Green v. Watson

34 Pa. 332
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 Pa. 332 (Green v. Watson) 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
Green v. Watson, 34 Pa. 332 (Pa. 1859).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thompson, J.

Both parties in this case claimed under a warrant issued to John Nicholson, dated the 5th of March 1793, for 1000 acres of land, on the waters of the west branch of the Susquehanna, which ivas duly surveyed and the return accepted at the land office, on March 21st 1807.

• The office of controller-general was created by the Act of the 15th of April 1782, and John Nicholson was appointed to fill it; and he continued to do so until in the year 1794. During that period, it has been estimated that over twenty-seven millions of public money passed through his hands, much complicated by its peculiar character, consisting to a large extent of paper, representing government credit in the shape of certificates, and paper money [335]*335more or less depreciated by the change of times. It is well known that, during his incumbency as controller-general, Mr. Nicholson invested very largely in the vacant lands of the Commonwealth, and acquired titles, legal and equitable, to some three million seven hundred acres of land, situate in, and scattered throughout thirty-nine of the present existing counties .of the state. In his office as controller-general, he became a large defaulter to the Commonwealth, most likely drawn into it by the application' of public moneys to the gratification of a most inordinate desire for the acquisition of real estate, the real or rather available value of which, he undoubtedly, at the time, much over estimated. Many of the western counties, as at present organized, were not then in existence, and the country west of the Allegheny mountains, especially west of the Allegheny river, was in almost a wilderness state. Many of his lands were located in this wild and almost uninhabited region. Under such circumstances, to realize money to enable him to discharge his liabilities- was wholly impracticable, whatever might have been his disposition-so to do. Notwithstanding Mr. Nicholson always denied any indebtedness to the Commonwealth, she brought suit in the Supreme Court, and recovered judgment against him, for the sum of $11,222.50, in December 1795; this, as the law then stood, operated as a lien throughout the Commonwealth : 1 Yeates 183. Afterwards, in 1796, on settlement of his accounts, on continental certificates, by the proper accounting officers, he was found to be in arrears to the amount of $51,209.22. This became a lien by virtue of the Act of 1785, and its supplements. In 1800, he was found to be further in arrears, in his accounts of certain 3 per cent stock, to the amount of $63,724.86. Thus there was a judicial lien, perhaps two, and two fiscal liens, against all his estate. The extent and number of the liens are not intended to be here avouched as precisely accurate — they are proximately so; — neither their nature nor amount are involved in this case, and they are only referred to, en passant, as the foundation of the sale by the Commonwealth to Mr. Baldwin, whose title both parties in this ejectment claim to hold. Nothing in the history of our Commonwealth has given rise to so much legislation and litigation, as these Nicholson liens and titles,-but which happily, may at this time, be considered finally settled and at rest. The private pecuniary embarrassments of Mr. Nicholson occasioned his arrest and imprisonment for debt in 1800, and he remained in confinement, until his decease in the same year.

But to the case in hand: — On the 31st of March 1806, an Act of Assembly, entitled “An Act for the more speedy and effectual collection of certain debts due this Commonwealth,” was passed. By the 1st section, Cadwallader Evans of Montgomery county, John Steele of Lancaster, and John Lyon of Uniontown, Fayette county,, were constituted commissioners, to [336]*336ascertain the condition, quality, and extent of the Nicholson estate, subject to the lien of the Commonwealth, and in what counties situate. They were, amongst other duties, required to average the demand of the state, on account of the lien, on .the several portions of the estate, according to the estimated value thereof, and report to the governor; who was required to cause the same to be sold by the sheriff of the respective counties, or so much thereof as should produce the amount averaged on each parcel of it: 8 Bioren L. 166.

In March following, a supplement to this act was passed, providing a further mode and manner of selling the Nicholson lands which were subject to the lien. The sales were to be made by the commissioners, under process from the governor. The act provided for cash sales — but conferred on the commissioners a discretion to defer payments; hut in no case for a longer period than four years, payable in instalments — the purchase-money to be secured by bonds, with security, to be approved by the commissioners, and to bear interest; the land in the mean time to be subject to the unpaid purchase-money. On making a sale, it became the duty of the commissioners, to deliver a certificate thereof, to the purchaser, and deposit with the state treasurer, the bond or bonds, if it was a sale on credit; and further to certify the same to the secretary of the Commonwealth, with the quantity, price, and how secured, to be registered and filed in his office; and who was required on application of any purchaser, and on the production of the certificate of the commissioners, together with the receipt of the state treasurer that the purchase-money was all paid, to execute a deed to the purchaser or his assignee, of all the interest of John Nicholson in the land, at the commencement of the lien of the Commonwealth; “which said conveyances, or copies of the records thereof, shall be primá facie evidence of ,the grantee’s title:" 8 Bioren L. 208.

On the 8th of July 1807, at one of these public sales of Nicholson lands, held by the commissioners, at Pittsburgh, the land in controversy, together with sixteen other tracts of 1000 acres each, were sold to Henry Baldwin, late of the Supreme Court of the United States, for the aggregate sum of $5100.62. The plaintiffs claim the tract in controversy by virtue of a treasurer’s sale of it to Andrew Wiggins, and deed dated September 16th, 1823, for the taxes of 1820-21.

The defendants, to defeat this title, rely upon the sale by the commissioners to Mr. Baldwin — a transfer by Baldwin and wife to George Bumford, in September 1835, and a deed from the Commonwealth to the latter, dated 2d October 1835. This deed recites the certificate of sale by the commissioners — the receipt for the purchase-money, in full, without specifying by whom paid, and the conveyance to Col. Bumford in 1835.

[337]*337Upon this showing, they contend that the sale for taxes is void. That, as the Commonwealth had not, in 1823, made a deed to the purchaser of the interest of Nicholson in the land, the title still remained in him; and that, by virtue of the 30th section of the Act of 1806, which exempted the Nicholson lands, bound by the lien of the Commonwealth, from sales for taxes, this tract was not the subject of a sale for taxes. This is the great point in the ease.

As we view the case, we do not think it material to examine the question, whether the Acts of 1808,1814,1819, and 1843, operated to repeal, by implication, the 10th section of the Act of 1806, exempting these lands from sale for taxes. It does not depend upon a solution of that question.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-watson-pa-1859.