Littlepage v. Fowler

24 U.S. 215, 6 L. Ed. 458, 11 Wheat. 215, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 307
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 22, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 U.S. 215 (Littlepage v. Fowler) 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
Littlepage v. Fowler, 24 U.S. 215, 6 L. Ed. 458, 11 Wheat. 215, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 307 (1826).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause comes up by appeal from the Circuit Court of Kentucky, in which the appellant filed his bill to compel the defendants to convey to him 20,000 acres of land in right of a prior e -try. The defendants, having obtained the prior patent, relied upon their prior legal rights; and, on the hearing below, the bill was dismissed. The entry on which the complainants relied was in these words :

Entry.

January 27, 1783. John Carter Littlepage enters 20,000 acres of land on twenty treasury warrants, No. 8,859, &c. beginning at the mouth of a creek falling into the main fork of Licking, on the north side below some cedar cliffs, and *217 about thirty-five miles above the Upper Blue Lick, and running from said beginning up the north side of Licking, and bending with the same, as far as will amount to ten miles when reduced to a straight line, thence extending from each end of said reduced line in- a northwardly course at right angles to the same for quantity.”

The only question in the cause is, whether this entry contains that legal precision which the land laws of Kentucky require to make an entry a valid appropriation of the land. For the defendants, it is contended, that it is vague, and calculated either to mislead a subsequent locater, or impose upón him an unreasonable labour in the effort to identify it.

Question on the validity of this entry.

On this subject, the rule of the law of that State, and the rule of reason, is, that the objects called for to designate the land appropriated, should be specific ; and, if not notorious in themselves, that they should be so indicated with reference to those which are notorious, as to enable a subsequent locater to discover and identify them by using ordinary diligence.

General mío as to the valia¡ty of entries

The locative calls in this cause are, a creek emptying into the main fork of Licking on the north side, below some cedar cliffs. It. is not pretended, that these objects have the attribute of notoriety, and, in order to lead to their discovery, the subsequent locater is referred to the main branch pf Licking river, and the Upper Blue Lick, which are notorious, and to' the position and distance of the beginning point of the entry, with reference to the lick and the river.

*218 A subsequent locater, then, having this entry in his hand, and proposing to appropriate the adjacent residuum, proceeds to the lick as his starting point; when there, he knows that the land lies above him with reference to the river, upon the river bank, and, in the language of the entry, “ about thirty-five miles above the Upper Blue Lick.”

On what principle is the distance called for to be computed?

The first question which then occúrs to him, isthat which has constituted the principal subject of argument in this cause. Upon what principle is the distance here called for to be computed ? For the appellant, it is contended, that he should pursue the meanders of the .river, or the most practicable route by land ; for the appellee, that he must apply the mathematical principle to the entry, and take the shortest line that can be drawn between the twp points; and both contend, that they are sustained by adjudicated cases.

Examination of the cases of this subject.

We have examined those cases, and are satisfied, that neither party is supported in his doctrine as a universal principle; but that the Courts of Kentucky, with that good sense which uniformly distinguishes their efforts to extricate themselves from that chaos of rights in which political relations, and inveterate practice, had involved them, have left each case to be governed by its own merits, wherever distance has been resorted to as the means of identifying a locative call. And certainly the sense in which the enterer uses the reference to distance, is the only general rule that can govern a Court in con *219 struing an entry. That sense may be gathered from his language, or inferred from the habits of men, and the state of the country ; but, as he is responsible for the sufficiency of his entry, it would be unfair to impose an arbitrary and unusual meaning upon the language of unlettered men, exploring a country covered with thickets, and replete with dangers.

For these reasons, the straight line, as the means of - ascertaining a locative call, has certainly been rejected as a general rule. Such was the case in Hite v. Graham et al. (2 Bibb. Rep. 144, 145.) M‘Kee v. Bodley, (2 Bibb. Rep. 482.) Whitaker v. Hale et al. (1 Bibb. Rep. 79.) As the method of surveying an entry, .however, the meanders of a river are always reduced to a straight line, and to this class of cases are all those quoted for the appellee to be refered. (Craig v. Hawkins’ Heirs, 1 Bibb. Rep. 53. and many others.) Yet; in the case of M‘Kee. v. Bodley, before cited, both the direction and admeasurement of a straight line are resorted to for the purpose of verifying a call lying on the side of a road. And the reason is obvious ; in that case, the shortness of the line, as well as the phraseology of the entry, rendered it admissible that the enterer referred to distance as ascertained by>direct measurement..

One general rule is never departed from, to wit, that when distance is indicated by a road, it shall be held to mean, by the meanders of a road. (Whitaker v. Hale, supra; and passim.) So, also, where there is no road or trace, the most *220 usualroute,iftherebe proved such a route to exist, seems to be the rule. So it is laid down in Hite v. Graham et al. in which, also, the general rule as to the sense in which the language of entries is to be received, is explicitly declared to.be “ according to the popular acceptation at the time when the entry was mad?.” And, although, in the case of White v. Wilson, (3 Bibb. Rep. 542.) a learned Judge is reported to have said, “ that there seems to be a diversity of opinion as to the most natural-construction of a locative call in an entry where a given distance, up or down a watercourse, is specified,” we cannot but think, that the same rules which govern the cases on the subject of distances by land, have been distinctly and rationally applied to distances called for with reference to water courses.

*219 Distance indicated by a road.

*220 Distanres cified on water courses,

Distances on the Ohio are invariably measured according to its meanders. (Hite v. Graham, 2 Bibb. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
24 U.S. 215, 6 L. Ed. 458, 11 Wheat. 215, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/littlepage-v-fowler-scotus-1826.