Beaty v. Lessee of Knowler

29 U.S. 152, 7 L. Ed. 813, 4 Pet. 152, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 29 U.S. 152 (Beaty v. Lessee of Knowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaty v. Lessee of Knowler, 29 U.S. 152, 7 L. Ed. 813, 4 Pet. 152, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 472 (1830).

Opinion

Mr Justice M’Lean

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of ejectment, brought in the circuit court of Ohio, to recover possession of one thousand two hundred acres of land, parcel of two thousand four hundred acres, in what is called the Connecticut reserve.

On the trial below, it was agreed, that Jonathan Douglas, the ancestor of the plaintiff’s lessors, became proprietor of the premises in question, in May 1792, under the laws of Connecticut, granting lands to certain sufferers, and died the 6th of March 1800, vested with the legal title; which he held in common with many other proprietors, the land not being set apart, or apportioned to any one of the whole. That the lessors of the plaintiff were his heirs at law, and held as partners or tenants in common.

On .the trial it was proved by the plaintiff below, that on the 5th of May 1S08, four of the lessors were minors.

The defendant set up a title under a tax sale, which was made by the company incorporated for the management of said lands.

This company was first incorporated by the Connecticut legislature, in the year 1796. No person is named in the act; but the-corporators are designated, as the proprietors of the half million of acres of land lying south of lake Erie.” Under this law the corporation was organized. In 1797, the Connecticut legislature passed an amendment to this law.

*165 On the 15th of April 1803, the legislature of Ohio passed an act incorporating those owners and proprietors, by the name of “ the proprietors of the half million of acres of land lying south of lake Erie, called sufferers’ land and by that name gave succession to them, their heirs and ássigns.

This was called the suffeiers’ land,, from the circumstance of its having been given by the state of Connecticut to indemnify the losses its citizens had sustained in the revolutionary war.

The act of incorporation by the legislature" of Ohio required nine directors to be appointed, who, were authorised to hold their meetings out of the state. In the second section, power is given to the directors to extinguish the Indian title; to survey the land into townships, or otherwise to make partition, as they should order, among the owners, in proportion to the amount of loss: and amongst other things, the act provided, “ that to defray all necessary expenses of said company, in purchasing and in extinguishing the Indian claim of title to the land, surveying, locating, and making partition thereof, as aforesaid, and all other necessary expenses of said company, power be, and the same is hereby given to, and vested in the said directors and their successors in-office, to levy a tax or taxes (two-thirds of the directors present agreeing thereto,) on said land, and have, power to enforce the collection thereof.”

The ninth section provides, “ that all sales of rights, or parts of rights, of any owner or proprietor in said half million acres of land, made by the collector, shall be goód and valid, so as to secure an absolute title in the purchaser; unless the said owner and proprietor shall redeem the same within six calendar months next after the sale thereof, by paying the taxes for which the said right or rights, or parts thereof, had been sold, with twelve-per cent, interest thereon, and costs of suit.” The act contains not provision in favour of the rights of infants or femes covert.

By the tenth section of this law it is provided, “that said directors shall have power and authority, and the same is hereby given to them and their successors, to do whatever shall to them appear necessary and proper to be done, for *166 the well ordering and interest of said owners and proprietors, not contrary to the laws of the state.” The eleventh directs that “supplies of money which shall remain in the hands of the treasurer,, after the Indian title shall be extinguished, and said land located, -and partition thereof made, shall be-used by said directors for the laying out and improving the public road in said tract, as this assembly. shall direct.” The act is declared to b,e a public one in the, twelfth section.

An act imposing' a land tax was passed by the Ohio legislature in 1806, which remained in force in 1808. This act required entry to be made of lands for taxation. A perpetual lien was imposed on the land, whether entered or not, for the amount of the tax, and minors had a right to redeem their land sold for taxes, within one year after their minority expired. It áppeared in proof, at the trial, that at a meeting of the directors of the company convened at the court house in New Haven, on Thursday the 5th of May 1808, agreeably to.a notification duly issued. according to the ordinances of said directors; it'was unanimously voted by six directors, being all that were present, that a tax of two cents on the pound, original loss, b.e assessed on the original rights or losses, in said half million acres of land, to be paid by each proprietor thereof, in proportion to each person’s respective share'or loss, as set in the grant of said lands made by the. state of Connecticut; to be collected and paid by the several collectors to the treasurer of this company, on or before the 1st of July 1808, to. defray the expenses of a tax laid by the legislature of the state of Ohio, and other necessary expenses, for the good of the proprietors of said land.

The defendant gave in evidence the assessment of a tax upon the rights of the said Jonathan Douglas,'the appointment of a collector, the issuing of a warrant of collection, the advertisement of sale for taxes, the sale of a part of the right of said Douglas, amounting to twelve, hundred acres, for taxes, to Elias Perkins, who conveyed the tract to the defendant.

The circuit court instructed the jury, that the directors had no power to assess said tax. And that the infant lessors were *167 not concluded or bound by such assessment. To these instructions the defendant excepted. The jury found a verdict of guilty, and judgment was rendered thereon.

A reversal of this judgment is prayed for by the plaintiff in error, on the following grounds :

1. The court erred in their instruction to the jury, that the directors had no legal authority to assess the tax :

2. That the minor proprietors were not bound and concluded by the assessment and sale.

It is not contended in this case, that this company could derive corporate powers to do any act in Ohio, in- relation to the sufferers’ land, under the statute of Connecticut. All their powers must be derived from the law of Ohio. This law, it is insisted, is a private act, not designed for public purposes, and consequently cannot affect the rights of any individual who did not assent to its provisions. That the provision declaring it to be a public act, does not alter the principle; for the rights derived under it are of a private nature, being limited to those who have an interest in the land; and it is denied,, that any evidence of assent has been shown by the lessors of the plaintiff or their ancestor.

Several authorities were cited, as having a bearing upon the objections thus stated. The names of the sufferers are.

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Bluebook (online)
29 U.S. 152, 7 L. Ed. 813, 4 Pet. 152, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaty-v-lessee-of-knowler-scotus-1830.