Lessee of Mercer v. Selden

42 U.S. 37, 11 L. Ed. 38, 1 How. 37, 1843 U.S. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 42 U.S. 37 (Lessee of Mercer v. Selden) 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 Mercer v. Selden, 42 U.S. 37, 11 L. Ed. 38, 1 How. 37, 1843 U.S. LEXIS 285 (1843).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McLEAN.

This case is brought before this court, from the Circuit Court of the eastern district of Virginia, by a writ of error. .

An action of ejectment was commenced by the lessors of the plaintiff, to recover possession of certain undivided interests in a tract of land in Loudon county.

On the trial, the jury found a statement of facts, on which the questions of law mainly arise.

Mary Mason Selden was seised and possessed in fee simple of certain tracts of land in the. county of Loudon, estimated to contain four thousand acres, a part of which is the land in controversy. She intermarried with Mann Page, who died in 1779, leaving his wife and three infant children, John, William Byrd,, and Jane Byrd. Mrs. Page continued a widow, seised in her own right, until 1782, when she married Wilson Cary Selden; who in right of his wife entered upon and held the lands. Soon Pfter the marriage, Selden became guardian of the three infant children aforesaid, gave bonds, &c., and continued to act as guardian during the minorities .of the two sons, and until the marriage of the daughter.

On the 22d Decembér, 1784, Selden and wife conveyed in fee simple to Cary Selden, father of the husband, the whole of the four thousand acres of land, with the exception of two thousand acres deeded to W. B. Page. Mrs. Selden was privily examined as the statute requires. This deed was acknowledged and recorded by Selden the 14th April, 1818, long alter the decease of the grantee. On the 1st January, 1785, Cary Selden and wife re-conveyed the land, with the exception above stated, to Wilson C. Selden; which deed was also recorded the 14th April, 1818. '

Selden and wife, previously to the execution of the above *49 deed to Cary Selden, made a deed to William Byrd Page, son of Mrs. Selden by her first marriage, for two thousand acres, part of the above tract of four thousand acres; which deed was never recorded and cannot now be found. From the time of their marriage, Selden and wife had their permanent dwelling in the county of Gloucester, until they removed to the county of Elizabeth City, where they established their residence. In September, 1787, Mrs. Selden, being in a low state of health, accompanied by her husband on a return from the Springs, was taken extremely ill at Winchester, in Frederick county, Virginia, where she died on the 17th of that month. Two days previous to her death Mrs. Selden, with her husband, executed a second deed to William Byrd Page, for two thousand acres by certain metes and bounds, and also a deed to Doct. Robert Mackay for two thousand acres, being the residue of the four thousand acres in Loudon aforesaid. On the 17th, it being the day of her decease, the privy examination of Mrs. Selden was taken to the above deeds, by three justicés of the peace of Frederick county, under a commission issued by the clerk of Loudon county. Selden, on the 8th October, 1787, acknowledged the above deeds, and they were ordered to be recorded. On the 17th September aforesaid, and after the decease of Mrs. Selden, Mackay re-conveyed the land conveyed to him as above stated, to Wilson C. Selden. This deed was recorded the 8th October ensuing.

From the time of his marriage to the decease of Mrs. Selden, Selden, in right of his wife, held possession of the premises in controversy. After her death he continued to hold possession, taking the rents, issues, and profits for his own use; claiming the land under the above deed. In 1818, when the legal sufficiency of that deed was questioned, he caused the deeds to and from his father to be recorded, as above stated, and so continued to claim the premises under both deeds, and to exercise acts of ownership over the land until his death, in 1835. Between the years 1796 and 1812, Selden sold, conveyed, and delivered possession to different persons, and among others to Thomas Swann, who had intermarried with Jane Byrd Page, various parcels of the land.

In April, 1794, Jane Byrd Page, with the consent of her guardian, she being. under twenty-one -.years of age, married *50 Thomas Swann; and died the 31st October, 1812, leaving seven infant children, .her heirs at law. Among others, Mary Scott, one of the lessors of the plaintiff, who, in June, 1818, being under twenty-one years of age, intermarried with John Mercer, one of the lessors of the plaintiff. In 1796, having received from Selden ¿8640, Thomas Swann executed a receipt, fully discharging him as guardian. John Pagé, the eldest son of Mrs, Selden, died in 1800, having devised all his estate, real and personal, aftér the death- óf his widow, -Elizabeth K. Page, to two of the children of his brother William Byrd Page, to wit: William B. Page and Mary M. Page, and to three of the children of his sister, Jane B. Swann, to wit: Edward, Maryland Thomas, as tenants in common. Edward and Thomasedied intestate, and without issue. Mary intermarried as above stated with John Mercer. ~

After John Page, the above testator, had attained full- age, on the 21st December, 1792, he settled, with Selden, his guardian, and executed to him a release from all demands.

Thomas Swann, surviving his wife, conveyed by deed duly executed'all.his interest in the premises to his surviving children.

After William Byrd Page, had attained full age, he made a claim against Selden, on account of. inequality in the partition of the aforesaid four thousand acres of land, which claim was finally adjusted sby the payment of one thousand pounds, and the purchase of five hundred acres of his land .by Selden. And after-wards, on the 23d July,.1794, Page, having received full satisfac- - tion from Selden as guardián, executed to him a release, &c.

From the death of Wilson Cary Selden Up to the present time, the defendant, his son, has held the actual possession of the pre-' mises in dispute, claiming the same as his own, undér the will of his father.

On the 6th December, 1819, the lessors of the plaintiff, claiming as heirs of Mrs. Swann, with others,- instituted their suit in the Superior Court of Chancery held at Winchester, against Wilson Cary Selden and others, claiming the lands now in controversy, Upon certain defects, in' the conveyances under which Selden claimed, and upon alleged equities. Answers were filed, and upon the final hearing in October, 1830, a decree was pronounced, whereby the court, “ disclaiming jurisdiction of the alleged imperfections in the conveyances, aforesaid, but taking jurisdiction *51 of the matters of equity, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiffs’ bill should be dismissed with cpsts, but without prejudice to any suit at law-which the plaintiffs might be advised to prosecute on account of thei,alleged legal defects, or want of validity in the said deeds.” This decree, on an appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeals, was affirmed the 17th of April, 1837.

This cause has been ably and elaborately argued. Some .points have been made and illustrated with great research ánd ingenuity, which, from the view taken of the case by the court, are not essentially involved in the decision. Among these are the construction of the statutes under which the deed from Selden and wife to Cary Selden, in 1784, was executed and recorded; and also the deed from Selden and wife to Mackay, in 1787.

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Bluebook (online)
42 U.S. 37, 11 L. Ed. 38, 1 How. 37, 1843 U.S. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lessee-of-mercer-v-selden-scotus-1843.