Legan v. Stevens

1 Jeff. 30, 2 Va. Col. Dec. 156
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 15, 1736
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Jeff. 30 (Legan v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Legan v. Stevens, 1 Jeff. 30, 2 Va. Col. Dec. 156 (Va. Super. Ct. 1736).

Opinion

There has been a survey with a jury in the country, and a special verdict found here upon which the case is : in September, 1726, Colonel Tayloe, a sworn surveyor, surveyed, (or pretended to survey) for the lessor of the plaintiff, one thousand acres of land, of winch he returned a plat, and a patentwas granted, June 16, 1727. This land, except about sixty poles from the beginning, was not marked or measured before issuing of the patent, and this Chew, the lessor of the plaintiff, knew. The defendant af-terwards surveys one thousand acres, and obtained a patent in September, 1728, which takes in part of the land within the bounds of Chew’s patent. This was marked and measured, and the surveyor (the said Tayloe) told the defendant the land was free and not taken up before. It appearing by the jury’s report in the country, that die surveyor told Chew, when be began his survey and run the sixty poles, that he could not then finish it, being then Saturday night,-but would, when he came up to finish two other surveys he had begun the day before. It appears also, that in January, 1728, when tire defendant first began to seat his land, Chew forewarned him from digging upon the land in controversy. The survey is of no other use than to shew how the grants interfere, and the sole question in the case is, whether the grant to Chew, the lessor, be good or not. The objection is, that the surveyor’s returning a plat without marking and measuring die land, and that with Chew’s privity, is a false suggestion, and so the King was deceived, and his grant void. This point has been once already labored very strongly, and once your honors have determined that the grant is good ; but Sir John Randolph is now to convince you of your mistake. However, I hope this case will not be drawn into a precedent, that after judgment is passed, a cause shall be suffered to he argued again, because a lawyer or his client happen [31]*31not to be satisfied. It must be my task to endeavor to shew that this grant is good ; and although [ shall not produce so many cases as I presume you will be entertained with on the other side, I hope to prove, first, That there is no such deceit in this case as will make void the King’s grant; secondly, That to determine this grant void, will introduce a general mischief and inconvenience upon the subjects here. As to the first, the King is of that great eminence and consideration in the law, that many little defects and omissions will make his grant void, which, in the case of a common person have no effect. Such are mis-recitals, wrong suggestions, non-recitals, &c. But the reason is not, as I conceive, because the King’s honor was concerned, as was argued last court, but because the King is supposed to intend the great affairs of government, and cannot take notice of matters of lesser moment, as a common person may and ought to do. Hob. 224. And the true reasons, why the law adjudges the King’s grants void in cases of deceit, are first, To punish the party for his fraud ; secondly, To prevent damage and prejudice to the King’s interest, which would often happen if such grants were allowed. Hob. 223. Yet it is not every circumstance that may be called deceit, nor every wrong suggestion that will make the King’s grant void; and where the King is not deceived in the consideration, in his title, in the value of the land, or in the restraint he intended to make for his benefit, or generally where it is not to the prejudice of himself or his subjects, the grant will be good. Even false considerations will not always defeat the King’s grant; as where it is personal and executed, as for money paid Or service done; though the money was not actually paid or the service done, the grant will be good. 10 Rep. 67. 68. St. Saviours 13. patents 4. Mod. 415. Saund. 37. 3. Leon. 248. pi. 455. a. The reason is, though this be a deceit, yet the law does not esteem it so weighty or material as to destroy the grant. Hob. 223. If there was any thing in the argument of the King’s being injured in point of honor, this sort of deceit is as injurious to honor as any other; but as I never read or heard of that argument till last court, until' I have some better authority for it than Sir John Randolph, he must excuse me if I look upon it as a mere refined speculation of his own. In other cases it has been, drought to be for the honor of the King to make his grants valid, and not to destroy them : as in the point of construction, if two constructions can be made, and by one the grant will be void, and by the other good, for the honor of the King and benefit of the subject, such a construction shall be made as will support the grant. 10. Rep. 67. St. Saviours 6. Rep. 6. Sir John Molin. And certainly it is more for the honor of the King to pass over small faults, where it [32]*32is not to the prejudice of himself or subjects, than to be too rigorous in taking advantage of them. In the case of a common person, I am sure we should think so. 2. Just. 496. 497. 1 Mod. 96. read Hob. 222. and St. Saviours’ case, 2 Just. 2. Mod. L If the King by office found, has a manor in ward, and grants the said manor by a certain name, which said manor was lately seized in our hands, &c. and in truth the said manor was not seized, this shall not avoid the grant, though false, for it was not material, and was only added for the greater certainty of that which was certain enough before. 10. II. 4. 2. Sir John Le-strange cited in Legat’s case, 10. Rep. 113. &c. Queen Elizabeth granted to Thomas Markham the office of Keeper of parks or woods of B. which said office the Earl of Rutland lately held, whereas the said Earl never held the said office, and it was resolved by the Chancellor, Attorney, and Solicitor general, to whom it was referred, that the grant was good notwithstanding that false suggestion. So if the King demise a manor by special name, which manor was lately in the tenure of I. S. hut in truth he never had it, yet the grant is good; for in these cases the King is not deceived in his title, nor in the value of that he intended to grant, nor in the restraint which he, for his profit, intended to make. Sir Thomas Markham’s case, cited in Legat’s case, supra, quod lege. H. 7. anno 1719, granted to G. B. the mannor of B. in tail male, and anno 24. by letters patent reciting the former,-and that they were surrendered and cancelled, by virtue whereof, the King was seized in fee, granted the said manor to the said G. B. and T. Ms wife, and the heirs of G. (without any grant of the reversion) and the question was, if the reversion would pass by this last grant ? It was objected 1. That the estate tail was not recited as continuing, whereof the reversion might he granted, but as determined, and therefore the King granted it as a thing in possession, when he had only the reversion expectant. 2. The King thought by the surrender of the first letters patent the estate tail was determined, and that he was seized in fee, in which he was deceived. 3. The King was deceived in the estate he granted, for he intended to grant an estate in fee, in possession, and not a reversion expectant, but it was adjudged that the grant was good to pass the reversion, for here was no wrong done to any one, and less passed by the grant (viz. the reversion) than the King intended, and so no prejudice to him. 6. Rep. 55. Lord Chandos. Lege. 2. Mod. 1. Where was the King’s honor in this case, or those others I cited. Yet it is evident he was deceived, but the deceit was not material, no ways to his prejudice, and so not weighty enough to make void his grant. Many other instances of the like kind might. [33]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Jeff. 30, 2 Va. Col. Dec. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legan-v-stevens-vagensess-1736.