Hurst v. Dippo

Supreme Court of the United States
Hurst v. Dippo, 1 U.S. 20 (1773)
1 Dall. 20
Chew, Willing, Morton

Hurst v. Dippo

Opinion

After long debate, the Chief Justice gave the opinion of the Court, as follows :

Chew, Chief Justice.

Though demurrers are disused, yet the law is not uncertain. It is a settled rule that courts of law determine law; a jury, facts. Upon which maxim every security depends in an English country.

When a deed is produced in evidence, it must be shown in hcee verba on the demurrer. There is a difference between Halier’s (Jase as reported in Croke and Coke ; but it is law, that when facts are attempted to be proved by witnesses, the fact must be admitted ; but previous to the admission of a fact, circumstances or evidence must be shown, tending to prove such fact. There may be a demurrer to evidence, either parol or written ; and there may be written evidence to prove a fact.

The difficulty in this case is, whether this list of .purchasers is- sufficiently descriptive of the nature of the estate, in the deed referred to. We must, for the security of the province, take notice of the circumstances of this province. It is well known, what kind of a transaction this was. William Penn, soon after his grant from the Crown, sold lands in small parcels. It appears, he made deeds for sundry small parcels of land, and received the money. These grants were in the province at large; the party must 'do something more to appropriate the land. By this list, he expressly says, it is an account of the lands granted to purchasers ; is it not then a proof that William Penn made a grant, among others, to A. Sonmans, for five thousand acres of land in Pennsylvania?

It sufficiently appears a deed did exist; but it may be asked, what was the nature of that deed — what kind of an estate passed by it ? Whether it is proper to go out of the evidence may be questionable. The word purchase, however, implies a purchase in fee ; and there is no instance where any other estate was granted. Besides, the custom of the province, in the like cases, shows what was the nature of the purchase.

The Court do not take upon themselves to say what the deed was ; and, under all the circumstances of the case, we think it not proper to insert this list in the demurrer. If the defendant’s counsel will not agree to state an estate in fee in the plaintiff’s ancestor, it must go to the jury to draw their inference of the nature of the estate, from the evidence laid before them, (a)

(a)

The “ list of first purchasers,” which appears to have been received in evidence in this case, was also admitted in Morris v. Vanderen, post, p. 64, after argument, and is said by C. J. Tilghman, in Kingston v. Leslie (10 S. & R. 387), to have been “ often since received without opposition.”

Reference

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2 cases
Status
Published