Gallipot ex dem. Bruner v. Manlove

2 Ill. 156
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1834
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ill. 156 (Gallipot ex dem. Bruner v. Manlove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallipot ex dem. Bruner v. Manlove, 2 Ill. 156 (Ill. 1834).

Opinion

Smith, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of ejectment brought to recover possession of the North West quarter of Section 30, Town 2 North, of Range 1 West of the 4th principal meridian, lying in the county of Schuyler. A verdict was rendered for the defendant. On the trial, the plaintiff offered in evidence, a certificate of the Register of the United States’ Land Office at Springfield, in this State, dated November 3d, 1834, by which it was declared, that on the 3d day of August, 1830, John Bruner purchased of the United States, at the said office, the land in question, as appeared from the records on file in said office, which, was objected to, but. admitted by the Court, the hand writing of the Register being ¡Droved. The plaintiff also proved the possession of the land by the defendants. The defendants then offered in evidence, which was objected to by the plaintiff, a duplicate receipt of the Receiver of public moneys „at Springfield, dated 29th of January, 1831, which expressed to have received of the defendants the sum of $197,60, being in full for the same land ; also a certificate of the Register of the said Land Office, dated 19th of September, 1834, which declared, that on the 29th of January, 1831, the defendants purchased of the United States, at the said Land Office, by virtue of the provisions of an act of Congress, approved on the 29 th of May, 1830, entitled “An act to grant pre-emption rights to settlers on the public lands” the same tract of land which appeared of record in said office. The Circuit Court admitted, notwithstanding the objection of the plaintiff, the last two certificates to be read in evidence. The defendants were also permitted to prove, notwithstanding the objection of the plaintiff, that the defendants were in possession of the land in question, and cultivated the same several years before the purchase of the land, either by Bruner or the defendants, except a portion of time when they had been out of the county, at the Mines—but how long a time the witness could not state. Several sets of instructions were prayed for and either given or refused. But it is not deemed essential to refer to more than one asked for by the plaintiff’s counsel, and refused to be given by the Court, viz: the 2d, “That the certificate of the Register and duplicate of the Receiver of the Land Office at Springfield, showing a sale of the same land in question to the defendants by the United States, after said sale of said land to Bruner, is not a better, legal and paramount title for said land to defendants.”

On this state of the case, three questions seem naturally to arise out of the evidence, on the second instruction prayed for:

1st. What is the rule in reference to the conveyance by the government of the United States of its land, where there are two sales and conveyances of the same land to different persons, and at different periods of time ?

2d. What is the character and effect, and what the extent of the rights of the parties, derived from the certificates of the United States’ Land Officers, by the laws of this State ?

3d. Was the refusal of the Court to give the instruction prayed for by the plaintiff’s counsel, an error ?

On the first point, we presume that a patent for land, or any mode of sale adopted by the government for the disposition of the public domain, must be subject to the same rules of interpretation as ordinary cases. It will not, we apprehend, be for a moment contended to be otherwise. What then is the rule where two patents have issued for the same lands, to different persons, at different times ? The elder patent is the highest evidence of title, and as long as it remains in force, it is conclusive against a junior patent. The second patent is inoperative and void, if the land passed by the first patent.

It is the almost universal rule of our courts, to look to the elder patent in all questions of title, and to give it effect. It is not for the Court to look to any equitable claim on the general government which a third party might have in respect to lands conveyed to another person prior to the issuing the patent.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallipot-ex-dem-bruner-v-manlove-ill-1834.