Dodson v. Cocke and Stewart

1 Tenn. 314
CourtTennessee Superior Court for Law and Equity
DecidedSeptember 6, 1808
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. 314 (Dodson v. Cocke and Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Superior Court for Law and Equity primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodson v. Cocke and Stewart, 1 Tenn. 314 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1808).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

In this case the plaintiff, or the person under whom he claims, obtained a grant upon a removed warrant, for which the defendant had previously obtained one; and to avoid the grant of *319 the defendant, six grounds have been taken as stated above. As several of these positions involve principles of considerable consequence to the peace of society, it may be material to consider the common law first, and see what light can be collected from thence.

First. Premising however, that the concession of the plaintiff's counsel in relation to contracts, seems to be correct in general. The grant of a state stands in the same situation, as the contracts of individuals by deed, as to principle. It is not material to enquire minutely, how far, and for what causes, the state can avoid their grants upon the principle of deception. Even in England, where the acknowledged rights of royalty confer privileges unknown to the ordinary rules of law between man and man, the better opinion seems to be, that the king cannot avoid his own grants for every mistake or deception. In this respect the law seems to be correctly laid down in Kemps case, 12 Mod. 78, that if the king is not deceived by the false suggestions of the grantee, (which is always stated by way of recital) but only mistaken by his own surmises as to fact or inferences of law, the grant shall be good, if not contrary to the rules of law ; and in such cases he cannot avoid his grant. Now, neither of the grants before us contain any recital of the suggestions or information of the parties. The grants specify the receipt of the consideration, but this is held to be unimportant ; nor is the point intended to be decided, that the state cannot repeal or avoid a grant itself, where an officer has issued one without having received a consideration. If, however, the law respecting the king’s grants, were to decide the case, it would seem that the grant could not be avoided by the state.—Conformably to the position conceded by the plaintiff's counsel, we must judge of this case as if it were the deed of an individual, with the exception of this principle, which is believed to be incontrovertible, that the state is never supposed to have committed a fraud. Frauds may be committed on them, but not vice versa. In the case of two individuals, could the plaintiff, under the circumstances of his case, which he has disclosed to the court, avoid Cocke’s deed or *320 grant, by the principles of the common law? It occurs strongly that he could not. Previously to the statute of the 27 Elz. c. 4, a deed could not be avoided for fraud, unless the person seeking the avoidance, had a claim to be prejudiced at the time the fraud was committed. 3 Co. 83. Cro. El. 445.—The doctrine of Ld. Mansfield, in Cowp. 434, that the common law covered all the cases embraced by the statutes of 15 Elz. c. 5, and 27 Elz. c. 4, is repudiated, so far as to enable subsequent purchasers of real estates, under particular circumstances, to avoid prior conveyances. By the common law, I take it to be a clear principle, that a subsequent purchaser of a real estate, for a valuable consideration, could not avoid a previous voluntary or fradulent conveyance. The ancient law did not consider a man who purchased with his eyes open, after a former conveyance, (no matter for what cause it was made) as injured, therefore, afforded no remedy.—In Baily vs. Merrill, 3 Bulst. 95, Croke, J. lays down the rule to be, “ that fraud without damage, or damage without fraud, gives no cause of action, but where these two do concur, there an action lieth." After making the statute of the 27th Eliz. c. 4, in order the more effectually to suppress fraud, the courts gave the statute an operation which the common law did not possess, to wit, that a person purchasing and taking a conveyance, after a voluntary and fradulent one, might avoid it. This statute how ever operated upon the intent of the person conveying; if he were innocent, the statute had no operation—the case stood as it was at the common law. (a)

It appears then, that the statute of 27 Elz. c. 4, cannot be made to bear upon the plaintiff's case, for it will not be asserted, that the state, when they conveyed the land to Cocke, intended to defraud the plaintiff, when his claim was not thought of, at the place where he now claims; nor in fact, can it be legally said, that they intended to defraud any person , itself, by deception or misrepresentation, m ight have been defrauded by others, but that induces a different consideration. From this view, it results, that we must judge of the plaintiff's case, without the aid of the 27th of Elz. c. 4, and that as the *321 defendant had previously obtained his grant, the plaintiff who obtained one afterwards, without a previous entry, cannot avoid it for fraud, mis-representation or deception in the grantee, because that deception did not operate to his prejudice, having then no right to be prejudiced. Res inter alias non nocet.

We will now consider the case as it respects the land law of the state. There are three principle divisons of claims—

First, county claims.

Second, military.

Third, John Armstrong's.

In order to the institution of a claim under the first division, it were necessary that a person should pay the consideration before an entry. It therefore follows, that an entry is of itself evidence of the payment of consideration after a grant has issued. Being matter of record, no evidence can be received to contradict it. If in fact, no consideration were paid, the entry taker and his securities are liable for the money.

The second kind of claims were founded upon meritorious services, of which the officers appointed by law were the judges, and after the issuing of grants, it never can be a question with the judiciary, whether services were performed or not ; the state, through the medium of their officers, were the competent judges of that, and their opinion should be conclusive on us. (a)

The third kind of claims seems to admit of the same rules of law as the first. In either case the grant is evidence in controversies between individuals, that all previous requisites of the law in relation to it, had been complied with ; and this presumption is conclusive as to claims by entries or grants, originating afterwards. *

The entries in John Armstrong’s office, are all extant ; but the grant of the defendant does not recite the entry upon which it was obtained. It acknowledges the receipt of l.10 per hundred, and we *322 have no legal means before us, as it respects the claim of the plaintiff, of knowing that the money was not received. If the plat annexed to the grant(which makes no essential part of it,) (a) should recite a Carter's warrant, which perhaps it does, and the grant should acknowledge the receipt of l.10 instead of l. 2

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodson-v-cocke-and-stewart-tennsuperct-1808.