Doe Ex Dem. Governeur's Heirs v. Robertson

24 U.S. 332, 6 L. Ed. 488, 11 Wheat. 332, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 24 U.S. 332 (Doe Ex Dem. Governeur's Heirs v. Robertson) 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
Doe Ex Dem. Governeur's Heirs v. Robertson, 24 U.S. 332, 6 L. Ed. 488, 11 Wheat. 332, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 316 (1826).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause comes up from the Circuit Court of Kentucky, upon a difference of opinion certified from that Court.

The case was this: Robertus S. Brantz, through whom the plaintiffs make title, obtained, on the 11th of October, 1784, two grants from the Commonwealth of Virginia, comprising, together, ten thousand acres of land lying in Kentucky.

One Duncan Rose, through whom the defendants make title, obtained a similar grant, of- the date of December 2d, 1785, covering a part of the same land.

Robertus Brantz, at the date of his patent, *349 was an alien, but became naturalized in Maryland on the 8th of November, 1784, less than one month aftér the date of his patent, and near a year before that of the defendant was obtained.

Some doubts appear to have been raised on the validity of Brantz’s patent at an early period, and, in the year 1796, the legislature of Kentucky passed an act, reciting that B. was an alien when the patent issued, and affirming his estate as against the rights of the Commonwealth, leaving it to operate as to all other persons as if that act had not passed.

B. died in 1797, leaving a son, J. B., an alien, incapable of inheriting, and owing debts to a considerable amount to the Governeurs. The son, unaware of his disability, executed a letter of attorney, under which the land was sold, and the purchasers, the Governeurs, subsequently discovering this defect, obtained another act from that State affirming their estate.

And this makes out the plaintiffs’ title.

The defendant’s title is regularly deduced through the patent to Duncan Rose.

The record presents, first, a general instruction prayed for in behalf of the plaintiffs on their right to recover. And of this there can be no question independently of the points made in the instructions moved for by the defendant, having regard to the effects, 1st. of his alien character; 2d. that of his son; and, 3d. of the compact between Virginia and Kentucky on the rights of the parties.

*350 These will, be considered in their own lahguage, and in their order. The first is,

“ That if the jury find that R. S. B. was an alien at the time when the patents givén in evidence were procured by him, nothing passed to him by the said patent, but that it was void.”

Although this, as well as the subsequent prayers of the defendant, purport to present distinct propositions, it will be unavoidable that they should be considered in connexion with each other, and with reference to the general prayer of the plaintiff for a charge in his favour. The defendant’s object in propounding them, is to repel the prayer of the plaintiff, and to ob\ ain a charge that the jury should find in his favour. They are introduced, in fact, as grounds upon which the prayer of the plaintiff should be rejected.

And, in this view of the subject,- the proposition stated draws after it the consideration of another, to wit: Whether, although the patent to Brantz should be pronounced void, in consideration of his incapacity to take at the time of its emanation, his subsequent naturalization did not relate ba,ck so as to obviate every consequence of this alien disability.

On this subject of relation, the authorities are so ancient, so uniform and universal, that nothing can raise a dpubt that it has a material bearing on this cause, but the question whethér naturalization in Maryland was equivalent to naturalization in Kentucky. To this the articles of Confedération furnish an affirmative answer, and the *351 defendant has not made it a question. Nor, indeed, has he made a question on the subject of relation back ; yet it is not easy to see how he could claim the benefit of an affirmative answer on the question he has raised, without first extricating his cause from the effects of the subsequent naturalization, upon the rights derived to Brantz through his patent.

The question argued, and intended to be ex^ clusively presented here, is, whether a patent for land to an alien, be not an absolute nullity.

A grant of land to an alien, by the State, is not absolutely void.

The argument is, that..it was so at common law, and that the Virginia land laws, in some of their provisions, affirm the common law on this subject.

We think, the doctrine of the defendant is not to be- sustained on either ground.

It is true, Sir William Blackstone has expressed himself on this subject with less than his usual precision and circumspection; but, whether the context be considered, or his authorities examined, we' shall find that this doctrine cannot be maintained. The passage relied on is found in his second volume, (p. 347, 348. of Christian,) in these words, “ If the king grants lands to an alien, it operates nothing.” But it would be doing injustice to the writer not to weigh his meaning by the words preceding and following this sentence. His language is this, “ But the king’s grant shall not enure to any other intent than, that which is precisely expressed in the grant. As, if he grants lands to an alien, it operates nothing; for such grant shall not also *352 enure to make him a denizen, that so he maybe capable of taking by grant.” And the authority referred to is . Brooke's Abr. Patent, 62. and Finch's Law, 110. (It ought to be 111.)

*351 Examinationi of Blackstone's doctirne on this subject.

*352 If we could admit that this learned writer could have committed so egregious a blunder as to suppose that an alíen must be made denizen before he could take by grant, as a general proposition, he might stand charged with having greatly, transcended his authorities. But when it is considered, that the effect of an alien’s being made denizen, is not to enable him to take lands, but to enable him to hold them against the king, we at once see, that his language is to be limited to the proposition laid down in the previous sentence, to wit: that the king’s grants shall not enure to the double intent, when made to an alien, of vesting in him the thing granted, and then, by implication, constituting him a denizen, so as to enable him to hold an indefeasible estate.

Ancient authorities of the common law.

In the case referred to as abridged by Brooke, the latter proposition alone is laid down; and. the case in the Year Books, which the author cites, affirms nothing more. This was Bagot's case, (7 Edw. IV. p. 29.) which appears to have occasioned a vast deal of discussion for several terms in the British Courts, and in which Bagot, and another grantee of an offiee by the crown, brought assize, and the defendant pleaded, as to Bagot, alien nee.

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Bluebook (online)
24 U.S. 332, 6 L. Ed. 488, 11 Wheat. 332, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-ex-dem-governeurs-heirs-v-robertson-scotus-1826.