Chamberlain v. Marshall

8 F. 398
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 F. 398 (Chamberlain v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain v. Marshall, 8 F. 398 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Matthews, Justice.

This is a bill in equity to establish and quiet the title of the complainant to a tract of land of 100 acres in Logan county, Ohio, described as Virginia military entry and survey No. . 5275. The complainant is a citizen of Ohio; the defendant, of Virginia.

i The facts of the case, so far as material, are as follows:

On March 17,1807, Robert Marshall, the ancestor of the defendants, entered a Virginia military warrant, No. 1763, for 100 acres, being entry No. 5275, which was surveyed, and the entry and survey recorded in the surveyor’s office [399]*399of the Virginia military district, at Chillicothe, Ohio, on November 28,1823, and April 6, 1824.
This entry and survey were for the first time returned to the land-office in July, 1877, and a patent was issued in July, 1877, and January 25,1878, in the name of the United States, duly signed by the president and countersigned by the recorder of the general land-office, granting the traet described to the defendants, as only heirs at law of Robert Marshall, deceased, who is recited therein to have been the assignee of Robert Alvery, who was assignee of Erancis Turner, the soldier whose service in the' Virginia line, on continental estab- • lishment, is declared to bo the consideration of the grant, and the grant therein made purports tobein pursuance of the act of congress of August 10,1790, and other acts of congress amendatory thereto. The act aforesaid is entitled “An act to enable the officers and soldiers of the Virginia line, on continental establishment, to obtain titles to certain lands lying north-west of the river Ohio, between the Tittle Miami and Scioto.”
It appears, from the records of the office of the auditor of Logan county, that in the list of lands in that county returned delinquent by the treasurer of the*county for taxes for the year 1841, with the interest and penalty thereon, including the simple tax for the year 1842, there is the following:
Proprietors Names. Origl. Qn’ty. 3STo. of Entry. Watercourse. Org’l Proprietor. Acres Listed.
Marshall, Robert 100 5275 Derby Robert Marshall 100
TOTAL AMOUNT OF TAX.
Value, including Buildings. Township. D. O. M.
189 Perry 8 37 5
2 94 7, cost of survey included.
And notice was thereby given that the tracts in said list, or so much thereof as necessary, would be sold at the court-house in said county on the last Monday in December (26th) by the treasurer. It further appears bv the same records, under date of Eebruary 27, 1843, that on December 26, 1842, the county treasurer had sold the tract as above described to Jeremiah Asher, the said delinquent sale having been advertised according to law for four weeks in succession in the Logan Gazette, a newspaper published and printed in the town of Bellefontaine, in said county.
On May 20,1845, the auditor of Logan county executed and delivered a deed, which was duly recorded, conveying to Jeremiah Asher the tract so sold, described as 100J acres of land and number of entry 5275, that was charged for taxation to Robert Marshall’s name, and situated in Perry township. This deed recites that the treasurer of said county, on the last Monday in, December, (26th,) in the year 1842, did sell, according to the provisions of the statute in that case made and provided, to Jeremiah Asher, the said traet of land for the taxes, interest, and penalty charged thereon, amounting to #8.37 5, which were paid by the purchaser, and that more than two years had elapsed from the time of said sale and the tract so sold had not been redeemed, and that the certificate of sale had been produced to him.
On August 6,1849, Jeremiah Asher sold and conveyed the tract to Eliza Ann Chamberlain, wife of William Chamberlain, by a deed duly executed and recorded
[400]*400' In the fall of 1849 the grantees entered into actual possession of the tract, enclosed it, cleared it in part, built a dwelling upon it, cultivated, and otherwise improved it. This possession has ever since been kept up by their successors in the title, the present complainant deriving title by several mesne Conveyances from them. Since the fall of 1849 the possession of the complainant has been, with that of his predecessors, under color of title, adverse, open, notorious, and uninterrupted. Prior to that time the tract was in forest and not reduced to any actual occupancy.
" On November 20,1879, the defendants in this suit commenced in this court their action at law against the complainant to recover possession of the land in controversy.
• The object and prayer of the bill in this suit is that the patent be cancelled, and perpetually to enjoin the prosecution by the defendants of their action at law; that they be required to release and convey all claim to the land to the complainant, and to establish and quiet the title and possession of the complainant.
The claim of the complainant is that he is in possession of the land, •vjith a complete and perfect equitable title as against the defendants, which he has a right to have established and quieted by the process of this court.
This claim is based on three grounds:
(1) That the patent of January 25,1878, is void, there being at that time no law in force authorizing its issue, and that consequently the naked legal title is outstanding in the United States; (2) that the tax title under which the ! complainant, and those through and from whom he derived title, claim, if not . shown by the proof to be sufficient and valid, will, after long-continued ad verse possession, under such circumstances as are shown in proof, be presumed ■ -to be good;. (3) that a similar presumption will arise that the original equity 'of Robert Marshall, under his entry and survey, to' a patent, was transferred and conveyed to the complainant, or those under and through whom he derives , title.

It is obvious that this bill cannot be supported as a bill quia timet, as known to the equity jurisprudence of chancery courts. In describing the .grounds of that jurisdiction, the supreme court of the United States, in the case of Phelps v. Harris, 101 U. S. 376, say:

“ The questions, what constitutes such a cloird upon the title, and what character of title the complainant himself must have in order to authorize a court of equity to assume jurisdiction of the ease, are to he decided upon principles which have long been established in those courts. Prominent among these are — First, that the title or right of the complainant must be clear; and, secondly, that the pretended title or right, which is alleged to be a cloud upon it, must not only-be clearly invalid or inequitable, but must be such as may, either at the present or at a future time, embarrass the real o wner in controverting it. Por it is held that when the complainant himself has no title, or a doubtful title, he cannot have this relief.” “ Those only,” said Mr. Justice Grier, “ who have a clear, legal, and equitable title to land, connected with possession, have any right to claim the interference of a court of equity to give .them peace, or dissipate a cloud in their title.”

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-marshall-uscirct-1881.