Edward's Lessee v. Darby

25 U.S. 206, 6 L. Ed. 603, 12 Wheat. 206, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 392
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 29, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by170 cases

This text of 25 U.S. 206 (Edward's Lessee v. Darby) 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
Edward's Lessee v. Darby, 25 U.S. 206, 6 L. Ed. 603, 12 Wheat. 206, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 392 (1827).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Trimble

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court for the Western District of Tennessee.

The plaintiff prosecuted an action of ejectment in that Court, to recover possession of a small tract of 20 or 30 acres of land, which had been laid out in lots and squares as part of the town of Nashville, the tenants in possession being the owners or occupiers of such lots.

In the year 1818, Patrick H. Darby appropriated, by entry and survey, all that part of the town from lot No. 141, to lot No. 165, the latter inclusive ; and having obtained a grant therefor from the State of Tennessee, he, before the institution of the suit, conveyed the laud by deed to Edwards. This was the plaintiff’s title..

'The legislature of North Carolina, by an act passed in the year 1782, entitled, “ An act for the relief of the officers and soldiers in the continental line, and for other purposes therein mentioned,” enacted, that certain bounties in land should be granted to the officers and soldiers in the line of that State, on continental establishment.

The seventh section of the act, after reciting that. “ Whereas, in May, 1780, an act passed reserving a certain tract of country to be appropriated to the aforesaid purposes, and that it had been represented to the assembly that sundry families had, before the passing of the said act, settled on the said tract of country, enacts that .640 acres of land shall be granted to each family, or head of a family, and to every single man of 21 years or upwards, (to include their improvements,) settled on said land before the first day of June, 1780, for which they shall have the right of pre-emption; provided no such grant shall include any salt licks or salt springs, which are hereby declared to be reserved as public- property, together with 640 acres of the. adjoining lands, for the common use and benefit of the inhabitants of that country, and not. subject to future appropriations ; and all the remainder of the aforesaid tract o; *208 country shall he considered as subject to partition as by this act directed.”

The eighth section appoints commissioners in behalf of the State, “ to- examine and superintend the laying off the land in one or more tracts, allotted to the officers and soldiers.”

The eleventh section authorizes the commissioners to appoint one or more surveyors, for the more speedy and effec-. tual laying off and surveying said lands.

The commissioners, in the exercise of their powers in carrying this act into effect, determined the French lick to be within the scope of its provisions, and a proper object of such reservation, and caused a survey to be made of said reservation as early as 1784, which turns out to include six hundred and sixty-seven and three quarter acres, instead of six hundred and forty, and embraces within its limits the whole of the lots laid .off in the town of Nashville, and the land covered by the grant to Patrick H. Darby.

In the year 1784, the legislature of North Carolina, by its act, appropriated 200 acres, part of said reservation, for the establishment of the town of Nashville, to be laid off at the bluff on the Cumberland river, nearest the French lick; and commissioners are designated in the act to lay out the proposedLown in streets, lots, and squares-; to causea plan thereof to be made out; and to sell and dispose of the lots in the town when thus laid off.

Upon'the trial of the general issue-in the Circuit Court, after the plaintiff had given in'evidence the grant to Darby, and conveyance from Darby to Edwards, already recited, - the defendants gave evidence conducing to prove <hat the survey made of the reservation around the French lick, by the commissioners, as early as 1784, included the whole of the land granted to Darby, and then in controversy ; and also, that the commissioners, or trustees, for laying off the town of Nashville, had, in the year laid off and disposed of a part of the town lots; and that, afterwards, the commissioners had laid off and disposed of the additional lots, to 1.65 inclusive, about the year 1789, or 1790; but it appeared that the quantity of 200 acres was thereby exceeded by 20 or 30 acres,'such excess covering the lots *209 from 141 to 165 inclusive, but the whole of which lay within. the French lick reservation, as laid.off by the commissioners about the year 1784.

The Court instructed the jury, that if they found the land in controversy, and within Darby’s grant, was also within the boundary of the town as actually laid off, although that boundary exceeded the quantity of 200 acres, or if they found it was within the actual survey of the French lick reservation, as laid off in 1784, although it exceeded the quantity of. 640 acres, the land was protected from individual appropriation by entry and survey, both by being so within the town boundary as laid off, and within the reservation as laid off, or if not by both, it was so protected by being included within the latter; and that, consequently, the grant to Darby was void.

To this opinion and instruction the plaintiff excepted, and his exception was sealed, and made part of the record.

It is not necessary to decide whether the land in controversy would, or would not, have been protected from individual appropriation by being actually laid off and disposed of as town lots, beyond the quantity of two hundred acres,as we are all of opinion it was so protected by being within the French lick reservation, as laid off.

■It is argued, that the commissioners, appointed by the act of 1782, were not authorized to cause surveys to be made of the reservations of 640 acres around the reserved salt licks and springs, that the reservation was by quantity only, and that no legal effect can therefore be attributed to the survey. Wei admit the- statute does not give the authority to survey ■the reservations, in express terms, but do not admit that the authority may not, and does not, result by necessary implication from the duties they were expressly required to perform, and from the general provisions of the statute. They were not expressly required by the statute to determine what licks and springs were proper objects. for reservation, and came within the provisions of the statute; but they were required to lay off and cause to be surveyed the lands granted to the officers and soldiers, subject to, and so as not to interfere with, these reservations. The right of pre-emption ■ granted by law to the settlers, of. 640 acres each, including *210 their settlements, were also to be avoided. It seems to result necessarily from these provisions, that the commissioners must first determine what were the proper subjects of •reservation, and having determined that a given salt lick or spring came within the provisions of the law, the power and duty of laying off by survey the 640 acres reserved, and to be avoided) around the lick, seems necessarily and irresistibly to result to the commissioners, in all cases where they /might deem it necessary to do so, in order to enable them to lay off the lands for the officers and soldiers, so as to avoid these reservations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tetra Tech EC, Inc. v. Wisconsin Department of Revenue
2018 WI 75 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2018)
S.D. Ex Rel. Dickson v. Hood
391 F.3d 581 (Fifth Circuit, 2004)
Apache Corp. v. State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Tax Commission
2004 OK 48 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2004)
Brecklein v. Bookwalter
231 F. Supp. 404 (W.D. Missouri, 1964)
United States v. S.S. American Hunter
192 F. Supp. 447 (S.D. New York, 1961)
United States v. T.I.M.E., Incorporated
252 F.2d 178 (Fifth Circuit, 1958)
Starker v. Scott
190 P.2d 532 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1948)
Duquesne Warehouse Co. v. Railroad Retirement Board
148 F.2d 473 (Second Circuit, 1945)
Utah Hotel Co. v. Industrial Commission
151 P.2d 467 (Utah Supreme Court, 1944)
Guiseppi v. Walling
144 F.2d 608 (Second Circuit, 1944)
Helvering v. Griffiths
318 U.S. 371 (Supreme Court, 1943)
Busey v. Deshler Hotel Co.
130 F.2d 187 (Sixth Circuit, 1942)
Bumpus v. Continental Baking Co.
124 F.2d 549 (Sixth Circuit, 1941)
Augustus v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
118 F.2d 38 (Sixth Circuit, 1941)
State v. Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana
178 So. 601 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 U.S. 206, 6 L. Ed. 603, 12 Wheat. 206, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-lessee-v-darby-scotus-1827.