Ex parte Morel

1 Charlton 240
CourtChatham Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedApril 14, 1809
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Charlton 240 (Ex parte Morel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Chatham Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Morel, 1 Charlton 240 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1809).

Opinion

By Charlton, Judge.

By the will of John Morel, the elder, the island of Os~ sabaw was devised to his three sons, Peter Henry, John, and Bryan, as tenants in common, each of the said sons to have an equal.part. In March, 1788, Peter Henry Morel, John Morel, and Bryan Morel, (who was then an infant.) by his guardians, William and James Bryan, applied to the Superior Court for a partition of the island, agreeably to the will of John Morel, the father. A writ of partition was accordingly granted, and in June, 1788, the commissioners proceeded to discharge the duties assigned them. This division ascertains three lots ; and the lot No. 1, comprehends, as is designated in a chart brought into court, the tracts, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and a part of the tract No. 8. A tract called Cabbage Garden, 50 acres called Horse Hammock, Bradley’s Hammock, containing 150 acres, and a hammock called Braddock’s Camp, containing 38 acres. This lot is assigned to John Morel. The lot No. 2, comprehending the remainder of the tracts Nos. 8 and 9, and half the tract No. 10, is assigned as (he portion of Peter Henry Morel. The lot No. 3, comprehending the remainder of Nos. 10, 11, 12, and including all the hammocks on the west of those numbers, is assigned to Bryan Morel, as his part, under the will of the ancestor, John Morel. This division being made, the commissioners informed us that a surplus remained, which they adjudged most beneficial to the parties, should it be enjoyed as a species of common appurtenant, but to be subject to partition whenever it [241]*241should be desired. This surplus land is supposed, by the . . commissioners, to contain tour thousand four hundred and sixty-six acres, and one half of an acre, of third quality land, and this is the land out of which the petitioner, Bryan Morel, desires to have his portion allotted to him. In this notice, which the law directs to be given, the petitioner apprizes the other claimants that he will apply to the judge of the court for a writ of partition to divide all the undivided lands on Ossabaw, and particularly those parts of the island called the eastern division, and marked in the plat thereof, as sixteen hundred acres; also, the lands in the western division, not described as of the first and second qualities, and said, in the record of a former division, to contain four thousand four hundred and sixty-six acres and a half.

No objections present themselves against the awarding a writ of partition to apportion and divide, amongst the several claimants, the residue of the land on Ossabaw ; but it is said by Mitchell and Bulloch, that this writ of partition cannot operate upon the lots specifically assigned by the commissioners in their partition of 1788 ; that the territory within the boundaries and lines of those lots cannot now be encroached upon, because being explicitly designated as the property of each of the heirs and unconditionally conveyed to them.

It cannot be presumed by any kind of explanation, dehors the partitioning record, that any land of the third quality, which is mentioned as the surplus land in the partition of 1788, and is left undivided, can be comprised- within the limits of those lots, and consequently, that the surplus land must mean the surrounding domain, or all the residue of territory exclusive of these specific allotments.

On the other side, it is contended, by Messrs. Berrien and Cuyler, that explanations may be received from the commissioners of 1788, to prove that those specific allotments were only intended to designate and convey the good land or lands, of first and second quality, and that all the lands of the third quality, whether, within the limits of these allotments, orin the surrounding territory, is still to be considered as surplus lands, [242]*242or of the third quality, and subject, according to the decree of the partitioners of 1788, to a division.

The proportion that the lands comprise within the speci-allotments, cannot be subject to a farther division ; is strongly supported by the plain terms of the partitioning record of 1788, in which the partitioners say, due respect having been had by us to the true value of all and singular the several lots and parcels of land, with the improvements and appurtenances thereunto belonging ; and after due and mature deliberation and consideration being had, and upon all and singular the premises, agreeably to the power vested in ⅛8, the said several lots, tracts, and parcels of land, into such parts in the manner we adjudged most beneficial to the parties concerned, have parted and divided, and so declare and adjudge our partition and division of all and every the said premises into the writ hereunto annexed, mentioned to be in the manner following, that is to say, all that lot No. 1, which is assigned as the part of John Morel, absolutely and unconditionally.

In the same manner are the other lots assigned to Peler Henry Morel, and Bryan Morel •, nothing can be collected from this deed of the partitioners, from which it can possibly be inferred that any fractions or portions of land within these lots were left undivided ; on the contrary, all and every the premises are explicitly assigned by the partitioning deed, and is made final and conclusive by the judgment which incorporated it. If it conveys “ all the premises,” there can be of course no surplus: adhering, therefore, to the plain unequivocal expressions of the deed, the supposition is not warranted, that these allotments contain lands of the third quality, called surplus land, or common appurtenant, by the petitioners, and by them made subject to a farther division: all the remainders or surplus lands the partitioners decreed to be held and enjoyed as in common, meaning perhaps a pasturable common, or common appendant, and all this surplus is denominated by them, third quality land. The par-titioners having already by the terms of their deed designated [243]*243the boundaries and divisions of three lots, can. the term remainder, upon any principles of exposition, mean a portion of that territory of which it is said to be a remaining part 1 The partitioning deed does not authorize such a solecism.

These are the strong grounds that have been, or may be occupied by the counsel who rely upon the plain language of the deed, to defeat any attempts to effect a diminution of territory within the specific allotments by a second writ of partition ; it is farther said, that if these allotments are subjected to a partition, it would probably gire a slip of land to one of the claimants in the middle of the cultivated land or lot of one of the others ; and hence the utmost dissatisfaction and confusion would result from the smallest infiingment upon the specified limits of those allotments.

This is an argument ab inconvenienti, which can have no weight in the construction of the power which must be strictly construed and complied with. Partitioners are under a former — they must strictly execute that power ; and when executed, a common law tribunal will give it a strict and rigid construction. The counsel for the petitioner introduced two of the partitioners of 178⅛ to prove, that they did not intend that the limits of these allotments should exclude a future partition of the lands of the third quality, which they might respectively contain.

Major Odingsell,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Charlton 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-morel-gasuperctchatha-1809.