Jackson v. Dilworth

39 Miss. 772
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 Miss. 772 (Jackson v. Dilworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Dilworth, 39 Miss. 772 (Mich. 1861).

Opinion

Handy, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of .tbe court:

This was a petition filed by the plaintiffs in error for a mandamus, requiring the defendant in error, as secretary of state, to issue to them a patent for a tract of land lying in Attala county ; and tbe case presented by the record is as follows:

On the 31st December, 1853, one Thomas Green located scrip for submerged lands issued to Tunica county, upon the land in controversy, and on the same day a patent thereon was issued to him by the secretary of state for the same land, lying in Attala county. This scrip was issued in virtue of the Act of 15th March, 1852, ch. 16, and it was located and the patent issued under the authority -of the same Act.

Scrip was issued to Attala county in virtue of the Act of 16th March, 1852, ch. 14; and Jackson and Zollicoffer became the purchasers of a part of said scrip for forty acres, dated 9th December, 1853, and duly indorsed and sold by the commissioner appointed for that purpose by the board of police of Attala county; and the purchasers indorsed on the said scrip that they had located it on a specified parcel of land, being a part of the same land embraced in the scrip and patent issued to [774]*774Green. On the 20th April, 1857, Jackson and Zollicoffer presented this scrip to the secretary'of state and demanded of him a patent to be issued thereon to them; but the demand was refused, on the ground that a patent for the same land had been previously issued to Green in virtue of the scrip held by him as above stated. And thereupon this action was instituted by the plaintiffs in error.

The rights of the parties depend mainly on the proper construction of the Acts of 15th and 16th March, 1852; and the first question to be considered is, whether the Act of 15th March authorizes warrants, issued under the provisions of the thirteenth section of the Act, to the counties therein named, to be located on any submerged lands lying in other counties than those specified and not before located. We must examine the general scope and object of this Act, as well as the language employed in many of its provisions, in determining this question.

The title of the Act shows its. general object to have been " to provide for the construction of a levee upon the Mississippi river and for the reclamation of the State and school lands.” Its first eleven sections relate to sales of the five hundred thousand acres of land donated to the State by the United States, directing how such sales shall be made and the proceeds appropriated, and that the proceeds of the sale of the first sixty thousand acres shall be applied to the construction of levees in the counties of Tunica, De Soto, Coahoma, and Bolivar, and that the residue be held for internal improvement and appropriated to that object by the Legislature.

The twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth sections relate to providing a fund for the construction of levees in certain counties on the Mississippi river, viz., De Soto, Tunica, Coahoma, Bolivar, Washington, and Issaquena; and prescribing the mode in which the fund shall be used for that purpose. This plan commences, in the Act, with the twelfth section, which very clearly confines it to the counties named, and shows that other counties not named were not to be embraced in the policy. That section provides 'that lists and maps of the lands lying in those counties shall be made, showing the [775]*775sections and parts of sections of land, which were tQ constitute the levee fund for the purposes of the Act. This provision does not embrace other counties.

The five following sections plainly have reference to the lands in the counties named, as constituting the fund upon which the levee scrip was to be issued. The thirteenth section provides for issuing scrip to the presidents of the boards of police for the same counties, "to be used in the construction of levees in their respective counties.” Various other provisions showing the same intent are contained in that and in the fifteenth section, and finally the seventeenth section provides that “from, and after the 1st October, 1853, all of said swamp lands lying within the counties above named, which shall remain unappropriated,” shall be subject to entry at one dollar per acre.

It is insisted, in behalf of the defendant in error, that the language of the form .of the warrant for scrip prescribed by the thirteenth section shows that the warrant was intended to be located upon any of the submerged lands donated to the State by the Act of Congress and not before located under a like certificate, though it did not lie within the counties named in that section.

This view, though rendered plausible by the words of the Act, is not sustained by its spirit shown by the context. The language used is, that the holder of the warrant “ is entitled to one quarter section of any land, not before located under certificate of like character, of the submerged lands donated by Congress to the State of Mississippi.”

We have above seen that the swamp lands in the particular counties named were intended by the Act to be appropriated as a fund for the construction of levees in those counties. The lands are set apart for the benefit of those counties, and the fund for the construction of levees in them was intended to be derived from those lands. It would be doing great violence to the general purview of these sections of the Act to say that thé lands lying in the counties named were subject to location under scrip held by other counties; for not only are these lands 'set apart for the levee fund of the counties in which they lie, but the form of the certificate entitles the holder to locate it on any [776]*776submerged, land not before located “ under certificate of like character — that is to say, under one of tbe warrants authorized by this Act. There were no certificates of like character” but those authorized by this Act; and hence the lands were not subject to location but by one of these certificates.

The general words in the form of the warrant contained in the thirteenth section must therefore be controlled by the scope and policy of the whole plan of providing a levee fund for the counties named, as shown by the accompanying sections; and it appears to be clear that the warrant could only be located on submerged lands lying within the counties named in the thirteenth section and not before located under a certificate of like character.

This view of the subject, founded upon the Act itself, is rendered still more manifest when we consider the contemporaneous Acts of the Legislature appropriating and granting to other counties and districts other lands within their limits.

By the Act of 12th March, 1852, ch. 84, the swamp and overflowed lands lying on Pearl river are granted to certain named counties situate on that river; and by the Act of 3d March, 1852, ch. 45, swamp lands lying on Homochitto and Leaf rivers are granted to the counties situate thereon, for the purpose of improvement of the navigation of those rivers, and of reclaiming the swamp lands overflowed by their waters.

By the Act of 16th March, 1852, ch. 14, the swamp and overflowed lands lying within another specified district, embracing the county of Attala, are appropriated to the reclamation of the lands on the rivers and streams within the district specified, and for the improvement of their navigation, and are “ granted to the counties in which they are situated for said purposes.”

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Bluebook (online)
39 Miss. 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-dilworth-miss-1861.