not only appropriate, but well adapted to assist and enlighten their minds on the subject. Doubtless, cases may occur where the facts may be such as to make it the duty of the court to determine the question of abandonment, or of the occupation and possession of the land, as one of law; as, for instance, where the lapse of time has been so great
The second error assigned is also an exception to the answers given by the court to the sixth point submitted on the part of the plaintiffs. By it the court were requested to instruct the jury, “ that if they believed that the surveys in the names of Clement Biddle and Philip Kinsey, respectively, were the lands called for in the warrant and survey of Joseph Long, as Mifflin’s lands, the law then fixed and settled the lines of the Joseph Long survey to adjoin the lines of Biddle at the west end of the Joseph Long survey, if no marks or lines and corners were there to be found upon the ground at the west end of the Joseph Long survey, showing that the original survey of Joseph Long did not adjoin Biddle, and this without regard to the lines and corners on the other parts of the Long survey.” To this the court replied, and told the jury, “ if they believed that the surveys in the names, respectively, of Clement Biddle and Philip Kinsey, were the lands called for in the warrant and survey of Joseph Long, as Mifflin’s lands, the law was as therein stated. But they would observe, -that the warrant of Joseph Long called for adjoining lands of William Patterson and Mr Mifflin; that Kinsey and Biddle were admitted to be lands of Mifflin; and that the survey of Long adjoined Kinsey, on two corners, which was fulfilling the call of the warrant ; and whether the line S. 75 W. from the hickory was extended to the Clement Biddle survey, was open for their consideration.” The answer here given to the sixth point of the plaintiffs was quite as favourable to them as they had any reason to expect or right to require. From the nature of the thing, it cannot be supposed or believed, that by the call of the warrant for the lands of Mr Mifflin, it was intended that in its location it should be made to adjoin all the lands of Mr Mifflin, or every tract and survey which he held there under warrants in different names. The court were therefore perfectly correct in saying, that as the Joseph Long survey had been made to adjoin the Kinsey survey, one of the tracts admitted to be Mifflin’s land, the call of the Joseph Long warrant, as also that of the survey made in pursuance of it, was' fully met and answered. Had the Long warrant, or the survey alone, called for land of Mifflin surveyed under a warrant in the name of Clement Biddle, and the courses, distances and marks made on the ground of the Long survey had all been consistent
The third error assigned, which is the only remaining one, is also an exception to the answer given by the court to the seventh point submitted on behalf of the defendant. The court were requested by the defendant, in this point, to instruct the jury, “ if they should believe from the evidence that the house, concerning which the witnesses had spoken, was within the lines of the James Long tract of land, yet if they were satisfied from the evidence that it was also within the lines of the Charles Green survey, and that the occupancy of the house was under Fee, the owner of that survey; and if they should believe from the evidence that the owner of the Joseph Long survey acquiesced in the possession of Fee, and did not intend to contest his right to the land thus adversely possessed by him, then the occupancy of the land by Fee and his tenants would not change the character of the residue of the Long tract, and make it a seated tract, if without such occupancy it would have been unseated; and that Fee’s adverse occupancy under his independent survey made in pursuance of the Charles Green warrant would not render a sale for taxes of the Joseph Long survey illegal and void under the facts there stated.” To this point the court responded in the affirmative, and referred to their general charge for more full instruction on the question raised by it. In their general charge, the court told the jury, that “ the law had been settled that the possession on an adjoining tract, or even on an interfering tract distinctly separate, would not avoid a sale of another tract as unseated, though the claim of the possessor may interfere with the adjoining unseated land, but the purchaser of the unseated tract may hold what is without the boundaries of the land so in possession of another. If, then, the evidence satisfied them that Col. Fee, who purchased from Charles Green in 1810 the land surveyed on the Charles Green warrant, which includes the little house, had this house occupied as a part
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.