Fussell v. Hughes

8 F. 384
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. 384 (Fussell v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fussell v. Hughes, 8 F. 384 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Matthews, Justice.

These suits were argued and may be decided together. The material facts as they appear by the pleadings and proofs, so far as material at present, are as follows:

On the nineteenth day of July, 1822, warrant TSTo. 6508, for 200 acres of land, was granted by Virginia to Archibald Gordon, late of Cecil county, Maryland, for service in the Virginia line, on continental establishment, in the war of the revolution.
On July 1, 1823, lie caused this warrant to be located on entry 12017. in the Virginia military district, in Logan county, Ohio, and the same to be duly recorded.
On March 25,1823, this location was carried into survey, and on iTovember [386]*3865,1824, this" survey was recorded in the office of the principal surveyor of said'district at Chillicothe'.
, Archibald Gordon died intestate about the year 1829 or 1830, leaving Arclii-i bald Gordon, Jr., his only child and heir at law.
Archibald Gordon, Jr., died intestate about the year 1833 or 1834, leaving the complainant and her sister, Sarah Priscilla, his only children and heirs at , law. •
The complainant was intermarried on Hovember 1,1855, and her husband ■ died about August 1, 1865. Her sister, Sarah P., was married about December 4, 1848, and died leaving Sarah Elizabeth her only child and heir at law; her husband died about the year 1855. Her* child, Sarah Elizabeth, died at the age of nine years and six months, leaving complainant her sole heir at law.
Ho patent has ever been applied for or issued, on this entry and survey, by , or to Archibald Gordon or his legal representatives. According to the testimony of E. P. Kendrick, principal surveyor of the Virginia military district at Chillicothe since 1845, this entry and survey of Archibald Gordon are marked *• withdrawn” on the record, as he supposes, because it was thought that the location was made upon a state-line warrant, though he never saw ’ the warrant. His supposition is based on a note made on the record of Gor- ' don’s location of the words “state line;” but by whom this note and the word “withdrawn” were written, and at what time, he does not know. A certified copy or duplicate of warrant Ho. 6508, the original being dated July 19,1822, | to Archibald Gordon, 'certified by the register of the Virginia land-office at ; Richmond, Virginia, shows that it was issued in consideration of services as u private in the continental line.
On May 25, 1840, Cadwallader Wallace made an entry in his own name of ; 50 acres of land in said district, and caused the same to be recorded on military. warrant Ho. 6713, described so that the west line of the Gordon survey Ho. 12017 should be the east line of Wallace’s entry Ho. 14530.
On the next day, May 26, 1840, Wallace caused a survey of this entry to be recorded, and from the survey it appears that his 50 acres were laid off and described, so that the whole of it lies within the limits of the Gordon survey; the west line of the latter being also the west line of the Wallace survey, instead of the east line, as called for by the entry. And on April 8,1842, • Wallace obtained a’patent from the United States for the land described by land embraced within this survey.
On October 4,1851, Daniel Gregg made an entry in the records of the principal surveyor of said district, Ho. 16070, of 130 acres, on military warrant Ho. 442, to include the vacant lands between surveys 9993, 9997, 9994, 9958, and 14530, the last-named being Wallace’s 50-acre survey, as above described.
On December 20,1851, Gregg procured 100 acres of his entry to be surveyed so as to cover that much of the land within the entry and survey Ho. 12017, of Archibald Gordon, lying next east to Wallace’s 50-acre survey.
Cadwallader Wallace, by a previous entry and survey, recorded Hovember 5,1834, became the proprietor of 150 acres of land, the title to which is not in dispute, described iii the survey so that its east line coincided its full length for that distance with the west line of Archibald Gordon’s survey Ho. 12017 to [387]*387its north-west corner; Gordon’s west line, for 240 poles from a stake to the north-west corner of Ms survey, being one of the calls in this survey of Wallace.
Of the 50 acres described in Wallace’s survey ISTo. 14530, 21 acres off the northern part are claimed by the defendant Hughes, and 29 acres remaining’ by the defendant Esther Dennison, who are joined in the first bill, who derive title from Wallace and are in possession. The 100 acres patented to Gregg, and conveyed by him to Swisgood and others, are covered by the second bill, to which they are made defendants. Kendrick, the principal surveyor of the military district, is made a defendant to both bills.
The complainant claims that she is, by virtue of the entry and survey of her ancestor, Archibald Gordon, now seized in fee-simple of an equitable estate in the land embraced therein, and entitled to the immediate possession thereof; that the entry and survey of Cadwallader Wallace, Ho. 14530, and his patent issued thereon, and the entry of said Gregg, and his survey and patent, were all of them made and obtained in violation of the proviso of the second section of the act entitled “An act to extend the time for locating Virginia military land-warrants and returning surveys thereon to the general land-office,” approved March 1,1823, and are all of them void.
The relief prayed for is that the location, entry, and survey Ho. 12017, in the name of her ancestor, Archibald Gordon, founded on said military warrant Ho. 6508, be established and affirmed, and the validity thereof forever perpetuated; that the location of said Cadwallader Wallace, his entry, survey Ho. 14530, and patent, and the location of Daniel Gregg, his entry, and survey Ho. 16070, and patent, be adjudged to have been made and issued in violation of the proviso of said act of congress and void; that the words “withdrawn” and “state line,” so written upon said records, location, entry, and survey Ho. 12017, be adjudged to have been so written without authority, and that the evidence of said military warrant Ho. 6508, and original survey of said entry Ho. 12017, be forever perpetuated; that the complainant may have an order for the delivery of the possession of said promises to her, for an account of rents and profits, and for general relief.

The act of March 1, 1823, referred to in the pleadings, after providing, in the first section, that the officers and soldiers of the Virginia line on continental establishment, their heirs and assigns, who are entitled to bounty lands within the country reserved by the state of Virginia between the Little Miami and Scioto rivers, shall be allowed a further time of two years from the fourth day of January, 1823, to obtain warrants and complete their locations, and the further time of four years from the same period to return their surveys and warrants to the general land-office to obtain patents, contains in the second section a proviso in the following words:

“ Provided, that no locations as aforesaid, in virtue of this or the preceding section of this act, shall be made on tracts of land for which patents had [388]*388previously been issued; or which had.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fussell-v-hughes-uscirct-1881.