Brummett v. Scott
Brummett v. Scott
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of ejectment for a tract of land in "Weakly county, in which the plaintiff below obtained a verdict and judgment.
On the trial, plaintiff relied on a grant from the State of Tennessee, dated on the 1st of December, 1857, and based on an entry made on the 27th of October, 1853, as recited on the face of the grant. He also read and relied on a copy of the entry, Ho. "969, dated October 27th, 1853, and upon the plat and certificate of survey, dated March 19th, 1856.
Defendant relied on a grant from the State of Tennessee, dated November 27th, 1869, and a copy of the entry, No. 952, dated January 16th, 1855.
It was agreed that each grant covered the land in controversy. It was also agreed that plaintiff’s entry is dated October 22nd, 1853, and is numbered on the margin of the entry taker’s book, No. 969, and is recorded in said book at page 965.
It was further agreed that defendants’ entry was dated January 16th, 1855, and is numbered in the
The dates agreed on as tbe dates of the entries, are those annexed by the parties to their respective locations, and copied by the entry takers on their books.
The Circuit Judge charged the jury that “the entry of the oldest date was superior to an entry of a later date, although the entry of a later date may have been recorded and numbered in the entry taker’s book before that of an older date.”
To this ruling the defendant excepted, and brings the cause to this court by appeal in error.
It is the established doctrine in this State, that in an action of ejectment, an elder entry with a younger grant will prevail against a younger entry with an elder grant: Parish v. Cummins, 11 Hum., 297. The entry is in the nature of a contract of sale by the State to the enterer,. and when the evidence of this contract is placed upon the books of the entry taker, it operates as notice to all subsequent purchasers by entry — the entry taker’s book being regarded as a public record.
The reason of the rule, therefore, that an elder entry with a younger grant will prevail against a younger entry with an elder grant is, that the subsequent enterer being affected with notice, his younger entry is fraudulent and void, as to the older enterer. Hence the importance attached to the dates of entries in such controversies.-
Ever since the case of Reid v. Dodson, decided in
But it is contended for defendant that as the object of requiring the entry to be recorded is that subsequent enterers may have notice that the land has been appropriated, therefore, the number marked on the book, and the page of the book on which it is recorded, are legitimate facts from which the true date of the entry may be ascertained. In support of this reasoning we are referred to the Acts of 1177 and ' 1783, by which entry taker’s officers were first established, and by which it was provided that when a person presented to the entry taker a written claim to specific land, a copy thereof should be entered in a book, and that each
Or without any fraud, the written claim might be made out and dated, but not presented to the entry taker for recording, for months and years, and long after other purchasers, ignorant of the claim so held up, had entered the same land. Yet, if the date of the claim, as annexed to it by the claimant was conclusive, the entry last recorded would take the land, although the last entry was made with notice, by the record, that the land was already appropriated.
Before the Act of 1777, there was no law re
It is true, that by the Act of 1777, there is no direction given to the entry-taker to enter on his book the time at which a claim was presented, so as to make the date of the entry a matter of record; but the Act of 1819, c. 1, passed for the adjudication of North Carolina land claims, and for satisfying the same out of the vacant soil, south and west of the congressional reservation line, it is provided, in section 17, after the priorities of the claims were ascertained by lot, that the surveyor (who was then both surveyor and entry taker)
It was not until the passage of the Act of 1847, c. 20, that the vacant lands south and west of the congressional reservation line were opened to location and entry, by the mere payment of the fees of entering and surveying. By the fourth section of that act it was provided, that “any of the vacant lands, not claimed by occupancy or preemption, may be entered in the same way that vacant lands are now entered, north and east of the congressional reservation line.”
By the Act of 1823, c. 49, (H. &. C., 113,) provision was made for establishing county offices for receiving entries, for vacant lands north and east of the congressional reservation line. By the seventh section, it was provided that “all persons wishing to make an entry in any of said offices, shall produce to the entry taker, at the time of making
It will be observed that plaintiff and defendants both entered the land in controversy, by virtue of the Act of 1847, c. 20, s. 4. And that their respective claims must he determined by the manner of entering lands prescribed by the Act of 1823, c. 49, just quoted. The manner of entering land provided for in the Act of 1823, is substantially the same as that prescribed in the Act of 1777. In both, claimants are to present written claims or locations to the entry taker — he is required to record
In those cases it was held, that the date of an entry fixed by record is conclusive, and cannot be explained or contradicted by extrinsic evidence. In this we concur, assuming that the date of an entry means the specific time at which the claim was
In a contest, therefore, between two enterers, as to which has the older entry, the question is, which was first recorded, and not which of their locations has the older date. If the entry taker has noted on his book the time at which the location was recorded, that would be the date of the entry, and this being record evidence, it is conclusive. If the entry taker has failed to record the date of the entry, but has recorded the location in his book, and given to it the number required by law, then it is legitimate to look to the record, both before and after the entry in question, to ascertain the fact
In the case before us tfie proof shows that both locations were received and recorded by the entry taker, but in neither case does the record show the time at which the location- was received and recorded. The record shows that the plaintiff’s location was dated on the 27th of October, 1853, and on the record it is numbered bio. 969. The certificate of the surveyor shows that .he surveyed the location of plaintiff on the 19th of March, 1856, but he fails to show, as the law requires, either the date or number of the entry which he surveyed. . TJpon this survey a grant issued on the 1st of December, 1857.-
The defendant adduced in evidence an entry, numbered bio. 952, and with the date of January 16th, 1855 annexed to his location as recorded. He then resorted to the entry taker’s book to show, and did show, that on his book his entry was recorded on page 949 of the book, and that plaintiff’s entry was recorded on page 965. He showed further from the book, that his entry was numbered on the book Ho. 9-52, and that the plaintiff’s was numbered Ho. 969. He showed also the several entries from his own number, 952, in progressive numbers down to plaintiff’s number, 969, from which it may be inferred that all of those intermediate entries bore date simultaneous with the dates of the locations, except that of plaintiff and one other.
Prom this proof it is manifest that defendant’s
TRe Circuit Judge Reid, and so cRarged tRe jury, that tRe entry of tRe oldest date was superior to an entry of a later date, altRougR the entry of a later date may Rave been recorded and numbered in tRe entry taker’s book before the entry of an older date. In this charge the general principles of law, that an elder entry will prevail over a later one, was correctly stated; but the proposition that the elder entry will prevail over the later, involves the assumption that the date of the location as copied on the record, was the date of the entry, and that this date could not be controverted by the' facts stated. In this proposition we cannot concur. After a laborious examination of our confused and complicated system of land laws, (if system it can be called,) and after carefully studying the early cases decided, we are constrained to bold that the true .date of an entry is the time at which it was recorded on Ris book by the entry taker, and that this is a question of fact, in the determination of which it is legitimate • to look to the entry taker’s book to see Row the entries stand recorded, and what are their numbers, for the purpose of determining which entry has the older date, and is hence the better title.
TRe judgment below will be reversed, and the cause be remanded for a new trial.
Reference
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- Pleasant Brummetts. v. R. F. Scotts.
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