Coan v. Flagg

123 U.S. 117, 8 S. Ct. 47, 31 L. Ed. 107, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2158
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 31, 1887
Docket21
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 123 U.S. 117 (Coan v. Flagg) 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
Coan v. Flagg, 123 U.S. 117, 8 S. Ct. 47, 31 L. Ed. 107, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2158 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

The judgment sought to be reviewed on the present writ of error was rendered by the Supreme Court of the State of Ohio *119 in a proceeding begun by Flagg, the defendant in error, to quiet his title and possession to a certain tract of land lying in Nile Township, Scioto County, Ohio, within the Virginia military district, embraced within survey No. 15,882. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Ohio in, the case is reported as Coan v. Flagg, 38 Ohio St. 156.

On the 18th of February, 1871, Congress passed an act to cede to the State of Ohio the unsurveyed and unsold land in the Virginia military district in said State, 16 Stat. 416, which reads as follows:

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the lands remaining unsurveyed and unsold in the Virginia military district in the State of Ohio be, and the same are hereby, ceded to the State of Ohio, upon the conditions following, to wit: Any person who at the time of the passage of this act is a bona fide settler on any portion of said land may hold not exceeding one hundred and sixty acres, so by him occupied, by his preempting the same in such manner as the legislature of the State óf Ohio may direct.”

The lands thus ceded were granted by the State of Ohio to the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College. The college claiming the lands in controversy to be embraced within this cession, for a valuable consideration sold and conveyed the same to Flagg, who entered into possession prior to the commencement of this suit. Coan, the original defendant, claims title under:

1st. Exchange military warrant No. 494, issued by the State of Virginia on the 16th day of June, 1840, to the children and heirs of Francis Gordon, a child and heir of John Gordon, the only heir of Thomas Gordon, who was a lieutenant of cavalry in the Continental line of Virginia troops in the Revolutionary War, for 500 acres of land, to be laid off in one or more surveys;

2d. An entry No. 15,882, purporting to cover ¿00 acres of land under the foregoing warrant No. 494, made on December IS, 1849, by the said heirs of Francis Gordon and one David F. Heaton, an assignee of part of said warrant;

*120 8(1. A survey under said entry No. 15,882, purporting to contain 400 acres, 3'75 acres for the heirs of Francis Gordon, and 25 acres for said Ilcaton, made by said D. F. Heaton, a deputy-surveyor of the district, on April 10, 1851, giving the metes and bounds of the lands surveyed, which was duly recorded on .December 23, 1851, in the district land office at Chilli cothe;

4th. And mesne conveyances from the heirs of said Francis Gordon and said Heaton to Coan.

It is an undisputed fact, appearing on the record, that this survey No. 15,882 embraces in fact 1682 acres.

The answer of Coan, the defendant below, contains the averment that “ on the 26th of December, a.d. 1851, the said E. P. Kendrick, surveyor for said district, duly certified said survey, being numbered (the same as said entry) 15,882, to the General Land Office at Washington, D. C., for patent, and that said survey has ever since been on file in said office.”

It is stated, however, in a letter addressed by the acting Commissioner of the General Land Office to L. C. Heaton, the executor of David F. Heaton, then claiming title, dated June 18,1S73, and admitted in evidence, that survey No. 15,8S2 was filed in that office for the purpose of obtaining a patent on the 26th of April, 1852. The same fact is recited in a letter from Willis Drummond, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, dated October 26, 1871, also admitted in evidence, addressed to David F. Heaton, then claiming title. No patent has ever been issued on this entry and survey, for the reason, among others, given in the correspondence between the officers of the Land Department and Heaton, “ that the same contained a large excess of land over and above the amount stated therein and actually due in virtue of said warrant exchange No. 494;" the amount of that excess being stated at 1282 acres. This was communicated in a lettpr from the Commissioner of -the General Land Office to L. C. Heaton, dated June 18, 1873, in which it was said that: “ This office will not, of course, recognize the validity of any such survey as the foregoing, and must refuse, if there were no other objections, to carry the same into grant, and uffiess you deny the facts as above stated and wish to offer rebutting testimony, and be heard in reply, *121 you will understand that the claim for patent in the case of said survey, No. 15,882 is rejected. Should you, however, dispute the correctness of the said resurvey, &c., and will at once advise this office of the fact, every reasonable opportunity will be afforded you to be heard in the case with such evidence as you may desire to present.”

On July 11, 1873, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, by a letter of that date, addressed to L. C. Heaton, informed him, in response to his application, made in a letter of June 30, that ninety days from July 11th would be allowed to establish his claim to a patent upon this survey.

On October 10, 1873, the Commissioner wrote to Heaton a letter containing the following: “You were advised on the 18th of June last of the rejection of your application for a-patent in the case, but, at your request of the 30th of the same month, the matter was held open for the period above stated to afford you an opportunity to present rebutting testimony, &c. The allotted time having expired and nothing presented on your part to sustain the validity of the said survey, you are hereby advised that the rejection of the case, as stated in my said communication of the 18th of June last, is now made definite and final, so far as this office is concerned.” No further action was taken in the Department on the subject.

It also appears that for the 100 acres not embraced in this survoj", to make the 500 acres called for by warrant No. 194, another survey was made containing SllTVir acres, so that the Whole amount of land embraced in the two surveys upon that warrant, nominally for 500 acres, actually embraced an excess of 1099^0- acres.

On the 27th of Hay, 1880, Congress passed an act to construe and define'the act of February 18, 1871. The first and second sections of this act are as follows :

“Be tt enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United, States of America in Congress assembled, That the act ceding to the State of Ohio the lands remaining “unsunmyed and unsold” in the Virginia ’military district in the State of Ohio had no reference to lands which were *122 included in any survey or entry within said district founded upon military warrant or warrants upon Continental establishment; and the true intent and meaning of said act was to cede to the State of Ohio only such lands as'were unappropriated and not included in' any survey or entry within said district, which survey or entry was founded' upon military warrant or warrants upon Continental establishment.

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Bluebook (online)
123 U.S. 117, 8 S. Ct. 47, 31 L. Ed. 107, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coan-v-flagg-scotus-1887.