Burton's Lessee v. Williams

16 U.S. 529, 4 L. Ed. 452, 3 Wheat. 529, 1818 U.S. LEXIS 372
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1818
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 U.S. 529 (Burton's Lessee v. Williams) 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
Burton's Lessee v. Williams, 16 U.S. 529, 4 L. Ed. 452, 3 Wheat. 529, 1818 U.S. LEXIS 372 (1818).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

deli-ered the opinion of court; This case originates in a collision of interest and opinion, between the.stat.es of North Carolina .and Tennessee, and the United Slates,.relative to théir respective rights, in certain instances, to perfect titles to the soil of Tennessee. North Carolina, in the year 1812, issued the grant-set'up on the trial, in behalf of the plaintiff. .Both Tennessee and the United States contend, that North. Carolina has relinquished the right tb issue- such a grant. And North Carolina replies, that her cession was conditional, and that the conditi on has .been violated, or that the casus fcederis has never-arisen.

The whole difficulty arises from the obscure -wording, or doubtful construction, of the act of congress of April 18th, 1806. But after comparing all the .acts of ’the respective states upon the subject, reviewing .the events which led to the passage of that act of congress, and determining the motives -which in', *534 fluenced the parties in making the compact,-which the act of congress contains", we are of opinion that • an exposition may be given perfectly consistent with good faith, and leaving to North Carolina no reasonable. ground for complaint. We here, disavow all inclination, on the part of this court, to interfere, unneces-. sárily, in state aftercati.o.ns ; we enter into the considerafion of such collisiorfs only so far as to secure individual right from being crushed ’ in the shock. But in-all-such discussions the questions necessarily arise, Whát has' a state granted ? and what was the extent of *ts .power to grant? Those questions cannot be avoided.

It will be recollected that the state of Tennessee . originally constituted a part of the state of North Carolina.; that* in the year 1789, the latter state mode, a cession, both. of:eoil and sovereignty, to the United States, of all the soil and country now. comprised within the limits of Tennessee; and that in the year 1796, the state of Tennessee was admitted into the union. Previous to the, act of cession, North Carolina had made title to a considerable proportion of the soil of Tennessee, under circumstances which attached the title to a designated portion of soil, so- that nothing more was pecessary to vest a complete legal title, but what, in contemplation of-her laws, was a mere formality, a survey arid grant. In other instances ■ she had issued warrants for a specified quantity, of land, hut under which the holder had not yet. definitely fixed his landmarks, so that he did not hold- land, but only the evidence of a right to acquire land. These, and several other descrip *535 tiqiisof land-titles, as they, are called*, the act of eéssjonmakes provision for securing to the individual* to .the full extent' to which 'he was entitled under the laws of North Carolina. 'The words of the deed df cession are these: “W.here entries have been made; agreeably to-law, and titles under them not perfected by grant or otherwise, then, fund' in that Case, the gov-c, ernor for the'time being shall, and he is hereby required to perfect, from time to time* such titles, in such manner as if this' act had never been passed! And that all entries made b.y, or grants made to all and and everry person or persons whatsoever, agreeably to law, and in the limits hereby intended to' be ceded to'the United States, shall have the same force and effect as if-suqh,cession had not-been made; and that all and every right of occupancy and pre-emption, and every other right reserved-by any act or acts, to persons settled and ^occupying lands within the limits of the lands-hereby intended to be ceded as aforesaid shall continue to be in full force in the same manner as if the cession had not been made, and as pondilions upon which the said lands are ceded to the United States;” - and, “further it shall bs understood,” &c. making a provision for the case of persons who shall lose the. benefit of a location because of its having been laid on a place previously located, and declaring that “they should be at liberty to remove the location of such entry or entries, to any lands on which no entry has been specifically located, or on any vacant lands inclfided within the limits of the-lands hereby intended tobe, reded-”

*536 Under the North a°Carof lina of 1783 ch.. 3, ratified by the act l79o!Tch. the domáine'¿a thé vacant lands in Tennéssee,subject ftc'Tngthe choate titles created under her laws. • The act ofN. ®a™lina, grants to Tenncssci/ irrevocably, the pow tU°esP°to00anf sion act, and is confess l° bjn

Thus under the act of cession; the United States held the right of soil in the vacant lands of Tennessee, qualified by the right which the state of North Carolina retained of perfecting the inchoate titles created under Jaws.

the act, was passed, admitting the state of Tennessee into the unions,. congress omitted to insert . . . , , . , express provision respecting unappropriated land; on this circumstance the stat.e of'Tennessee set up e^a'm to a^ such land within her designated limits. — But still she was embarrassed in the use of her suppo- , . ^ ,. sed acquisition, by the rights which North Carolina re-°f,perfecting her own land titles, and she could' ^rom a state a cession of that right without the consent of congress. This afforded the United' * D J States ultimately the means, of’resuming, in part, the* soil'that they were supposed inadvertently to have-ceded tq-Tennessee, and was the ground work of. the* c9Íhp'acü' Svhich is exibited in the act of 1806. The state of North Carolina in the meantime has passed fiii act in 1803,. entitled' “an act to authorise the state-pf’Tehnessee .fcr perfect titles to land reserved to .this. sta*e ^y the cession act,” but expressly subject to the G°n&ress,; aod the two great objects of the: a'ct of congress of 1806, as avowed in the atle, are-“to authorize the state of Tennessee tiy .issue grants-. titles to.'certain lands therein described,. ahd to-settle'the claims to the vacant and-unappropriated lands within, the same’;” or, in other words’, to/enaTle the state .of Tennessee to. acquire the abso- r lute unqualified right, (so far as it comported with..’ *537 private right) of appropriating the soil -within its limits, and,- eodem, flatu, to enter into a partition of that soil with the U. States, connected with the, rights thus acquired. from North Carolina. And such in effect is the operation of. the compact-of 1806. The two con - «-feting parties- commence with drawing a line across the state, and then, stipulate that the soil tp -the Westward shall be vested-absolutely-in the United Slates, and that to th* eastward in Tennessee. Now,-, it is absurd to suppose that- when the' United States proposed to acquire-to themselves the absolute-dominion-over the soil to the westward, that- they would haye withheld that assent, without which Tennessee could not acquire it, and,, of course, could not convey it to the United' States-. The words in which the assent of congress is expressed, are. found in the- close of the 2d section; they are. thesé^ “to which’ said act the assent of congress is hereby given, so far as is mees ■ sary to carry into effect.. the¡ objects of this compact”—

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 U.S. 529, 4 L. Ed. 452, 3 Wheat. 529, 1818 U.S. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burtons-lessee-v-williams-scotus-1818.