Anderson v. Nesbit

2 Rawle 114
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Rawle 114 (Anderson v. Nesbit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Nesbit, 2 Rawle 114 (Pa. 1828).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Huston, J.

— This is an, ejectment, in which the plaintiffs herb were plaintiffs below. Alexander Murray died before 1793, leaving four daughters, one of whom afterwards married the plaintiff, William Anderson, one married M‘Crea, one married Allen Nesbit, Sen., and one married William, Fisher. He made a will, and appointed his widow, William Fisher, and. Allen Nesbit executors. He died possessed of a valuable tract of land; and further, on the 18th of June, 1774, a warrant issued to William Irwin for fifty acres, on which a survey of fifty-six acres and one hundred and forty-seven perches was made by S. Lyon, deputy surveyor, on the 33d of June, 1787. It was admitted one half of this land belonged to Alexander Murray. On the 4th of October, 1793, Francis Irwin, the only son and heir of William Irwin, made a deed to William'Fisher, one of Murray’s executors, for the use of the legatees of the said Murray, for one undivided half of the said tract, to be taken off the upper end of the said tract, adjoining the said Murray’s land, containing in all fifty acres, more or less, surveyed on warrant in June, 1774. '

On the 4th of April, 1794, Francis Irwin sold his own half to William M‘Cord. After recitingj that he had conveyed one-half to William Fisher, he conveys the other undivided half of the before described tract, in consideration, &c. William M‘ Cord’s representatives, by legal conveyance, sold this half to William Anderson, on the 15th of January, 1833, describing it as one equal half of the said warant and right for fifty acres, held on warrant, dated, &c. as above.

Alexander Murray, by his will, devised to his daughters, Margaret, Mary, Isabella, and Jane, all his estate, real and personal, to be equally divided among them; to be, at their disposal among their children, as they shall think them deserving. After some small legacies, he adds, “ also all the plantation I now live on, to be sold after my wife’s decease, and divided as before.” On the 6th of April, 1811, Allen Nesbit and wife conveyed to Allen Nesbit, Jr. and John Nesbit, reciting Murray’s will, and Mrs. Nesbit’s title, to one-fourth of the two tracts of land, and describing the larger by courses and distances, and the other as twenty-five acres, being half of a fifty acre warrant, granted to William Irwin-, and sold Mrs. Nesbit’s fourth part of both tracts, subject to, the widow’s dower. William Fisher was then dead. Before this, in 1803, Allen Nesbit and William M‘Cord, had met on the land, and made a division by parol; and a Mr. Morrison had, as was supposed, run round the whole tract, and marked á division line. Although the survey, made by Mr. Lyon was returned^ yet it would seem, this was not ■known to the owners, for Morrison’s survey left out a long narrow [116]*116strip adjoining Murray’s other land, and containing about fifteen acres, and in other respects differed from the survey, which was ' well marked on the ground, and from the return in the office; Immediately after this division, Allen Nesbit bought a Wyoming credit, and took a warrant on it, surveyed on this land so left out at the division, together with a few acres adjoining, which perhaps were really vacant; and there was no proof in the cause, whether this was fraud or mistake in Nesbit. But, from that time until 1824, perhaps all those interested, remained ignorant that it was included in the return of survey, as well as the marked lines on the warrant to William Irwin.

On the 14th of June, 1814, (the widow being dead,) Allen Nesbit, as surviving executor,’ sold the whole, estate at public sale to William Anderson, (including the fourth part sold before to Allen and John Nesbit; but Anderson immediately conveyed the same fourth to them.) In the deed, the mansion tract was described by courses and distances; and also, the one-half of the above-described tract, surveyed in pursuance of a warrant granted to William Irwin, &c., and covenanted, that the said Nesbit has not heretofore done, or committed any act, matter, or thing, wittingly, or wilfully suffered to be done any thing whereby the premises hereby granted, or any part thereof is, are, or shall, or may be impeached, charged, or incumbered, in title, charge, or estate, or otherwise.”

Allen and John Nesbit conveyed their fourth part, described as in the deed of Allen Nesbit and wife, to Samuel M'Cord, the other plaintiff. The plaintiffs showed, and it was admitted, William Anderson was the- owner of Jane M‘ Crea’s share. Mrs. Fisher’s share appeared to be outstanding then, but it was sold with the rest to Anderson by Allen Nesbit, surviving executor, and thus the title to the whole was vested in the plaintiffs. On this same 14th of June, 1815, Anderson executed a release in full and general terms to Allen Nesbit, for the shares of his wife and of Mrs. M‘Crea.

In 1823, Anderson applied for a patent for the land, and then saw the draft, and discovered that it embraced the fifteen acres for which this ejectment is brought, and which it is admitted he did not know were included in the survey on the warrant to William Irwin at the time of his purchase.

The defendants, who are the children A Allen Nesbit, claimed these fifteen acres as their own, and showed the warrant, survey, and -return of their father in 1803, as good title. This the court very properly decided was no title; because, at that time, a warrant, survey, and return, not founded on actual settlement, was void; and because, an executor could not take land surveyed and returned by his testator, and which, as executor, he was bound to give to the devisees.

But it was further contended, that Anderson did not know these fifteen, acres belonged to. the testator; did not think he had purchased it, and after his purchase, frequently called it Nesbit’s land, [117]*117and really thought it was his, from 1815 till 1893; and in this part of the case the court were mistaken in the view they took of it. If a man sells land which is surveyed and returned, and. he describes it as so much land held on a warrant of a certain date, and in a certain name, it is as certain and precise a description, as if the deed had recited the courses and distances of the survey. The description then, in the several deeds, and among others, in the deed of Allen Nesbit to Anderson,, of. this land, as one-half of a tract of land, surveyed in pursuance of a warrant to William Irwin, dated the 18th of June, 1774, containing fifty -acres, more or less, was precisely equivalent to a conveyance reciting the courses and distances in the return of survey. Considering it in this point of view then, it is conveyed to Anderson and M'Cord, by a description which cannot be mistaken; and in such a case, and where it is under-a misapprehension, said repeatedly, that the land was not his, belonged to Nesbit, &e., these parol declarations do not destroy the title.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Rawle 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-nesbit-pa-1828.