Darby's Lessee v. Mayer

23 U.S. 465, 6 L. Ed. 367, 10 Wheat. 465, 1825 U.S. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 23 U.S. 465 (Darby's Lessee v. Mayer) 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
Darby's Lessee v. Mayer, 23 U.S. 465, 6 L. Ed. 367, 10 Wheat. 465, 1825 U.S. LEXIS 240 (1825).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of ejectment, in which the present plaintiff was plaintiff in the Court below. His title is derived through a patent to onevJphn Rice, and successive convevances down to him- *466 ¿elf, which it is immaterial to recapitulate, since no question arises upon’this part of the evidence. The defence set up was the statute of limitations, and in order to bring himself within its provisions, the defendant received the patent under which the plaintiff claims, as the patent for his own land, and undertakes to connect himself with it. This gave rise to a variety of exceptions táken by the plaintiff to the evidence offered by the defendant for this purpose, to which the defendant repliés, that should he have failed in establishing a connexion by a chain of title, he has complied with the statute notwithstanding, by proving his possession within the patent issued to Rice, which, he contends, is all the connexion with a patent which the law requires.

One of the grounds of exception made by the plaintiff is, that the evidence of the defendant proves his possession to be upon a tract of land essentially different from that which the patent covers. And not a little difficulty has existed on this pait of the case, to understand the counsel when discussing the question pf. identity. All this has arisen, from emitting to have the locus in quo established by a survey; an omission to which the Court takes this opportunity to express its disapprobation. It is true,, that the case upon this bill of exceptions can be disposed of without such a survey, but great facility would- have been afforded by a survey, in understanding -the discussion, which, without it, was scarcely intelligible. It is very obvious, when we refer to the patent, to Rice under which the plaintiff claims; *467 and the entry to Ramsay through which the defendant deduces title, both of which aré made parts of the bill of exceptions, that they do not’ describe the same land. On the contrary, that to Rice, calling for the entry to Ramsay as its eastern boundary, must necessarily lie without it.

However, we are of opinion, thát we are not now at liberty to notice this inconsistency. The bill of exceptions states, that the plaintiff proved the defendant in possession of the land granted to Rice, and the defendant proved himself in possession of the land entered to Ramsay, both concurring in the fact that the land in the defendant’s possession was the land in controversy; from which it certainly results that Rice held a patent for Ramsay’s entry. But the defendant having no pátent, the other has, of course, the legal estate in him, which may be barred by the defendant’s possession, if he brings himself within the provisions of the statute.

In order to connect himself with the .patent, the defendant , proved a sale, of the inchoate interest of John Rice to one Solomon Kitts, and the next link in his title depended upon the will of Solomon Kitts. To prove that Kitts devised the land to the trustees, through whom defendant made title, a copy and probate of the will of Kitts was produced in evidence, duly certified from the Orphan’s Court of Baltimore cóunty, Maryland, in which, it seems, the will had been recently proved and recorded. This evidence was excepted to, but the Court overruled the.exception;,and it went to the jury.

*468 . Effect of the probate of «ni ■*"•••

The question is, whether the evidence thus offered was legal evidence of a devise of land ? ,

The common law doctrine on this subject no contests; the ordinary’s.probate was no evidence of the execution of the will in ejectment. Where the will itself was in existence, and could landsproduced, it was necessary to; produce it; when the will was lost, or could not be. procured to be produced, in evidence, secondary evidence was necessarily resorted to, according to the nature of the case. But .whatever'proof was made,' was required to be made before the Cpurt that tried the cause; the proof before the ordinary being ex parte, and the heir at law having had no opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses ; neither were the same solemnities required to admit the will to probate, as were indispensable to give it validity as a devise of real estate. At first it'was a question of controversy between the common law and ecclesiastical. Courts, whether a will, containing a devise of lands, should hot be precluded from probate, although containing a bequest of personalty also. And the question was one of serious import, since the : common law Courts required the production of the original, whereas the consequence of probate was, that the original , should he. consigned to the archives of the Court that proved it. This was at length. compromised, and the practice introduced of delivering out the will, when necessary, upon seeürity to return it.-

Upon general principles, there is no question, that, lands in Tennessee must, in all respects, be *469 subject to the land laws of Tennessee. Their laws- affecting devises, and the rules of. their Courts respecting evidence, in ejectment, must be the law of this case, as far as the constitution of the United States does not control the one or the other.

The lex loci rœi silœ go verns as to the effect of a devise in one country of lands in another. Quœre, how far this general principle is modified by the provisions of the constitution and laws of the U. S. in respect to the faith and credit, &c. to be given to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of each State in every other State?

With regard to the modification under which the right of devising may be exercised, there is no question that the power of the State is unlimited ; and wills of realty, wherever executed, must conform to the laws of Tennessee. The right of determining whether its láws have been complied with in this respect, is a necessary result from the power of passing those laws. B ut in this respect, it has been supposed,, that the right of the States is m some measure controlled by that article of the constitution, which declares “ that full faith and credit shall be given in State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State.” And hence that a will of lands duly recorded in one States so as to be evidence in the Courts of. that State, is rendered evidence thereby in the Court of every other State, provided the record, on the face of it, shows that it possessed the solemnities required by the laws of the State where the land lies.

As this is a. question of some delicacy as it relates to devises of lands, the Court passes it over at present, being induced to adopt the opinion, that the rule, could not be applied to this case, since the laws of Maryland do not make the probate here offered evidence in a land-cause in the Courts of that State,

*470 law ^of laud, as to ev¡probate, of a an action oi the same with law of England‘

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 U.S. 465, 6 L. Ed. 367, 10 Wheat. 465, 1825 U.S. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darbys-lessee-v-mayer-scotus-1825.