Henegar v. Seymour

93 Tenn. 253
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 93 Tenn. 253 (Henegar v. Seymour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henegar v. Seymour, 93 Tenn. 253 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is an action of ejectment to recover a tract of land alleged to he located in Monroe and Polk Counties.

[254]*254'Corn plain ants claim as the heirs of Erancis W. Lea, who, in his life-time, July 7, 1858, obtained a grant for it from the State of Tennessee.

On the trial of the cause in the Court below,, the Chancellor held that complainants had failed to sustain the allegations of their bill, and dismissed the same, and they have appealed and assigned as error the finding of the Chancellor against their contention.

The facts of the case, so far as they need to be stated, are- as follows: Prior to 1819 the United States Government bought of the Cherokee Indians all their claim to the lands embraced in what was known as the Hiwassee Land District, having previously ceded the same to the State of Tennessee, subject to this Indian claim. After this purchase-was made, the State of Tennessee appointed Commissioners to lay off the district into ranges, townships, sections, and fractions of sections. In June,. 1819, some disagreement having arisen with the Indians in ■ regard to the boundary line of the district, P. Houston and James McIntosh, on the-part of the United States, and “Squire” and “ Crow,” on the part of the Cherokee tribe of Indians, were appointed Commissioners to resurvey and remark the line, which they proceeded to do, and on June 12, 1819, they agreed upon and signed their report at the forks of the Nautagulee and Cowee Rivers'.

• The Cherokees owned a section of country adjoining the Hiwassee purchase, lying south and [255]*255east of it, which, became known as th,e Ocoee District. This was also purchased at a later date,, and in 1836 the State of Tennessee directed a survey of this district into ranges, townships, sections,, and fractions of sections.

The line between the two districts ran in a direction north 18° west from the beginning corner on the bank of the Hiwassee River, and the township lines were intended to close upon it, but could not do so, at right-angles, and the consequence was a great number of fractional sections- and quarters were formed.

Maps and surveys were filed in each district, showing the township, sections, and fractional divisions and lines, but the lengths of the fractional-lines abutting on the boundary line were not given,, but only the fractional areas.

On February 25, 1854, the' State of Tennessee-passed an Act authorizing the entry and grant of' all unsurveyed lands in the Ocoee District, and in. 1859 Francis W. Lea. obtained a grant under this. Act for 8,270 acres of land. Complainants claim as his heirs, and their contention is that there is a strip of unsurveyed land lying between the Hi-wassee and Ocoee Districts on the Ocoee side of' the Indian boundary line.

Defendants also hold under a chain of title from the State of Tennessee by numerous grants. Their contention is that there is no unsurveyed or vacant unsectionized lands between the two districts, but that the lines of the sections and fractional sec[256]*256tions of surveyed lands in the two districts approach each other until they meet upon a common line, which is the original boundary line of 1819, and, second, that as to a large portion of the land embraced in complainants’ grant, the grant is void, because the land was, at the time the grant was issued, in the actual adverse possession and occupation of defendants and their predecessors under older grants.

Complainants caused the lines called for by their grant to be run out by actual survey, using in making the survey not only the calls in complainants’ grant, but also the calls of the fractional sections abutting on the district lines on both the Iliwassee and Ocoee sides, as obtained from their respective land-offices, and upon completing such survey the surveyor came to the conclusion that there was an area of 3,610 acres of land not covered by defendants’ title, or any other, and not sectionized, but laying like a gore between the two districts, and it is this strip or gore which complainants claim, disclaiming all right to any land •covered by the calls of defendants’ title-papers, or lying in the sectionized portion of the Ocoee District, and disclaiming all right to any lauds in the Iliwassee District.

It will thus be seen that the controversy narrows itself down to the question whether there is .■any vacant or unseetionized lauds in the Ocoee District abutting on this Indian boundary line.

Defendants have also caused surveys to be made [257]*257of tlie locality, and various tests to be applied, and the contention of each party is liberally illustrated by handsome maps covering all the territory and fully sustaining the opposite contentions, and in each case showing the utter impossibility of the correctness of the opposing theory from the stand-point taken. The accuracy and competency of the surveyors is called m question. It is said that the defendants’ surveyors are not experts, that they did not locate the Indian boundary line, nor attempt to do so, and that their testimony and conclusion is based upon the laws fixing the boundaries of the two districts rather than upon any actual surveys and personal observations.

On the other hand, it is shown that complainants’ surveyor is incompetent; that he has had an experience of only five years in Georgia, and none in the mountains of East Tennessee; that he guessed at his beginning corner, and in attempting to follow the Indian boundary line of 1819 he placed the variation of the compass needle on the wrong side of the meridian line; that he professed to find land-marks of the old line run in 1819 upon trees in a locality where it is shown the forest trees had been cleared away and the land cultivated for more than twenty years, and which had since been covered with, a second or undergrowth for thirty years; that he also professed to find marked trees in other localities where it appeared the land had been, cleared and in cultivation for forty year's.

[258]*258Upon an inspection of the title-papers of the contesting parties, and a comparison of their maps, and the statements of the surveyors explaining the same, we are of opinion that complainants have failed to show satisfactorily that there is any vacant or unsectionized lands in the Ocoee District, bordering on this Indian lihe between the two districts covered by their grant.

The testimony of Thomas, their surveyor, is wholly overthrown by that of Waring, Muller, Deakins, and McG-uffey, the surveyors of defendants.

These latter gentlemen appear to be ■ competent, intelligent, experienced surveyors and engineers of many years’ standing and practice in their profession, with much experience in surveying mountain and other lands in the locality, and in locating old lines, including this Indian boundary line, which had been located by them in many places in the native forests, after reaching Starr’s Mountain. Each of these surveyors states that from actual measurement and personal observations and experiments with various fractional and sectional lines, it is impossible that there should be a vacant gore or strip between the two districts. They explain that, while there is an apparent shortage in some of the fractional lines, and that others are too long, so as to cause at some places an interlap of the lines from the two districts, there is no discrepancy of any consequence at any place, and no more than would naturally, and does usu

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93 Tenn. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henegar-v-seymour-tenn-1893.