Martin v. Hughes

90 F. 632, 33 C.C.A. 198, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1898
DocketNo. 9
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 F. 632 (Martin v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Hughes, 90 F. 632, 33 C.C.A. 198, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719 (3d Cir. 1898).

Opinion

BUTLER, District Judge.

The plaintiff brought ejectment under a title from the commonwealth, in pursuance of a warrant issued to Isaac Brennan. March. 25, 1794, a survey thereunder by Deputy Surveyor George Woods, a return of this survey by his successor in office, in 1808, and a patent based thereon soon after. Three other warrants were issued contemporaneously with Brennan’s, one of them to Richard Bmith, another to William Smith and a third to John Nicholson, for lands in the same locality, and surveys made in pursuance of them by Woods contemporaneously with the survey for Brennan. Woods dying wiShout having made returns of these surveys, they were made by his successor in office, William O’Keefe, in June, 1808; and patents were issued accordingly. The return on William Smith’s warrant calls for a beech tree as its northwestern corner; a line running thence north; a road crossing that line obliquely at a distance of 30 rods from the corner; and a line running north and west from its northwest corner. The return on the Nicholson warrant (tails for land of William Smith on the east; a cedar tree near a beech, as its northeast corner; lines running 1 hence north, east and west; the “state road” crossing this line, running norfh in the same oblique direction shown on the return of the William ¡Smith survey, at a distance of 30 rods from the corner; for Isaac Brennan’s land on the north; and extending 30 rods west of Nicholson’s northwestern corner. The calls of the return on the Isaac Brennan warrant reciprocate calls of the other returns, specifying a cedar tree as its southeastern corner; John Nicholson as an adjoiner on the south, declaring that the survey starts at tin; cedar and extends west 30 iards less than the length of its southern line; and that lines run from (he cedar north and south, and so on.

The defendants claim under a title from the commonwealth in pursuance of a warrant issued to James Duncan in March, 1794, and a survey made thereunder in 1853.

The question involved in the suit is: Where was the controverted line of (he Brennan survey located? The plaintiff claims that it started in a northerly direction at the cedar near a beech, as described in the return, and located by bis testimony; while the defendants claim that it started at a point called “the cedar stump” or “big cedar,” about 40 yards westward, where marks are found, made in 1808. Each of these claims is supported by testimony, and under the instruction of the court a verdict was rendered for the defendants. The plaintiff complains of this instruction, and also of the rejection of certain testimony. The specifications of error are as follows:

The learned court erred below:
(1) In overruling the plaintiff's offer of the testimony of William Griffith, a surveyor, then deceased, delivered upon the trial of a certain cause in the court of common pleas of Cambria comity, Pennsylvania, in the year 1835, in which David Smay, through whom the defendant below deduced title to part of the Duncan tract, liecord 17-23, was plaintiff, and the plaintiff' below was defendant. to the effect that in or about the year 1835, he made a survey of the John Nicholson tract, in doing which, he found at the point claimed by the plaintiff (below) as the common corner of the Brennan, Nicholson and Smith tracts a [634]*634cedar tree and a beech tree, each marked on four sides as a corner, standing just so far apart' that he could stand between them; that the cedar stood to the southwest of the beech and that he could set his compass between the trees and turn it upon any one of the four lines and see marks on any one of the four lines around it; that subsequently the beech tree was blocked and showed marks of 1794 and 180S, and that there was an old, well-marked line running north and south from the cedar and beech; and that in 1835 the corner marks on the cedar were apparently old; the same haying been reduced to writing by the official reporter of the court, and being offered, first, as a deposition, and, second, as the declaration of a deceased surveyor, and rejected upon each offer. Record, 87-8.
(2) In its answer to the plaintiff’s second point, which point was as follows: “It appears by the official return that the Isaac Brennan tract was surveyed by George Woods, Jr., in June, 1794, and therefore if marks made upon the ground by the surveyor in locating the Isaac Brennan tract have at any time been found and their position identified, they must control the location of the tract;” and was answered as follows; “This point is affirmed if the jury find that George Woods, deputy surveyor, surveyed the land as stated and his survey was adopted and returned by William O’Keefe, his successor in office,” Record, 88; and in not unqualifiedly affirming the point.
(3) In its answer to the plaintiff’s fifth point, which point was as follows: “If the jury believe from all the evidencé that three tracts of land mentioned in the preceding point (namely the Smith, Nicholson and Brennan) have a common corner, that would fix the eastern side of the Isaac Brennan, and the same could not be changed by the subsequent survey made of the James Duncan in 1853;” and was answered as follows: “We have already explained that to you, that if the true line of the Isaac Brennan was as claimed for by the plaintiff in this case, and the survey was made at the early date claimed, that the subsequent survey of the James Duncan tract in 1853 overlapping the Isaac Brennan must give way to the older survey.” Record, 89.
(4) In charging the jury as follows: “Now these surveys (namely of the Brennan, Smith and Nicholson tracts) if they were made by George Woods-upon the ground, William O’Keefe, the deputy surveyor, or who seems to have been his successor, had a right to return, and so far as the effect of the surveys is concerned, the act of the deputy in surveying them was the act of the principal, or George Woods, if he made the prior survey. * * * On the face of the papers [the returns of surveys of the Brennan, Smith and Nicholson tracts], the inquiry will naturally arise to you: If these surveys, if these are returns of surveys made by George Woods in 1794, and if those surveys were made in the month of June, and presumably at the same time— if those be returns of his survey, did George Woods mean the same corner by these three different designations, if they are different, namely, one a beech, one a cedar and one a cedar near a beech.” Record, 91.
(5) In its answer to the defendants’ second point, which point was as follows: “The plaintiff to make out his case having given in evidence the return of survey made by William O’Keefe in 1808, and a patent founded on that return, he is concluded by the boundaries therein set out and as found upon the ground;” and was answered as follows: “Affirmed.”
(6) In its answer to the defendants’ third point, which point was as follows: “There is no evidence of any return of, survey on warrant to Isaac Brennan earlier that the O’Keefe return in 1808, and the location therein set out by its-metes and bounds, is the true location of the Isaac Brennan tract;” and was answered as follows: “In answer to this we may say: The return in question is the only one, and is evidence of the true location of the tract. As thus stated the point is affirmed; that is, it is evidence of the true location of the trad, and is to be considered as we have stated to you in connection with the-marks you find upon the ground.”

The first specification is not sustained.

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Patillo v. Allen-West Commission Co.
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Bluebook (online)
90 F. 632, 33 C.C.A. 198, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-hughes-ca3-1898.