Marcy v. Gardinier

7 Watts 240
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 Watts 240 (Marcy v. Gardinier) 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
Marcy v. Gardinier, 7 Watts 240 (Pa. 1838).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The first error is founded on an exception to the answers of the court below, given to three points submitted by the counsel for the plaintiff. The answers of the court to the two first of these points accord with the decision of this court made in regard to them, when this case was here before on a former writ of errror; see 5 Watts 337. It is therefore unnecessary to go into any further argument now to show that the court was right in answering them as it did. The third point however being new and not made before, it, becomes proper t.o notice it particularly, and to give at least some of the reasons why a majority of this court think that the court below answered it also correctly.

The plaintiff’s counsel, by this point, requested the court below to instruct the jury, “ that if the survey made under the warrant of Gardinier included a part of the improvement of Marcy, and was made at the direction of Gardinier, he knowing at the time that it so included a part of the improvements of Marcy, and the two parts of said survey were connected' by thus running across the land of Marcy, and the adjoining lands of Hartly, which were also improved, Gardinier, knowing, at the time of making the survey, that they were so, and that he was running across the land of Marcy and Hartly, directed the surveyor so to run it, the survey would be void, and would not vest any title in Gardinier to the lands contained in it,5* [241]*241To which the court in reply answered, “it would be invalid as to the improved lands, and good as to the land that was vacant and unappropriated.” According to the draft of the survey of Gardinier, the plat appears to be of considerable width at either end, but reduced in the middle to a narrow strip of only two or three perches in width, exhibiting, certainly, quite an unusual figure for a survey or tract of land. The question which it is alleged was intended to be raised by this point, and that has been argued here is, whether a survey be good or absolutely void, which includes two separate parcels of unappropriated land, lying each on opposite sides of land previously appropriated, where the owner of the warrant and survey caused the survey to be extended across the appropriated land knowingly, by taking in a narrow strip of the same, of two perches only or so in width, for the purpose merely of having the two unappropriated parcels included in appearance within one entire tract or survey. I am inclined to believe however, that the question argued by the counsel for the plaintiff is not necessarily embraced by the terms or language of the point, as drawn up and submitted to the court below. It would appear to contain nothing more than a request of the court to charge the jury, that if they should find that Gardinier, in making his survey on his warrant, knowingly extended it across the lands, then and previously to, the granting of his warrant., owned by Marcy and Hartly, that the survey of Gardinier was therefore void in toto. The terms also in which the answer of the court is couched, would seem to indicate as if they understood it in this sense. If this then be the fair import of the language of the point, there is no ground whatever for saying that the answer of the court is erroneous. It is most unquestionably in accordance with an uninterrupted and uniform series of decisions made by this court on the very point itself; so that it cannot be considered now as being even open to debate, In short, although it has occurred in numberless cases almost, which have heretofore come under the notice of this court, that the owner of a warrant caused land to be included within his survey which he knew to be previously appropriated, yet I am not aware that it was ever gravely contended that the survey was void on that account, as to the unappropriated land contained within it. Indeed I think it probable that it was never before alleged, that because a warrantee, in getting a survey made on his warrant, knowingly directed and caused the deputy surveyor to include within it land which was previously appropriated with that which was vacant and unappropriated, that therefore the survey was void as to the vacant land.

But, admitting the question now raised and argued by the plaintiff’s counsel to be embraced within the point as put to the court, is the answer given thereto by the court erroneous 1 It has been argued that the survey of Gardinier was made in the form that it appears to be, with a view to evade the direction, in regard to making surveys, contained in the fifteenth section of the act of 1785, and therefore ought to be considered void. By this section it is enacted, [242]*242among other things, that “in making any survey by any deputy surveyor, he shall not go out of his proper district to perform the same, and every survey made by any deputy surveyor without his proper district shall be void and of none effect: and the surveyor-general and his deputies are hereby severally directed and enjoined to locale and survey, or cause to be located and surveyed, the full amount of land contained and mentioned in any warrant in one entire tract, in such manner and form, as that such tract shall not contain in front on any river more than one half of the length or depth of such tract, and to conform the lines of every survey in such manner as to form the figure or plot thereof, as nearly as circumstances will admit, to an oblong of three limes the breadth thereof.” It ought to ■ be a sufficient answer to this argument, to show that the fifteenth section of this act has been adjudged not to extend to the lands within the purchase from the Indians in 1768, of which the land in question forms a part; nor to any purchase made prior to the last, which was in 1784. In the lessee of Steinmitz v. Young, 2 Binn. 523, the late Chief Justice Tilghman says, “ it has been expressly decided by this court in the case of M’Ginnis’s Lessee v. Albright, December 1799, that this act does not extend to any part of the state but that which lies within the last purchase from the Indians.” And upon this ground the fifteenth section of the act, in a part not recited above, allowing only of an excess of ten per cent above the quantity mentioned in the warrant as being surveyed and returned, was held not to be applicable in Steinmilzt). Young; and accordingly a survey made in 1788, including two hundred and eighty-eight, acres, lying within the old purchase, upon a warrant of one hundred acres only, was adjudged good. And indeed some years before, as early as May 1793, at a court of nisi prius holden at Washington before M’Kean, chief justice and Yeates, justice, in the Lessee of Wright v. Wells, 1 Yeates 286; S. C., 2 Smith’s L.201, it was ruled, after full argument, that this fifteenth section related solely to lands lately purchased at Fort M’Intosh. And accordingly a survey made by John Hoge, a deputy surveyor, of land lying within the purchase of 1768, the same as the land here, but altogether without his district and within that of Pressley Neville and Matthew Ritchey, other deputy surveyors, was held good. This decision was recognized afterwards by this court as late as 1815 in the Lessee of Harris v. Monks, 2 Serg. & Rawle 560.

Besides, it is very obvious that there was not the same reason for extending all the provisions of the fifteenth section to the lands of the state included within the previous purchases from the Indians, that there was for requiring them to be observed in regard to the lands within the purchase of the preceding year.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Watts 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcy-v-gardinier-pa-1838.