Blunt's Lessee v. Smith

20 U.S. 248, 5 L. Ed. 446, 7 Wheat. 248, 1822 U.S. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 20 U.S. 248 (Blunt's Lessee v. Smith) 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
Blunt's Lessee v. Smith, 20 U.S. 248, 5 L. Ed. 446, 7 Wheat. 248, 1822 U.S. LEXIS 264 (1822).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment in ejectment rendered in the Circuit Court of the United States for the 0istrict of West Tennessee, which was brought by the plaintiffs in error. After a verdict in favor oí the defendants, the counsel for the plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was refused. To the opinion of the judge, overruling the motion for a new trial, and also to his charge to the jury, the plaintiff excepted, and the cause comes on now to be heard on his exceptions

it Is well settled that this Court will not revise the opinion of a Circuit Court, either granting or rejecting a motion for a new trial; but the exception to the charge of the judge, although taken after a motion for a new trial, may have been and probably was reserved at the time the charge was given, and will therefore be considered.

The exception to this charge of the Court below, consists of two parts:

1st. To so much of it as admits the copies taken from the Secretary’s office of North Carolina, as evidence in the cause.

2d. To so much of it as admits the validity of - Gee’s entry, and gives it the preference to so much of Sumner’s patent as comprehends land not embraced in Pollock’s survey.

*273 The first point seems not.to have been relied on by the plaintiff’s counsel in 'argument; and has, we think, been very properly abandoned. These documents. were, official copies of papers belonging to the title of dhe parties, taken from the office in which those papers wére kept, and regularly authenticated. We perceive no ground on which the objections to their admission could be sustained. If the charge-of the judge went beyond these official copies to the proceedings of the legislature, and the record of the former trial, we perceive no error in this. The former trial was between parties or privies, and the petition to. the legislature was the act of the party by ' guardian, the resolution of the General Assembly on which, was a. measure óf the whole State, the effect of which in this or any other case, might be controverted, but to which,all interested in it might have recourse.

The second part of the charge presents a question of more intricacy, which requires an attentive consideration of the land laws of North Carolina, and of . the decisions of the Courts of Tennessee.

In Kentucky and in Virginia the rule is, that a Court of common law cannot look beyond the patent ; but in Tennessee it is understood to be otherwise. The Courts of law in that state allow the parties, in an ejectment, to go.back to the original entry, and to connect the patent with it. This rule is founded on the land laws of North Carolina, which have been construed in Tennessee to permit and require it. But the, plaintiffs contend that this construction has been limited to the comparison of. the *274 dates of the entries, and admits of no inquiry into their legal effect as they stand in relation to each other.

If the question were to depend merely on its reason, it would be difficult to support the opinion that a Court authorized to compare entries with each other, should not, in the exercise of this power, be permitted to examine their whole legal operation and relative effect. If it, were,to depend upon a construction, no Wj for the first time^. to, be given to the acts of North Carolina, we should find great difficulty in maintaining that they allow the entries to be compared so far as respects dates, but no farther. The act of November, 1786, ch. 20, in its preamble, recites, that “ Whereas.it is thjb intent and meaning of the said act,” (the act.'for opening the lánd-office,) ‘‘¿and of the act hereby revived and put in force, that the first enterérs of the vacant and unappropriated lands, %f specially located, therein described, shall have preference ;of ail others,” &c. The 1st sefction then enacts,That; every first, en ter er of anytract of land, .specially located, lying in, the western parts of this state,” &c. shall have a further, time for making his surveys, and that grants upon lands previously entered by any other person shall be voidi

The same act allows a survey to be máde on removed. warrants, in cases where the warrants, were originally located on lands which had been previously entered “ as the law directs,” by some other person, “provided such lands were at the time of such survey actually vacant, and* that such survey on removed warrants shall not affect or injure the right of *275 any lands entered, snáspeciaMy located, in'the office aforesaid previous to such survey,”

The act of November, 1787, chv ,23* directs- all .surveyors'to survey lands according to their priority pf entry, and that every grant obtained on a'subset quent entry, contrary to the-provisions of that act, shall be void.1

The original, afct had prescribed the manner óf má-, king entries, and those-made in pursuance of law are considered special;

Bétween special entries.the first is undoubtedly to be preferred ; feat- if title entry be special ahd the other ya^ue, as'if one should describe the land intend^ éd tb be .acquired; in conformity with the act, and the other'should, totally omit, to.give a description which might designate the place, should enter 5,00.0 acres of land, lying in the .county of Ke without, naming : any place in the county to which , it might be fixed, could it be contended that, on any fair construction Of the acts, this entry would prevail against one which was special, but was subsequently made P We think it could not. The acts of North Carolina appear to us to have heed intended to preserve the priority of legál entries, not of those made contrary to law.

We. do not think .that the decisions of the Courts of Tennessee establish a contrary principle. SeVeral dicta are to be found in the cases stating the rule to be, that Courts will go beyond the grant only to support a prior entry, hut these dicta were apjplied to the exclusion óf extrinsic matter, not to the exclusion of considerations belonging to the entries themselves. *276 The title to lands surveyed on removed warrants, ^as never ^een car|,iRd back to the entry ; and on the same principle the title to lands surveyed off the entry, can have no date anterior to the patent, so far as the survey does not conform to the entry. (1 Tenn. Rep. 172. 351. 306. 413.)

The effects of entries, then, as well as their dates, is considered by the Courts of Tennessee.

It has also been contended that this principle ought not to be applied to military grants. The acts of North Carolina, which have been construed to justify a Court of law in considering the entry as the commencement of title, are not, it is agreed, applicable to military warrants. But the act of 1786, c. 20. on which this construction is supposed to be , founded, declares it to have been the intention of the act for opening the land office, that the first enterers c< shall have preference to all others in surveying and obtaining grants for the same.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 U.S. 248, 5 L. Ed. 446, 7 Wheat. 248, 1822 U.S. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blunts-lessee-v-smith-scotus-1822.