Kerr v. Watts

19 U.S. 550, 5 L. Ed. 328, 6 Wheat. 550, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 16, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 19 U.S. 550 (Kerr v. Watts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr v. Watts, 19 U.S. 550, 5 L. Ed. 328, 6 Wheat. 550, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 374 (1821).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause has its origin in the case decided in this Court between Watts and Massie, in the year 1810.

*558 Former decision in this case revised and confirmed. Hole in Eqtoity as to who are necessary parties, how far applicable to this case.

That suit came up from the Kentucky District, and was prosecuted there because Massie, the defendant, then resided in that State, and either was, or was supposed to be, actually seised of the land in question.

Since that decision, it has been ascertained that the present defendants are in possession of the land, or the greater part of it; and Massie also having changed his residence to Ohio, this suit has become necessary, both to enforce the former decree against him, and to obtain relief against the actual possessors of the land.

In the course of discussion, the Court has been called on to review its decision in Watts and Massie, arid it has patiently heard, and deliberately considered, the able and well-conducted argument ou this subject. But, after the maturest reflection, it adheres.to the opinion that, whether the case be viewed with reference to the time, intent, and meaning of the calls, to analogy to decided cases, or convenience in the voluntary adoption of a principle of the most general application ; that laid down in the case of Watts and Massie, for running the lines of the land called for, cannot be deviated from. So far, therefore, ás Massie himself, and his privies in estate, are concerned, Watts is now entitled to the full benefit of that decision.

But there are various other defendants, and several, grounds of defence assumed in this case, which are unaffected by the decision referred to.

It is contended, in the first place, that there is a radical defect of parties. That the representatives *559 of O'Neal and Seott,~throughwhoth the complainant éláims, and those of Powell and Thomas Massie, supposed to be. hostile to his interests, ought to. have been made parties.

~rinc~p~e applied to the re~ lief of bone fide purchasers without notice, not applicable to this case.

On this point there may be `given one general answer. No one• need be made a party complainant in whom there exists no jr rest, and no one party defendant from whom not~ung is demanded. Watts rests his case upon the averment .that all the interests once vested in O'Neal and the Seots, now centre in bimself~ and, provided he can recover the land now In possession of those actually made defendants, he is contented• ~afterwards to meet the just claims of any Others who are not made defendants. No rights w~1l be affected by his recovery, but those of the actual defendants, and those claiming through them. As to the supposed . interference of the lines ordered. to be surveyed, with those of Thomas Massie, or Powell, the former is merely hypothetical by way of reference, or imaginary; and' the latter is only asserted on the ground that Massie had, acquired all• the interest in Powell's survey that Powell ever had. There was therefore nothing to demand of Powell, as the `case is exhibited by the record. . It must be subject to these modifications, that the obiter dict~im~ of the Court, in the case of Simms and Guthrie, is to be understood.

It is next contended, in behalf of Ker~, an ci several other defendants, that they claim through purchasers who were bona Jide purchasers without notice, fQr a valuable ~onsideration. And at first view it would seem, that the principles so often applied to the re *560 lief of innocent purchasers, are applicable to the case of these defendants, wherever the facts sustain the defence. But it. will n~ do at this day, to apply this principle to the case of purchasers of military land-warrants, derived under the laws of Virginia. in all the Courts in which such cases have come under review, the purchasers have been considered as affected by the record notice of the entry, and also of the survey, such as it legally ought to be made, as incident to, or bound up in the entry. It is altogether a system sui generis, and subsequent purchasers are considered as acquiring the interest of the entror, and not necessarily that of the State. So that purchasers under conflicting entries are considered as purchasing under distinct rights, in which case the principle here contended for does not apply; since the ignorance of a purchaser of a defective ti - tie, cannot make that title good, as against an independent and better right. rilbese principles may safely be laid hold of, to support a doctrine which, however severe occasionally in its operation, was perhaps indispensable tè the protection of the interests acquired under military land-warrants, wh~n we take into .consideration the facility with which such interests might otherwise, in all cases, have been defeated by early transfers.

The former decree, how far ~`ouclusiye in die nresent case.

It is further contended, that the defendants are not bound by the decree in the case of I'Vatts and Massie, becauseneither parties, nor privies, nor pen-dente lite purchasers. - - -

That those who come not into this Court, in any one of those characters, are not subject to the direct *561 and binding efficacy of an adjudication, is unquestionable. But it is not very material as to the principal question in this case, whether the parties are to be. affected -by the former adjudication directly, or by the declared adherence of this Court to the doctrines established in that case. The consequence to the parties on the merits of the case is the same.

But in one view it'is material, and that is with regard to the proof of the exhibits, through which Watts, the complainant, deduces his title through the Scots from O’Neal.. As Massie, in the former case, (the record of which is made a proof of this,) acquiesced in this deduction of Watts’ title; we are of opinion that it is, as to him and his privies in estate, a point conceded. As to parties and privies, the principle cannot be contested ; and as to pendente lite purchasers, .it is not necessary to determine the question, since the only defendants who have appealed from the decision below, to wit, Kerr, the Kirkpa-tricks, Doolittle, and the Johnsons, claim under purchases made long anterior to this scrip, in Kentucky.

Those defendants certainly were entitled to a plenary defence, and where they have, by their answers, put the complainant upon proof of his allegátions, as to his deduction of title, the question arises, whether it appears from the record that the deduction of title was legally proved.

There can be no doubt that this question passed sub silentio in the Court below, but it does not appear from any thing on the record, that the point was waived ; and we are not at liberty to look be *562 yond the record for the evidence on which the deduction of title was sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 U.S. 550, 5 L. Ed. 328, 6 Wheat. 550, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-watts-scotus-1821.