Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Union Bank of Georgetown

5 F. Cas. 570, 4 D.C. 75, 4 Cranch 75
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedMay 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 570 (Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Union Bank of Georgetown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Co. v. Union Bank of Georgetown, 5 F. Cas. 570, 4 D.C. 75, 4 Cranch 75 (circtddc 1830).

Opinions

CRanch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court: —

1. The first objection to the inquisition is, that the name of the owner of the land does not appear in the inquisition; and although the inquisition refers to a warrant supposed to be returned therewith, yet that warrant is not annexed to the inquisition, nor referred to by any mark or other description by which it can be ascertained to which of the various warrants returned, it refers.

In answer to this objection, we think it is competent for the clerk to whom, by law, it was returned; or for the marshal who took and returned the inquisition and warrant, to prove, by parol, the fact of the return, and to designate which warrant was returned with the inquisition. It is admitted in argument that a warrant was returned and filed with this inquisition; in which warrant the property proposed to be valued is stated to be the property of the Union Bank of Georgetown ; and the inquisition with which it was returned and filed, is marked on the margin with these letters : “Pt. & Drs. U. B.”

We think it is competent for the Canal Company to prove those facts by parol.

2. The second and third objections are, that the property is not sufficiently described either in the warrant or inquisition.

The description is in these words: “All those parts of a lot of land, lying in the county aforesaid, and known and recorded as lots ‘ eight,’ (8), ‘ nine,’ (9), and ‘ ten,’ (10), in the square {one,’ (1), in the city of Washington, which fie west of the west side of Twenty-eighth (28) Street west; and all those other pieces of land belonging to said lots, or any of them, and being due west of the said lots, or any of them, and extending thence to, and binding with, the channel of Bock Creek, — the property of the president and directors of the Union Bank of Georgetown.”

It is evident, that neither the bounds of those parts of lots eight, nine, and ten, which lie west of Twenty-eighth Street west, if any such there be; nor of the pieces of land belonging or appertaining to said lots, are ascertained and described by the jury. The square “one,” is bounded on the west by Twenty-seventh Street west; therefore no lot, in square one, can extend west of that street. If any of the lots, in square one, have privileges extending west of that street, such privileges are not parts of 'such lots, but appurtenances thereto. The pieces of land which are sup[77]*77posed to be “belonging or appertaining to said lots,” are described as lying due west of the said lots; but whether contiguous thereto, or at what distance therefrom, does not appear. They are said to be extending thence. Whence ? Not from the place where they were lying, for that would make them extend beyond themselves ; not from the lots eight, nine, and ten, for Twenty-eighth Street intervenes ; not due west of the same lots, for that designates no place at all. It is impossible to locate these appurtenances from the description. Nor does the plat of square one, as recorded on the surveyor’s books, or the engraved plan of the city, cure the defect. It does not appear that any water privilege is, by law, or by any authoritative regulation, in regard to the plan of the city, annexed to those lots; or, if there is, the extent of it does not appear to have been defined ; the jury, therefore, ought to have ascertained and described the bounds of the land by them valued; and not having done so, the inquisition must be set aside. It is much better for all parlies, that the error should be now- corrected by a new inquisition, than that it should be left for future litigation.

4. The fourth objection is, that the jury have not “described and ascertained the quality and duration of the interest and estate in the- same required by the company for its use.”

The only reason for introducing this provision into the fifteenth section of the charter, seems to have been to show what quantity of interest in the land was in the contemplation of the jury at the time of the valuation; for that quantity of interest, only, would pass by the valuation. The jury were to value such interest only as the company should require; it was, therefore, necessary that it should appear, in the inquisition, what that interest was.

It has been supposed, in argument, that the 'jury was to ascertain whether that interest was or was not needed by the company. The word, however, is not “needed,” but “required,” by the company, who are the sole judges what interest in the land will be necessary for their operations; and the jury are to value such interest as the company shall require.

The fifteenth section of the charter authorizes the condemnation of land for the temporary use of the company in the construction of their works, as well as a more permanent interest for the actual bed of the canal, and the site of their locks, dams, ponds, and feeders; and the jury is to value the land itself, “as of an absolute estate in perpetuity,” “ or the partial ór temporary appropriation, use, or occupation of such land,” according as the same shall be required by the company; and upon such valuation, “ and on payment thereof, the said company shall be seized of such land as of an absolute estate in perpetuity, or with such less quantity and duration of interest or estate in the same; or subject to such par* [78]*78tial or temporary appropriation, use, or occupation, as shall be required and described as aforesaid, as if conveyed by the owner to them.”

From a consideration of these and other provisions of this section, it seems to us very clear, that the canal company, so far as relates to the duty of the jurors, was to be the sole judge what interest in the land was required by the company; and that the only reason why the jury is to describe and ascertain the quality and duration of the interest required by the company is, that it may be known what sort of interest is valued by the jury, so as to know what interest passes to the company by the valuation and payment.

The warrant states that the canal is intended to pass through certain land, and that the said land, (therein described,) “ is needed as of an absolute estate in perpetuity, for the making of the said canal and its appurtenant works.”

The jury in the inquisition “ say, that all the said land described in the said warrant as of an absolute estate in perpetuity and all damages,” &e., “are of the value of one thousand dollars.”

They have, therefore, clearly expressed, in their inquisition, “the quality and duration of the interest and estate,” in the land which they have valued. Its quality is “absolute,” and its duration is “in perpetuity.” They have not, indeed, stated that the company required an interest and estate of such quality and duration ; but this they were not bound to do. They have stated what sort of interest and estate they valued; and the warrant which is returned with, and, by reference, made part of the inquisition, shows that the company required such an interest and estate as they have valued. They have, therefore, “ described and ascertained the quality and duration of the interest and estate,” “required by the company for its use,” which is all they were, in this respect, bound to do.

Much stress, in the argument, was laid up on the word “ as,” in the finding of the jury in these words: “The jury say that all the said land described in said warrant as of an absolute estate in perpetuity,” “and the damages,” &c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 570, 4 D.C. 75, 4 Cranch 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-canal-co-v-union-bank-of-georgetown-circtddc-1830.