Green v. M'Clellan

4 H. & J. 200
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 H. & J. 200 (Green v. M'Clellan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. M'Clellan, 4 H. & J. 200 (Md. 1816).

Opinion

Chase, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. The court are of opinion, that the beginning of McClellan's First Venture depends on the true location of the tract of land called Come by Chance, which said beginning must be at the place or point where the north 200 perches line of Come by Chance terminates — the termination of the said tine to be ascertained by the jury according to the evidence, and on such allowance for the variation of the compass as the jury may find to be right and proper; it being the exclusive right and province of the jury to decide on the proper allowance to be made for such variation according to the proof.

The court are also of opinion, that the jury were bound in locating McClellan’s First Venture, to begin at the place where they found the north 200 perches line of Come by Chance terminated, and think the court below erred in giving the direction prayed by the plaintiff, as stated in the second bill of exceptions.

Tins court concur with that court in the opinion expressed in the first bill of exceptions.

Johnson. J.

This is an action to recover for a trespass allega] to have been committed by Green, the appellant, on the appellee’s land called McClellan’s First Venture.

In the trial of this cause two exceptions were taken on the part of the defendant — The first, because the court refused to permit the land commission, offered by him, to be read to the, jury; but the objection to the opinion pronounced by the ecu tí on the first exception appears to have been waved in this court.

The tract of land called McClellan's First Venture, calls to begin “at the end of the North 200 perches line of a tract of land called Come by Chance, it being the second line of said land.”

In the trial of the cause, the plaintiff offered evidence to prove “that at the time McClellan’s First Venture was taken up and surveyed, the taker-up thereof, in order to ascertain its place of beginning at the end of the second line of the tract called Comeby Chance, ran the two first lines of that tract from the place marked A on the plots, its admitted beginning, as the needle then pointed, without any allowance for the variation of the compass, and in the manner by him located on the plots in the cause; and thereupon prayed the court to direct the jury, that in fixing the true location of said tract called M‘ Clellan’s First Venture they are not hound to begin at the place where they may believe that the second line of Come by Chance terminates, according to what they may now find to be the true location of.that tract.” Which direction the, court gave. And the question for the consideration of this court is, Whether the opinion so pronounced was correct?

In examining this question I propose to establish three propositions-—

[204]*2041st. That on principles of reason and justice it is correct that the land should be located as it was when taken up. 2d. That such a location is sanctioned by general princi-pies of law; and

3d. That no decision has been made by either the general court, or the court of appeals, conflicting with the right of making such a location; but that they have been of an opposite character.

On the first point I apprehend it must be conceded by all, that the land actually run out and designed to be purchased, should pass by the conveyance; and that if by any mistake, or inaccuracy of expression, a part should be left out, or more included, that a power ought to exist by which such errors might be corrected. For the land intended by both parties to be sold should pass by the deed or grant. If then it be correct, that the land intended tobe purchased should pass by the conveyance, are there any general principles of law which will prevent the location of the land in question from being made, as it was, when run out? M'Clellan’s First Venture was surveyed on the 20th of March 1776, and the contract then made, we are now called on to expound.

Nothing is more evident, than that every contract should depend on the law existing at the time it was made; and that the language in which a contract is expressed, should be construed to have the same meaning, as would have been given to it at the time it was used.

Let us examine the certificate in question by these, rules. In the year 1776 the surveyor, when he run the land, was bound to run the anterior tract, according to the expressions of the certificate' — By them he v/as governed; by them he was bound. If, at that period, an action of ejectment had been brought to recover any tract of land, containing courses and distances only, no other location would have been admitted, but such as they expressly pointed out; the least deviation from them, would have excluded the reading- of the patent at the trial of the cause.

ft was then not merely the custom to run as the needle pointed, but such was the. law of the land; and such would now have been the law, had the legislature not thought fit to have changed it.

If then in the year 1776, the beginning of MiClellan,s First Venture could only be ascertained by running the two first lines of Come by Chance at the point of the'uee-dle, and if such would have been the rule at this day, but for a Legislative interposition, our attention is naturally drawn to an examination of the law, by which that change has been made; and unless, by that law, we are compelled to give a location evidently different from that which was given when the land was taken up, it would seem to follow that no departure ought to be made from that survey.

But, so far from finding the legislature disposed to vary the survey, and thereby embracing within it, or excluding from it, land not originally included, we shall discover their [205]*205sole object to have been to confine the survey to the original land, and to confirm the purchaser in the particular land taken up by him.

By the 12th section of the act passed at November session 1781, eh. 20, which recites, “that whereas land originally included by the courses and distances, expressed in the certificate of lands heretofore granted, is now excluded by the variation of the compass, which ought not to be taken from the person claiming under such survey or grant, it is in substance enacted, that on the chancellor being satisfied as to the feet, he shall refuse a patent to any other person, who hath, or may survey the land, and shall give a confirmatory granr, gratuitously, to the originaltaker-up.

The courts of law, although not in words, authorized to act on the subject, have gone further than the letter of the law, grounding their decisions on its equity and spirit. The chancellor was empowered to refuse to the one, and to grant to the other, but should the same not have been brough* before him, as was the case in a variety of instances, then, except for the liberal construction, placed by the courts on this law, a junior patentee, holding land comprehended in a survey, would have retained it, notwithstanding the same was included within the lines of an ancient grant, and only excluded therefrom by the variation of the compass.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 H. & J. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-mclellan-md-1816.