Conn v. Penn

6 F. Cas. 292, 4 Wash. C. C. 430

This text of 6 F. Cas. 292 (Conn v. Penn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conn v. Penn, 6 F. Cas. 292, 4 Wash. C. C. 430 (circtedpa 1824).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice,

now delivered the opinion <5f the court When this cause was heard at the April term 1818 (see Pet. C. C. 496 [Case No. 3,104]), the nature of the proprietary title to the soil of Pennsylvania generally, and to the asserted manor of Springetsburg in particular, was fully examined in discussed by the court; and to the opinion delivered in that case, in relation to these parts of it, we now refer for the purpose of avoiding the unnecessary repetition of the same matter. It was then stated that, by force of certain concessions,-or agreements made, and rules and practices of the land office adopted by the original proprietary, all persons complying with the prescribed terms on which the territorial lands of the province were offered for individual appropriation, acquired a title to the portion of land so appropriated by them; not only against other private individuals who might thereafter attempt to appropriate the same lands, but even against the proprietary himself, unless he had previously and by some act of notoriety, evinced his intention to withdraw such land from the general mass, and to appropriate it to his own use, in satisfaction of what was denominated his tenths, and that such intention was made known by a warrant or order to survey such reserves, and surveys thereof were accordingly made for his use. But that after such notorious appropriation of any particular portion of the land for the use of the proprietary, no individual could acquire a title to any portion of the tract so reserved without a spe-' cial agreement with the proprietary, which [293]*293might, or might not be in the common terms, as he might please.

In the examination of the various claims of the plaintiffs, the court will arrange them under the two following heads: 1. Those who acquired titles upon the common terms applicable to the territorial lands, and yet located themselves within the boundaries of the manor, as ascertained by the warrant of survey of 1722, under the authority of Governor Keith, or of the warrant of 17G2, issued by Governor Hamilton, and the resurvey made in pursuance thereof, in 17GS. 2. Those who acquired titles within the boundaries of the manor, as designated by the survey of 1722, or the warrant of 17G2, and the survey made under it, with notice of its existence, either actual or constructive. Under these general heads the present inquiry will be pursued.

1. In the former opinion, it was stated, that tile equity upon which the claimants, coming under the first head, could rest their pretensions, was, that they acquired their titles without notice of the legal title of the proprietary to this asserted manor. The correctness of this position we believe to be unquestionable. But since there may be a material difference between the cases of those persons, who acquired titles to lands within this manor before, and those who acquired them after the date of the warrant of re-survey; the inquiry under this head will be confined, in the first place, to those who claim under titles which commenced prior to the 21st of May, 1762; and secondly, to those whose titles originated after that period.

As to the first. That the plaintiffs are equally affected by constructive, as by actual notice of the title of the proprietary to this manor, is a point very properly conceded by the plaintiffs’ counsel; but then it is insisted by them, that the warrant and survey of 1722 ought not, under the circumstances which attended those acts, and the evidence appearing in the cause, to be considered as amounting to constructive notice to any of the plaintiffs, whose claims originated by common warrants, applications, or settlements. The difficulty in which this part of the case is involved, was felt by the court at the former hearing of the cause, and we are by no means prepared to say that it is altogether removed by the ingenious and able arguments which have been urged on the present occasion. Nothing can be more improbable, as it would seem, than that the re-survey in 17GS should represent the survey made under Keith’s warrant in 1722. The latter warrant is special, and describes, with such apparent precision, the place at which the survey was to begin, that it would seem to us impossible that it could have been mistaken; it is, upon the S. W. bank of Susquehanna, over against Connestogo creek. The courses and distances are plainly marked out: W. S. W. ten miles; thence N. W. by »N. twelve miles; thence E. N. E. to the uppermost corner of the Newbury tract; thence S. E. by E. along the head line of Newbury to the southern corner tree of that tract; and thence down the side line thereof to the river. In this description of the tract to be surveyed, there are no calls for natural or artificial corners which could reasonably have warranted a departure from the prescribed courses and distances, and thereby to countenance the supposition that they were departed from for the purpose of accommodating the survey to other, and more important calls. In addition to all this, the return of survey professes generally to have been executed in conformity to the warrant, and the courses and distances stated in the return are precisely the same as those mentioned in the warrant. The only difference between the authority given, and its execution, is, that the former makes the beginning to be over against Connestogo, and the latter commences at a run called Penn's run, and takes no notice of Connestogo. Whether this be any thing more than a mere verbal difference, does not, and probably cannot, appear at this remote period. It is in proof, that this is a run over against Connestogo; but whether it was ever called Penn’s run, or whether there be a run on that side of the river which ever was designated by that name, does not appear, even by traditionary evidence. The boundaries of this tract of land, as asserted in the warrant of re-survey, and the survey made under it, are irreconcilably variant from those stated in the warrant of 1722. The former disregards Connestogo creek as entirely as if no such creek had ever existed, being at a point so high up the river as to leave that creek entirely out of sight. The line to the westward, instead of ten miles, turns out to be seventeen; and the north line, instead of being twelve miles in length, is but the half of that distance. There is another difference which is remarkably striking; provided, the mine tract, surveyed by order of the board of property, was the same which had been previously surveyed for Governor Keith, under the name of Newbury; of which we have very little doubt. It is, that the north line of the survey, under Hamilton’s warrant, is considerably to the north of the most northerly line of the above mentioned tract; whereas the warrant of 1722, called expressly for that tract, and was, in some of its lines, to be bounded by it. Were there no other evidence in the cause in relation to this mysterious portion of it, there could scarcely exist a doubt in any mind that the boundaries of Keith's survey, as laid down on the map exhibited at the trial, and contended for by the plaintiff's counsel, are correctly delineated. But the following facts, which are in proof, afford such a mass of positive and circumstantial evidence of the identity of the two surveys, as asserted by the defendant’s counsel, as strongly to incline the judgment to embrace this latter [294]*294position. The • facts alluded to are the following: 1.

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6 F. Cas. 292, 4 Wash. C. C. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conn-v-penn-circtedpa-1824.