Ellicott v. Pearl

35 U.S. 412
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 35 U.S. 412 (Ellicott v. Pearl) 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
Ellicott v. Pearl, 35 U.S. 412 (1836).

Opinion

Mr Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the judgment of the circuit court for the district of Kentucky, upon a writ of right, sued forth on the 17th of January 1831; in which the plaintiffs in error were the demandants. The proceedings are in the form .prescribed by the statute of Kentucky ; and the cause was tried upon the issue joined by the parties. There were several writs of right against other tenants of distinct parcels of the same tract of land, held by the tenants, respectively, under a common title; and all of them were tried at the same time, by- consent of ihe parties; as the same evidence was applicable to each.

The demandants claimed title through intermediate conveyances to a tract of land of two thousand acres, lying on the east fork of Rockcastle, in Lincoln county, under a patent granted to James Kincaid, by the commonwealth of Kentucky, dated the ,°d day of February 1796; and also another tract, of land, containing one thousand acres, on the waters of Rockcastle, on the south side and contiguous to that of two thousand, on a like patent, dated on the same day.-

The tenants claimed title to the premises under a patent from the commonwealth of Virginia, to Jacob Remey, of twenty thousand acres of land, lying on the waters of Rockcastle, dated on the 15th of July 1789. Remey, on the 2.0th of November 1799, conveyed thirteen thousand four hundred acres of the same tract to William Edwards: [433]*433and Edwards, on the 26th of December 1799, conveyed seven thousand acres of the same tract, by metes and bounds, to William Pearl, the tenant, under whom all the other tenants claim: The conveyance to Pearl comprehends all the land in controversy; and the same land is also included in the patents to Kincaid.

At the trial, evidence was introduced by the tenants to prove that, in 1800, Pearl entered into and settled on the tract of land so conveyed to him, intending to take possession of the whole tract; and that he, and those claiming under him, have had possession of the same land ever since, and have'always claimed to hold the land under Remey’s patent. Evidence was also introduced to prove, that James M’Cammon (whose name is mentioned, as we shall hereafter see, in the bill of exceptions), moved his family and settled on a part of the land in controversy, either in the year 1800 or 1801, under a purchase from Pearl; but how much land he purchased or held did not appear : and about two years afterwards, by some arrangements between them, M’Cammon took.some other part of Pearl’s land, in the same tract, and Pearl took the place where M’Cammon had settled. Pearl’s original settlement was a little outside of the southern bounds of Kincaid’s thousand acre tract; between Sugar Camp branch and Rockcastle: and M’Cammon’s original settlement was v/ithin Kincaid’s two thousand acres, south of Moore’s creek.

The demandants then introduced evidence to show that Remey’s patent did not cover the lands patented to Kincaid, but that it covered land at or near the mouth of Pond creek; and that the survey of Remey was in fact, made On Pond creek, (which was outside of the western boundary of Kincaid’s patent), as the beginning corner, under a mistake that it was Raccoon creek. If so made, it was clear, from the plea, that Remey’s survey was surveyed off the land in controversy.

The foregoing are all the portions of the evidence which seem necessary to be stated in order fully to understand the bearing of the questions made at the trial.

The first question was upon the admissibility of the evidence of witnesses, offered by the demandants, to prove that one Moore, whose name was put down as.one of the original chain carriers, in making Remey’s survey, was dead; and that he attended with the witness, .Cafffp Mullins, -about twenty-four or twenty-five years ago, when .one Charles Smith run from the mouth of Pond creek to the white -oak tree, and also fun the line north from the mouth of.Pond creek: [434]*434and while fit the corner and running the line, he declared that to be the corner made by Kincaid (the surveyor), and the line run by Wilson, by the direction of Kincaid, for Remey’s original survey: and also t.o prove what Moore had said to others relative to the boundary of Remey’s patent, and the making of the original survey, since the settlement and possession of Pearl on the land in controversy. This evidence being objected to, was rejected by the court: and this constitutes the matter of the first exception of the demandants.

We are of opinion that the evidence was properly rejected. It was not merely hearsay, but hearsay not to matters of general reputation, or common interest among many, but to specific parts, viz. the manner and place of running the boundaryjines of Remey’s patent. The general rule is, that evidence, to be admissible, should be given under the sanction of an oath, legally administered; and in á judicial proceeding, depending between the parties affected by it, or those who stand in privity of estate, or interest with them. So it was laid down by. Lord Kenyon, in his able opinion in the King v. Enswell, 3 T. Rep. 721. Certain exceptions have, however, been-allowed, which perhaps may be as old as the rule itself. But these exceptions stand upon peculiar grounds; and, as was remarked by Lord Ellenborough in Weeks v. Sparke, 1 M. & Selw. 686;, the admission of hearing evidence, upon all occasions, whether in matters of public or private right, is somewhat of an anomaly. Hearsay is admitted in cases of pedigree; of prescriptive rights and customs ; and some other cases of a public or quasi public nature. In cases of pedigree, it is admitted upon the ground of necessity, or the great difficulty, and sometimes the impossibility of proving' remote facts of this sort by living witnesses. But in these cases it is only admitted, when the tradition comes from persons intimately connected, or in close relation with the family; or.from sources of a kindred-nature, which, in a general sense, may be said to import verity; there being no lis nota or other interest to affect the credit of their statement. So the law was expounded by Lord Kenyon in The King v. Enswell, 3 Term Rep. 723, and by Lord Eldon in Vowles v. Young, 13 Ves. 143, and in Whitlocke v. Baker, 13 Ves. 514.

In cases of prescriptive rights and customs, and other claims of a public nature, tradition and reputation have been in like manner admitted.. They are all cases of a general right, affecting a number of persons, having a. common interest.. In Morehead v. Wood, 14 East’s Rep. 329 (note), Lord Kenyon stated the general ground of [435]*435this exception thus: “evidence of reputation upon general points is receivable, because all mankind being interested therein, it is natural to suppose, that they may be conversant with the subjects, and that they should discourse together about them, having all'the.same means of information.” “But,” he says, “howca'n this apply to private titles, either with regard to particular customs or private prescriptions 1 How is it possible for strangers to know, any thing that concerns only their private titles ?”- Lord Ellenborough, in Weeks v. Sparke, 1 M. & Selw. 686, commenting on this distinction between public and private rights, said, “ I confess myself at a loss fully to understand upon what principle, even in matters of public right, reputation was ever deemed admissible evidence. It is said, indeed, that upon questions of public right' all are interested, and must be presumed conversant with them ; and that .is the distinction taken.

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Bluebook (online)
35 U.S. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellicott-v-pearl-scotus-1836.