Doe on Dem. of Rouche v. WilLiamson

25 N.C. 141
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 N.C. 141 (Doe on Dem. of Rouche v. WilLiamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe on Dem. of Rouche v. WilLiamson, 25 N.C. 141 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

Gaston, J.

The lessors of the plaintiff set up title to the premises in dispute, as purchasers at a judicial sale. The Sheriff sold, by virtue of two writs of fieri facias, against *145 the property of Samuel Fraley, the owner oí the premises, and to the validity and regularity of one of these writs, objection has been taken. It is unnecessary, therefore, to examine the objection made to the other.

The lessors were both natives of the kingdom of France, and, at the time of their purchase, and at the date of the Sheriff’s conveyance to them, neither had been naturalized. Rut one of them, (John Rouche,) had, before the purchase, as a preparatory step for his naturalization, reported himself in a Court of Record in this State, as having arrived from France, at New York, more than two years previously thereto, and, declaring his intention to become'a citizen of the United States, then and there took an oath of allegiance to the State. And the other lessor, who, at the time of his arrival in the United States, was a minor, and therefore not under the necessity of taking that preparatory measure, was, before the trial of this suit, but after it was put to issue, regularly naturalized.

The 40th section of the Constitution of this State declares, that “ every foreigner who comes to settle in this State, having first taken the. oath of allegiance to the State, may purchase, or by other just means acquire, hold, and transfer land or other real estate , and after one year’s residence, shall be deemed a free citizen.” The constitution of the United States having conferred on Congress the power “ to establish an uniform rule of naturalization,’’ and Congress having accordingly prescribed the mode by which aliens may be naturalized, the last part of this 40th section in the State Constitution is no longer in force ; but the, residue of the section comes not.into conflict with the constitution, or any law made under the constitution of the United States, and therefore is in full force. Consequently, all the disabilities of alienage, so far as they extend to the acquiring, holding,. and transferring of land and other real estate in North Carolina, were removed from John Rouche, by his taking the oath of allegiance. Upon this state of facts, one of the joint lessors of the plaintiff being qualified, at the time of the purchase made, to hold lands, the other then being wholly disqualified as an alien, and remaining such at the date of *146 the demise laid in the declaration, and at the time when the issue was joined, but becoming naturalized before trial of the issue, several interesting questions are very naturally suggested. But we shall not enter upon the investigation of any of them, because we hold that the objection of alienage, supposing it to apply in all its force and to both the lessors, would not avail to destroy the plaintiff’s right to a recovery in this action.

A loose notion has to some extent prevailed in the profession of this State, that an alien cannot maintain an ejectment, and' this notion- w'e suppose has arisen from a dictum to that effect reported in the case of Barges v Hogg, 1 Hay. 485. That was an action of trespass, guare clausumfregit, in which the defendant pleaded in abatement that the plaintiff was an alien born. Upon demurrer, the court held the plea bad, upon the plain ground that the possession of land by an alien is not necessarily illegal; that he can rightfully hold land, which hé has bought, until the State take it from him, and that while thus rightfully holding it, he is entitled to all legal remedies for an injury to his possession. But in pronouncing this judgment, according to the Reporter, the court took a distinction between the action of trespass on the one’ hand, and the action of ejectment or other actions for the recovery of a freehold on the other, and' observed of these that they could not be maintained by an alien. This dictum, so far as it applies to the action of ejectment, we believe to be incorrect.

It is an elementary maxim, that' an alien has capacity to take, but no capacity to hold land. Care must be taken, however; not to be led into an error by this epigrammatical distinction. When it is said that an alien has not capacity to hold land, no more is meant than that he cannot hold it against the sovereign, should the sovereign choose to assert his claim thereto as iorfeited. But against all the rest of the world, the alien has full capacity to hol'd, and he can hold even against the sovereign, until the estate of the alien be divested by an office found, or some other equally solemn sovereign act. Page’s case, 5 Co. 22. Att’y Gen’l. v Du- *147 nlessis. Parker, 152. Hobart, 231. Fairfax's devisee v Hunter, 7 Cranch, 603. University v Miller, 3 Dev. 188. It would therefore seem clear, that the alien being thus subject to the right of the sovereign to divest his estate for a forfeitnre, and, until he shall be thus divested by office found, the owner of the estate, he may convey, lease, and do every other act in relation thereto, which a rightful owner may do, and can maintain any aetion and have the benefit of any remedy, which the law gives to secure the enjoyment of property unto those whom the law recognizes as entitled to its enjoyment. But these inferences, however logically they may appear to follow from the principles clearly established, seem to come into conflict with certain positions expressly laid down in books of undoubted authority. Thus it is said, Co. Lit. 426, Shep. Touchstone, 204, in the most general terms, that an alien cannot lease, or en-feoff, or make any other conveyance. But upon examination it will be seen, that the meaning of these positions is, that the grantees, feoffees or lessees of the alien take defeasi-ble estates only; that they are in no better plight than their grantor, feoffor or lessor, and therefore hold their estates subject to be divested by the sovereign on office found. Shep. Touchstone, 56, and 132. Preston on Convey. 257. Fair-fax's devisee v Hunter, 7 Cranch, ut supra. 2 Kent’s Com’y. 61, and the authorities there cited. So also we find it stated in very general terms, that an alien cannot maintain a real or mixed action, But it is also stated, that if alien-age be pleaded to an alien in league, that is to say, an alien not an enemy, it cannot be pleaded “ to the writ or to the action, but in disability of the person as in case of villenage and outlawry” — but if it be pleaded to an alien enemy, “ it may be pleaded to the action.” Littleton, sect. 198. Co. Lit. 129. Brooke title, Denizen, 3, 10. Roscoe on Real Act’ns. 197. It has been thought by very learned Judges that it is difficult, at least, to reconcile the doctrine, that a plea of alien born is a good pica to the person of the demandant in a real action with the well established law, that, until office found, an alien purchaser is the rightful owner of the estate, aud because of a supposed incompatibility between this doc *148 trine, and the acknowledged dominion of such alien in the land, the Supreme Court of New York have solemnly decided that this was a bad plea in abatement, when pleaded *n 51 j. Bradstreet

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25 N.C. 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-on-dem-of-rouche-v-williamson-nc-1842.