French v. Bankhead

11 Gratt. 136
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 Gratt. 136 (French v. Bankhead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. Bankhead, 11 Gratt. 136 (Va. 1854).

Opinion

ALLEN, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

By the terms of the federal constitution, the United States are bound to protect each state against invasion, and no state is authorized to keep troops in time of peace without the consent of congress. The duty of providing for the common defence being thus imposed upon the United States, and the erection and maintenance of fortifications being necessary and proper to perform this duty, the constitution confers upon congress the power to exercise jurisdiction over all places purchased by the consent of the legislature of the state in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, &c. &c. Having thus in a great measure surrendered the .power of providing for her own protection against invasion, and her cost' being exposed to aggression, the state of Virginia was called upon to cede to the United States places proper for the erection of forts, so that the United States *might do that for the people of the state which she could not do herself.

On the 1st of March 1821, Sess. Acts, p. 102, an act was passed, entitled “an act ceding to the United States the lands on Old Point Comfort, and the shoal called Rip Raps.” The preamble of the act recites, 1 ‘that whereas it is shown to the present general assembly, that the government of the United States is solicitous that certain lands at Old Point Comfort, and at the shoal called the Rip Raps, should be, with the right of property and entire jurisdiction thereon, vested in the said United States for the purpose of fortification, and other objects of national defence.” And it is then enacted, “That it shall be lawful and proper for the governor, by conveyance, to transfer, assign and make over unto the United States the right of _property and title as well as all the jurisdiction which this commonwealth possesses over the lands and shoal at Old Point Comfort and the Rip Raps: provided the cession at Old Point Comfort shall not exceed two hundred and fifty acres, and the cession of the shoal at the Rip Raps shall not exceed fifteen acres: and provided also, that the cession shall not be construed or taken so as to prevent the officers of this state from executing any process, or discharging any other legal functions within the jurisdiction or territory herein directed to be ceded, nor to prevent, abolish or restrain the right and privthege of fishery hitherto enjoyed and used bj’’ the citizens of this commonwealth within the limits aforesaid: and provided • further, that nothing in the deed of conveyance required by the first section of this act shall authorize the discontinuance of the present road to the fort, or in any manner prevent the pilots from erecting such marks and beacons as may be deemed necessary:” With a further provision, “that should the United States at any time abandon the said *lands and shoal, or appropriate them to any other purposes than those indicated in the preamble to the said act, that then and in that case the same shall revert to and revest in the commonwealth. ’ ’

The evidence in the record shows that surveys of part of the lands at Old Point Comfort had been made under the direction of the officers of the United States in 1816 or 1817, and in 1818. And the law, by the proviso preventing the discontinuance of the present road to the fort, seems to recognize the then existence of a fort, which must have been in possession of the United States. After the passage of the act the United States proceeded to erect an extensive fortification on the point, but no conveyance was made by the governor, nor so far as the record discloses, any measures taken to designate the precise boundaries of the land embraced by the cession, until the year 1838.

On the 16th of May 1838, a communication from the acting secretary of war was addressed to the governor, requesting him to make a conveyance in the manner prescribed by the provisions of said act, and for the maximum quantity of land contemplated to be ceded; and referring the governor to Captain W. A. Eliason, the bearer of the communication, as being authorized by the department of war to mark out to the surveyors of other persons acting for the commonwealth of Virginia, the boundaries which for purposes of defence should be given to said cession.

This officer, on the 22nd of May 1838, addressed a letter to the governor, in which he remarked, that the limits of the ceded territory at Old Point Comfort should include all the neck of land on which Eort Monroe is situated, from the bridge to the main land; and extend as far in the northerly direction as the plat of two hundred and fift3r acres will allow ; that he could not say how far this would be, until he knew *how the law requires the survey lines to be run. That he believed the lines ought to include only the dry land at ordinal high water, and that the coterminus land from high to low water line pertained as a matter of course to the plotted land. He furthermore stated that the high tide limits could be readity defined; that it would not do to leave the land between high and low water in debate; it must attach to the land above tide; and it is to be desired that it does so without increasing the number of acres in the plot.

These papers were referred to the attorney general of the state, by the governor, for his opinion and advice. That officer, after stating that it did not appear from the papers before him, whether the commonwealth owned two hundred and fifty acres of land above high water, advised that all the commonwealth’s lands should [69]*69be layed off by metes and bounds; that then the surveyor should lay off, under the direction of the United States or its officers, so much of the public land, not exceeding two hundred and fifty acres, at Old Point, as they may require. That this land should be laid off by metes and bounds, the courses as well and durably marked as they could be. That the officers of the United States should elect whether they would have the whole survey laid off above high water mark; or whether they would include in ifs boundaries the lands below high water mark. On the return of the survey a conveyance should be made by metes and bounds. That the grant to the United States must be limited by the metes and bounds laid off, and they could not take either property or jurisdiction over the adjacent lands below high water mark as pertinent to the plotted land.

Oil the 1st of June 1838, the governor, as appears from an extract from the executive journal, directed the surveyor of Elizabeth City county, under the direction of Captain Eliason, and in accordance with the '"’opinion of the attorney general, to make surveys of the lands and shoals mentioned in the act of cession, and return a fair plat and certificate of surveys to the executive. A survey was accordingly made by the survej'or, and a report returned to the governor. In the report so returned, the surveyor informs the governor that in pursuance of his directions, he applied to Captain Eliason to elect whether he would have the land ceded to the United States surveyed to high or low water mark; that he elected the former for the boundary, but requested the surveyor to spread the low water line, the mud flats and grass marsh on Mill creek, on the plat, which he had done. He further states that he began the survey at Old Point Comfort, at the southeast foot of the Mill creek bridge; and then pursued the ordinary high water mark on the Mill creek shore, until he came to the mouth of a small gut running up into the grass marsh. From thence he pursued a line between the high land and the marsh until he came to a piece of land taken up by Shelton.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Gratt. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-bankhead-va-1854.