Lessee of Croghan v. Nelson

44 U.S. 187, 11 L. Ed. 554, 3 How. 187, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 44 U.S. 187 (Lessee of Croghan v. Nelson) 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
Lessee of Croghan v. Nelson, 44 U.S. 187, 11 L. Ed. 554, 3 How. 187, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 429 (1845).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKINLEY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a case certified to this court from the Circuit Court-for the district of Kentucky.

The plaintiffs brought an action of ejectment, in that court, against the defendants.; and to support their'.action, they read to the jury a patent for 1000 acres of- land, granted by tire state of Kentucky to Charles Croghan, hearing date the 29th of November,-1826, and provéd title in themselves by the will of the said Charles Croghan. The plat marked A was shown to the jury; and the surveyor proved, that the fork of Mayfield creek., at the letter A, was correctly laid down; that five huildred- poles; on a straight line, on the branch. leading from Mayfield creek, would extend the line to letter B, on *191 the plat, where one of the patent-corners was found; and that the plat truly represented the land, granted by the patent.

The defendant then read the following entry of William Croghan, assignee, for 1000 acres, dated 16thof August, 1784, on which the patent is founded, to wit: “ William Croghan, assignee, enters 1000 acres of land, part of a military warrant, No. 2023, beginning at a fork of Mayfield creek, about two1 miles By-water above Fort Jeffer.son, where a branch, occasioned by the high waters from the Mississippi, runs out of said creek, and at high water empties into the river at the upper end of the iron-banks; from said beginning 500 poles, when reduced to a straight line; and then off from the branch towards the Mississippi, on a line parallel to Mayfield creek, until a line from the extremity of said line', parallel with the first line, will strike Mayfield creek, to include the quantity.” The defendants then offered in evidence a patent from the state of Kentucky to Hugh' Nelson, for 103 acres of land, bearing date the 17th of December, 1830; and proved.by the surveyor, that the beginning of the entry .was at A, on the plat, and that the end of the first line was at B,' and if a line were run from B towards the Mississippi river, in a direction parallel with the general course of Mayfield creek,. for twelve miles above the fork at A, it would be tiered line extending from the letter B to the Mississippi river at F. It was also proved, if a line were run from, the comer at B parallel with Mayfield creek, below the fork, to the letter D, at the mouth of the creek, it would-run from B to E, and leave out the land claimed by the defendants. The surveyor- also .proved-, that the various lines on the' plat were correctly laid down from actual survey. ■

“ The counsel for the defendants then prayed the court to instruct the jury, if they believe, from the evidence, that the course of May-field creek from A to D. is correctly laid down, then a line from B towards the Mississippi river should be run parallel to that line, to conform to the entry; and if, in running that parallel line, they shall believe, from the evidence, that the improvement of- the defendants is left out, they ought to find- -for the defendants.-^ But^the court were divided in opinion on the point, whether the second line .called for in the entry should run from B to E, or, whether the line'from B to C should be taken'and recognised as the true and proper line, it being the line on which the patent was founded. One of the judges being of the opinión, that for all the land south and west-pf a line from B to E the patent was void; and the other judge being "of- a contrary opinion. They were also divided in opinion, for therforegoim•• ¡reasons, whether the foregoing instructions ought to be given or,.refused.”

By a statute’of Kentucky, passed the 26th of December, i820, it is required, that all .surveys thereafter to be -made on .entries west'-of Tennessee river should be run according to the calls of the eritry. And “to enable the-register to ascertain, whether the survey is made according to entry, a copy of the entry shall. be returned to the re *192 gister’s ^office, with the plat and certificate of survey; and any patent issuing on á survey made contrary to the location shall be void "to all intents and purposes,-so far as the'same may be differént and variant from the location.” Thé survey in this case was made on the 5th day of November, 1825; and, the patent; under which the 'defendants elaim, "dated the 17th day of December j 1830, was granted for land sold by the" state -subsequent- to. the date of the patent under which the plaintiffs claim title, and which covers part of the land claimed by the defendants. This brings in question, the legality of the survey, and the- construction of the entry on which it was made, and leads to an examination of the points certified for our determination.

But before we- enter on that duty it will -be proper to consider-the circumstances in which the locator was j>laced when he made the entry. It was. proved in the Circuit Court, that along this branch there was a very dense cane-brake, and the greater part of the land, covered by the patent is still a dense cane-brake. It was also proved, that a line run parallel with the' general' course of Mayfield creek, for twelve'miles abqve the fork, and crossing'the branch, at the "teVminafion of the 500 .poles, from A to B, on the plat, would strike-the Mississippi- river at F, on the plat, a considerable distance below Ihe corner called for in the patent at the letter C. ' And it appears by the plat that the ereek" continues to run- neárly the same course for 300 or 400 yards below the fork, and then runs north of northwest'for about 300 poles.Now"we have a right" to -infer, from the facts proved,' that all the land included in Croghan’s patent,.and all the river-bottom above Mayfield creek, at the date of the -entry, was a dense cane-brake'; because, if an object, pérmanent in its .nature, is proved to exist at' the time of the trial, it is fair to infer that it existed -at the time the entry was made. Crochet v. Greenup,4 Bibb, R. 158. The history and topography -of the great valley of the Mississippi proves satisfactorily, that, where there is a eane-braké now there was one sixty years ago ; and this fairly induces the belief that the cane.upon the rich and alluvion lands is coeval with the oldest trees'-of the forest. As the locator had the means of ascertaining the course of Mayfield creek above the fork, where it .ran across the high lands, and where there was no cane, it .is reasonable to suppose, from the calls of the. entry, that he believed that Mayfield creek, below the fork, ran. nearly at right' angles to the branch in its general course to the river. And he had a right, from the circumstances, also to believe, that the distance'from the fork of the creek to the river was about two miles, when in fact it was less 'than one mile.

It is obvious from these circumstances,' and the calls of the entry, that the locator believed the survey to' be made upon it would approach'as near to a parallelogram as the irregularity-of the two natural boundaries would permit. 'We are led to the conclusion, *193 therefore, that these mistakes were all occasioned by the impracticability of ascertaining the relative positions of the objects called for, and the courses and distances of the lines necessary to include the quantity of land specified in the entry. But mistakes of this character have "been corrected, as far as practicable, by the ¡courts of.

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Bluebook (online)
44 U.S. 187, 11 L. Ed. 554, 3 How. 187, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lessee-of-croghan-v-nelson-scotus-1845.