Ward v. Heirs of Fox
Ward v. Heirs of Fox
Opinion of the Court
-It is not necessary to ascertain whether the appellant’s survey was or was not made conformably to his entry; It is clearly proven, that Kenton, one of the defendants in the court below, for a valuable consideration, did undertake and actu
It would therefore be highly absurd, that he should have it in his power by any entry of his own, to take advantage of an error, if there be one committed by himself, or in other words to take advantage of his own wrong. And it would be equally absurd to suppose he could transfer a right to others of which he had in this way divested himself.
It has never been doubted, but that a conditional or dividing line agreed on by two claimants of land, would equally bind the assignee of either of them, and that case appears very similar to the one in question. From these considerations, and from the general principles of equity, which are applicable to every question for land, wherein the conflicting claims have distinct origins, and wherein the being a purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice, can never be pleaded with success, it seems to this court, that all equity which bound Kenton’s entry while it remained his, did follow it into the hands of those to whom he sold it. And therefore so far as Kenton’s entry, and the survey made thereon by the appellees, is affected by the appellant’s survey having been made contrary to entry, the appellees must sustain the loss, especially as the claim of the appellant is in other respects of superior dignity.
Wherefore it is decreed and ordered, that the decree of the district court herein given, dismissing the bill of the complainant, be reversed. But as it appears from the surveyor’s report, that the appellant’s said survey, which purports to be 2,000 acres, contains a much larger quantity ; and as the surplus must have proceeded from an error in the surveyor, over whom in this respect, Kenton had no control, and for which he was not answerable (it not having been proven, that the error was made by his procurement, or that he was privy to it), it seems to this court that the appellant ought not to hold that part of the surplus which is contained within the lines of the appellees’ survey, and which will be excluded from the appellant’s survey, by running his north and part of his west boundary line in the following manner to-wit: Beginning at the beginning corner of the appellant’s survey, a mulberry and two sugar trees on the south boundary line of William Beckley’s settlement, and running thence west or westwardly with said Beekley’s said line, passing his south-west corner and- continuing
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Ward v. The Heirs of Arthur Fox, William Wood and Simon Kenton
- Status
- 150