Belding v. Hebard

103 F. 532, 43 C.C.A. 296, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 3879
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 1900
DocketNo. 783
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 F. 532 (Belding v. Hebard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belding v. Hebard, 103 F. 532, 43 C.C.A. 296, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 3879 (6th Cir. 1900).

Opinion

LURTON, Circuit Judge,

after making the foregoing statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The intention of the North Carolina cession act of 1789 was to make the crest of the great mountain ranges extending across the state of North Carolina in a southwestwardly direction the boundary line of the ceded territory. This is most evident from even a casual reading of the boundary line therein described. The Painted Rock on the French Broad river is a natural monument of great notoriety. From that point the calls in the cession act are, “Thence along the highest ridge of said mountain to the place where it is called the ‘Great Iron’ or ‘Smoky’ Mountain; thence along the main ridge of said mountain to the place where it is called ‘Unicoy’ or ‘Unaka’ Mountain, between the Indian towns Cowee and Old Chota.” The part of the great mountain range called “Smoky Mountain” is well known, as is also that part of the same range southwest of Smoky Mountain called “Unicoy” or “Unaka” Mountain. There is no trouble about the loca tion of these two great natural monuments in the line. The distance between the two is no t less than 50 miles, and the only call which is locative of the line between the two is that the line is to run along “the extreme height of the said range, theretofore called the ‘Great Iron’ or ‘Smoky’ Mountain, to that part of the range or ridge called the ‘Unicoy’ or ‘Unaka’ Mountain.” The commissioners representing the two states were not authorized to agree upon a new boundary, but to “settle, run, and re[536]*536mark the boundary line * * * agreeably to the true intent and meaning” of the said cession act of 1789. It was clearly their duty to run and mark a line between the Great Smoky and Unaka Mountains “following the extreme height” of the mountain range connecting these two prominent points.

The line located by the commissioners, as shown by the two acts adopting it as the boundary between the two states, begins at a stone set up on the north side of Cataloochee turnpike, and properly marked. The course of the line from that stone for a distance of 101 miles is “southwestwardly,” as repeatedly stated in the boundary acts referred to. From the Cataloochee stone the call is to run southwestwardly “to the Bald Bock on the summit of the Great Iron or Smoky Mountain,” and continuing southwestwardly “on the extreme height thereof to where it strikes the Tennessee river, * * * crossing Tennessee river at the distance of sixty-five miles from the beginning.” Between the Bald Bock and the Tennessee river several points on the line are called for, but we need not concern ourselves with them, inasmuch as the line' to the Tennessee river is undisputed, and is not here involved. The point where the commissioners’ line reaches the Tennessee river, now known as the “Little Tennessee Biver,” is one of the fixed and settled questions on this record. The line on the northeast side of the river is well located, and a fore and aft .state-line pine tree is standing very near the bank of the river, one-half mile below the point where Slick Bock creek empties into the river on the opposite side. The special master reports that this pine tree on the northeast bank of the river is a state-line tree, marked as a state-line fore and aft tree, the marks showing by annular lines that it was so marked in 1821. He also reports that the parties agreed before him that the line was well established to that tree. The controversy begins, then, at the point where the line reaches the Tennessee river at this well-established monument. The next point in the line as located by the commissioners, upon which all parties agree, is the point where two ridges make a junction southwest of the Tennessee river. One of these ridges is known as the “Hangover” and the other as the “Fodder Stack.” This point of junction is about nine miles from the fore and aft pine tree on the northeast bank of the river. The disagreement is as to the true location of the commissioners’ line between these two well-located points in the line. Beturning to the line as located by the joint commission, we find the next call, after striking the Tennessee river, is in these words: “From Tennessee river to the main ridge and along the extreme height of the same to the place where it is called the ‘Unicoy’ or ‘Unaka’ Mountain.” Just here it may be observed that the Unicoy or Unaka Mountain is about 15 miles in a southwesterly course from the junction of the two ridges spoken of heretofore. How did the commissioners locate the line between the Tennessee river and the Unaka Mountain? It is to be borne in mind that their authority was to “settle, run, and re-mark” the line “agreeably” to the cession act. The Tennessee river was a water course, which cut a deep gorge through the main mountain range which the line was following be[537]*537tween the Smoky and the Unieoy Mountain. The cession act placed the boundary “along the extreme height of said mountain (that is, the Great Smoky) to the place where it is called ‘Unieoy’ or ‘Unaka’ Mountain.” It was the duty of the commissioners to locate the line “agreeably” to this call. They had been following the extreme height of the ridge between the Smoky and the Tennessee river. The river cut through the ridge by a deep gorge, the mountain on either side gradually lowering, and terminating at the river in a bluff. The last monument on the northeastern side is a tree marked as a fore and aft tree., A fore and aft tree is a tree in the line, and the chops are on the sides showing the direction of the line. The chops on this tree indicated that the line there crossed the river. The general course of the line, as called for by the call which thought the line to the river, was southwesterly, and this course was to he continued to the Unaka. The course would, therefore, require the line to there cross the river, as also indicated by the chops on the tree. The general direction of the cession act would keep the line on the extreme height of the mountain ridge or range. Immediately across the river, and in the general course of the line, was the Hangover ridge. This ridge is joined by another ridge called the “Fodder Stack,” some eight or ten miles southwest. Its height increases after it leaves the river, and the highest points between the river and the junction with the Fodder Stack are the Hangover and Hao peaks, the former having an altitude of about 4,500 feet. From the point where it is joined by the Fodder Stack ridge or spur, it is admittedly the main ridge, and further southwest becomes the Unieoy or Unaka. From the river the general course of Hangover is southwesterly, and therefore in the general course of the line as described in the cession act. One-half mile below the state-line fore and aft tree, a creek known as “Slick Rock Creek” empties into the river on the opposite side. That creek is some eight or ten miles in length, and has one or more branches. A short distance below its mouth a low spur approaches the river, called “Slick Rock Spur,” being a spur of Fodder Stack ridge. Some seven miles up the creek another spur of Fodder Stack is found. The basin of-the Slick Rock is about eight miles long and three miles wide. It is bounded on the south and southeast hv the Hangover ridge, on the north and northwest by the Fodder Stack ridge, and on the north and northeast by the Tennessee river and the Slick Rock ridge. The mountains shutting it in are from 1,000 to 4,000 feet high, and the basin itself is a rough, broken mountain valley, almost impenetrable by man. The master reports that the Hangover ridge was the main or highest ridge, having an average height of 800 feet greater than the Fodder Stack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 F. 532, 43 C.C.A. 296, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 3879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belding-v-hebard-ca6-1900.