Goddard v. Gloninger

5 Watts 209
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 Watts 209 (Goddard v. Gloninger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goddard v. Gloninger, 5 Watts 209 (Pa. 1836).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Huston, J.

Many things are presented, in this voluminous record, which to me had appeared long settled, yet are here made the subject of exception and of alleged doubt. When I came into the profession, in 1795, almost all causes in which the title to lands came in question, were removed to the supreme court, and, after the circuit court was established, into that court; and until 1809, when that court was abolished, all such causes were tried before, at first, two judges of the supreme court, and afterwards, before one judge. M’Kean, Shippen, Yeates and Smith, were the judges in 1795; after McKean was elected governor, Brackenridge came on the bench. These men were eminent, as general lawyers, and some of them had more experience of the local land title of Pennsylvania, than commonly falls to the lot of man. The three first named were at the bar or on the bench, each of them, above half a century.

At a period when no reports of decisions existed, this experience was a matter of some consequence. From some remaining cases, it appears Mr Chew, the chief justice for a few years before 1776, was a sound lawyer; but, it seems pretty certain that nothing, approaching very nearly to a regular system of law, as to land titles, existed, until the men I have just named, or three of them, composed the supreme court, on the adoption of the present constitution; and for several years it was gradually growing into regular and digested form, and, about 1795 it had begun to assume, and, in 1800 had assumed, its present shape. But there was no person reporting the decisions of the nisiprius, or circuit courts. A motion for a new trial, or, after the circuit court was established, an appeal, could be had only to the supreme court, which then sat only at Philadelphia, and very few cases were carried to the court in bank. In 1805 a western district was established, to sit at Pittsburgh, and, in 1807 a middle district, at Sunbury, and then others. The counsel, for many years, took notes of the decisions; these were often cited, and the points settled were remembered more generally and more accurately than since it has become the fashion to take writs of error or appeals and to publish all the decisions. From 1807 until this time, some cases on land titles were carried to the supreme court by appeal, before 1809, and by writ of error after, but there are no detached points, and together, will not enable me to furnish a correct idea of the details, nor even of the general system.

At length, in 1817, Yeates’s Reports appeared, but at that time almost all the suits arising from conflicting original titles, east of the Alleghany river, had been settled, and those volumes, although containing the only record of that part of our jurisprudence, have been neglected too much by the profession, while every scrap, from the often very loose and unsatisfactory nisi prius decisions of England, [217]*217are sought for, and, too often, adopted; though often founded on usages of trade not known here, and often on acts of parliament unknown to us, and if known, essentially different from our own legislative provisions. These volumes lie neglected on the shelf, or in the office of the publisher, and yet contain more sound law on general subjects of contest in this country, than in the whole nisiprius reports of England, and are the only source of information, as to the details, and also of the general system of land titles in this state. To be sure, as the system was forming, some of the cases have been corrected, or overruled, and time has made some changes necessary; delay in completing a title might be excusable in 1800, and thirty - six years afterwards that delay may have been totally inexcusable.. There are, however, in many parts of this state, mountains, for which these warrants were taken, and surveys thereon made and returned. These mountains were eagerly bought by a few individuals, and some of them sold and mortgaged, &c., &c. — the property and titles have-laid long neglected — at length, many of them have become valuable for timber, and some for coal and other minerals, and we discover symptoms of contest, as to who has the best title to what, from 1800, for twenty or more years, was supposed to be worthless; and as we are compelled to compare the conflicting.titles of the claimants, we must have recourse to the decisions made in cases in times past.

The act of the 9th of April 1781, established and organized the land office, under the commonwealth. By section one hundred and eleven of that act, it is provided, the secretary of the land office, receiver-general and surveyor-general, shall be entitled to receive such fees, from time to time, as heretofore have been allowed by law, until the same shall be altered by the legislature, and shall have power to appoint deputies or clerks to assist in executing the business of their respective offices, for whose conduct they shall be responsible, and copies of records, entries and papers of the said office* duly attested by them or their lawful deputies, under their hand and seal of office, shall be as good evidence as the original, by law* might or could be. The surveyor-general shall have power to appoint a deputy or deputies, in any county in this state, who shall have power to make and return into the land office, surveys of land only in the county for which such deputy shall be appointed, for the conduct of which deputy or deputies, the said surveyor-general shall be responsible.

This speaks of fees heretofore allowed, and the second section of the act of the 1st of April 1784, for granting lands, &c., says— The several officers of the land office are hereby fully enabled to do and perform every aict and thing incident, or any wise appertaining to their said offices, with respect to receiving, filing and entering locations (applications) granting warrants on the same, receiving the consideration, directing copies of warrants, receiving returns and issuing patents of confirmation as heretofore, agreeably to the former customs and usages of the land office.

[218]*218John Lukens, who had been surveyor-general under the proprie" tors from 1761, was the surveyor-general under this act, till his death in 17S9, and the routine and forms of the office (only substituting the commonwealth for the proprietor) continued pretty much as before. The bar and the judges, first named, knew that warrants, locations and applications, had been directed to the several deputy-surveyors, by the chief clerk for the time being, as officer, as by the surveyor-general himself, and until, in this case, 1 do not recollect to have heard it questioned that a receipt for purchase-money, signed by John KÍJale, who was long chief clerk of the receiver-general, or that a warrant directed to a deputy-surveyor by John Barron (who directed many thousand) or any other chief clerk of the surveyor-general, was not as good as if signed by the principal. A direction by a chief clerk is as valid as one by the principal surveyor-general. 2 Serg. & Rawle 561. But you must prove, it is said, that such a one.was chief clerk at the time, and must prove the handwriting by some one who saw him write. Let us see to what this will lead us. First, to make the appointment out in the form required, you must show that the surveyor-general was himself acting under a commission; next that the governor who appointed him was duly elected; to reach that, you must at least prove the returns and the handwriting of all the return-judges, &c. &c.;.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Watts 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goddard-v-gloninger-pa-1836.