Lawrence v. Hunter

9 Watts 64
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Watts 64 (Lawrence v. Hunter) 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
Lawrence v. Hunter, 9 Watts 64 (Pa. 1839).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The first error assigned is a bill of exception to the opinion of the court below, rejecting a survey, or the notes of one, made by the deputy surveyor of the district at the time, including the land in question, for Philip Lawrence, the ancestor of the plaintiff in error, as an actual settler thereon. The objection to its admission as it appears from the face of the bill of exceptions is, that it did not designate the same boundaries or quantity of land claimed by the plaintiff in error, who was the defendant in the court below, in his special defence. But it has been further objected here in argument, that it was a mere nullity and had no efficacy in it whatever for any purpose; because the land embraced by it had been previously granted by the state to the defendant in error, and therefore was rendered incapable of being taken up by the ancestor of the defendant below, by his making a settlement upon it, and having a survey made thereof by the deputy surveyor of the district within which it lay at the time; and therefore as the land lay north and west of the rivers Ohio and Allegheny and Conewango creek, the settlement and improvement made upon it by him enured to the benefit of the plaintiff below. The land, from its situation, falls within the provisions of the act of the 3d of April 1792. By this act lands lying within that section of the state, not previously or subsequently appropriated to any public or charitable use, were made liable either to be obtained from the state by warrant upon payment of the purchase-money in the first instance, subject, however, to the condition of a subsequent settlement and improvement to be commenced thereon by the warrantee within two years thereafter, and to be continued for the space of five years; or by a settlement and improvement being made thereon in the first place, to be followed by a survey thereof made by the deputy surveyor of the district at any time after the settlement, and the payment of the [74]*74purchase-money and procurement of a warrant therefor within ten years from the date of the act. By the 8th section the deputy surveyor of the proper district is expressly required, upon the application of any person who shall have made an actual settlement and improvement on lands lying north and west of the rivers Ohio and Allegheny and Cone wango-creek, and upon payment of the legal fee, to survey and mark out the lines of the tract of land to which, such person may, by conforming to the provisions of the act, become entitled by virtue of such settlement and improvement. A survey made in such case by the proper deputy surveyor must undoubtedly be regarded as an official survey; as much so at least as if it had been made in pursuance of a warrant; because it has been made by a public officer appointed for that purpose by the state, and in pursuance of the requisition of the act, which is of equal authority with any warrant that can be issued from the land office. Now had Philip Lawrence, the ancestor, taken out a warrant for the land and procured a survey to be made of it in pursuance thereof, by the deputy surveyor, when he first made his settlement upon it, instead of settling and improving thereon as he did; and after this had been done, he had entered- upon the land and settled there with his family, and so continued to reside thereon, improving it as he did until his death, and it had then descended to his two sons, George and the defendant below, who taking possession thereof had continued the settlement and improvement in the same manner that they have done, I would ask, could it be doubted that the warrant and survey in such case, although void and of no effect whatever as against the warrant and survey of the plaintiff, and notwithstanding the settlement and improvement enured to his benefit, would have been admissible in evidence for the purpose of showing the- extent of the actual and adverse possession of the ancestor? certainly not, whether decided upon reason or authority; because it would have gone to prove the common and ordinary case of what is called colour of title; and as Philip Lawrence the ancestor had entered and taken possession under it, his possession therefore would have been rendered coextensive with his survey. It is a mistake to suppose in such case that the extension of the disseisor’s possession to the lines of his survey depends upon its validity: for it would be absurd to hold that to be valid, which at most only tended to show colour of title; a thing that every one considers invalid; in short null and void. The survey in such case, though of no efficacy in giving a title to the land, yet being made by a public officer of the state professing to act under the authority of law, may be considered apparently of some virtue, and be received as evidence to show the extent of the possession which the party for whom it was made intended to take, and has taken, by entering upon the land and remaining there, occupying and improving it as the absolute owner thereof. His actual possession will be considered as-having reference to his survey, and be taken to. extend to its utmost [75]*75limits, so as to repel that constructive possession of the land beyond his pedis possessio, which otherwise would be ascribed to the true owner in virtue of his better right. The evidence offered of the survey would, therefore, had it been received, have gone to prove a disseisin of the plaintiff of'all his land included within the lines' of the survey made for the ancestor of the defendant below. This fact, had it been established in connection with what was shown' and not denied, that the ancestor had'diod in the possession of the land, and that thereupon it descended to his sons George and Philip, the plaintiff’s right of entry wouldhave been shown to have been' taken away. Littleton,sect. 385; Co. Litt. 237, a. That this would* have been the result had the evidence been admitted can not, I think, be refuted; because it is impossible, to assign any reason foy excluding the evidence offered, that.would not also with the same force and application go to exclude the supposed survey made in' pursuance of a warrant granted- to the ancestor of the defendant’ below, before he entered upon the land.- In principle the two surveys are alike, for neither can be considered as good or valid in law;-the one is as much a-nullity in every respect as the other, where the land inclosed by them has been previously appropriated-under a prior grant from the state. A deputy surveyor is forbidden.1' to make a survey under a junior-warrant upon land previously-surveyed under a prior warrant; and if he does so,it will be deemed' void; and more than this can not be predicated"of a survey made'by him, in virtue of a settlement- actuálly made on'land lying north" and west of the rivers Ohio and'Allegheny and-Conewango creek; that has been previously, surveyed'under-a-warrant: They are1 both necessarily alike inefficacious, because it would be contrary* to every-principle of natural justice as'well'as’to the constitution* and laws of the state, that they should- affect or take away- rights' vested under prior grants. But-still, notwithstanding their absolute* invalidity, as they are both made uhder the appearance' of authority, and by an-officer on behalf of the state appointed for that purpose, they are therefore looked on as official, not as mere private surveys;* and- as.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Watts 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-hunter-pa-1839.