Matson v. Hord

14 U.S. 130, 4 L. Ed. 53, 1 Wheat. 130, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 14 U.S. 130 (Matson v. Hord) 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
Matson v. Hord, 14 U.S. 130, 4 L. Ed. 53, 1 Wheat. 130, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 316 (1816).

Opinion

Marshall, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court, as follows:

This is . an. appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Kentucky, by which the plaintiff’s bill was' dismissed:

The object of the-suit is to-enjoin the proceedings of the defendant at law, and to obtain from him a conveyance for so much of the land contained in his patent as interferes with the entry and survey made by thé plaintiff.

The plaintiff claims by virtue of an entry made on the 17th of January, 1784, the material part of which is set forth in the bill in these words : “ Richard Masterson enters 22,277 and a half acres of land, on treasury warrant No. 19,455, to be laid off in a parallelogram twice as long, as wide, to include a mulberry tree marked thus, “ F,” and two hiccories, with four chops in each, to include the said three marked trees near the centre .thereof j the said trees standing near the Hunter’s trace, leading from Bryant’s station over to the waters of Hinkston, on the dividing ridge between the waters of Hinkston and the waters of Elkhorn.” This entry has been surveyed, he states, according to location, and that part of it which covers the land in controversy has been assigned to him.

The validity of this entry constitutes the most essential point in the present controversy. If it cannot be sustained, there is an end of the plaintiff’s title *132 if it can,'other points arise in the case which must he. decided.

This question depends on the construction of that clause in the land law which requires that warrants shall be located so specially and precisely, as that others may be enabled, with certainty, to locate other Warrants oh the adjacent residuum.

' In the construction of. an act so interesting to the people of Kentucky, it is of vital importance that principles be adhered to with care, and that as much uniformity as is. practicable be observed in judicial decisions. This court has ever sought, with solicitude, for the true . spirit of the law, as settled in the state tribunals, and has conformed its judgments to the rules of those tribunals whenever it has been able to find them established.

In the cases which have been, on different occasions, examined, that absolute certainty which would remove every doubt from the mind of a subsequent locator, appears never to have been required. The courts of Kentucky have viewed locations with that indulgence which the state of the country, and the general character of those who first explored and settled it, would seem to justify; and have required only that reasonable certainty- which was attainable in such a country, and might be expected from such men as were necessarily employed. The effort has been to sustain rather than to avoid entries; and, although the motives which led to this course of adjudication are inapplicable to late entries, made on Ja,nd supposed to be previously appropriated, yet it is not understood that different rules of construction- *133 have. ever been applied to entries of different dates.

By these rules, a certainty to a common intent, a description which will not mislead a subsequent lo~ eator, which will conduct him, if .he uses reasonable care and diligence, to the place where the objects are to be found, will satisfy the law, and sustain the .entry; but süch a certainty must exist, or thé entry cannot.be sustained. .

A location- usually consists of some general description which, designates the place in which’the particular object is to be found, and of a description of the particular object itself. The general description must be such as would enable a man intending to locate the adjacent residuum, by making those inquiries which would be in his power,' and which he would naturally make, to know the plaeé in which he-was . to search for the particular or locative call, so nearly,. that, by a reasonable search, he might find the object mentioned in that particular or locative call, and avoid the land located. If-the description- will fit a different place better, or equally well, ;it is too .defective, because, if it does not mislead the subsequent locator, it leaves him in doubt where to search.

The general description in this case is, “ the Huntfer’s trace,- leading from Bryant’s station over, ter the waters, of Hinkston, on the dividing ridge between the waters of Hinkston and the waters of Elk-horn.”:

Will this description designate ithe place! in which the tfeés called for in the location are.tó be found ■?

*134 Bryant’s station is a fixed place of public, noto ríe* ty. It is on the great road leading from Lexingtoii T • ' • , . i . , ° i ® to Limestone, on the Ohio, which road crosses the dividing ridge between'the waters of Elkhorn and Licking, which is the ridge mentioned in MastersonV entry. This road had been travelled by hunters, but seems to have been known by the name of the Blue Lick, or Buffalo trace, and .-not by the name of the Hunter’s trace.

A trace which was, at the time, called the Hunr ter’s trace, leaves this great -road at Bryant’s station, and proceeds in a direction west of north, until it crosses North Elkhorn, where it divides : the left-hand, or more western trace, after entering a road .leading from Lexington to Riddle’s station, on Licking, or that branch of Licking called Hinkston, crosses the dividing ridge about the head waters of á creek now called Townsend, which empties into the stream running by Riddle’s station a little above_ that station.- This creek was; in the year. 1784, known by the name of Hinkston Creek, or, perhaps, Hinkston’s Mill Creek.

The right; or more eastern fork, again divides nearly two miles before it reaches the dividing ridge, Each of these trices crosses the dividing ridge to the head waters of Cooper’s run, which empties into Stoner’s fork. ' The more eastern of them crosses Stoner’s fork, and, passing Mas tin’s station, terminates very near that place. Cooper’s run empties into Stoner’s fork, which either empties' into Hinkston, and then passing by Riddle’s station, empties into Licking; or, uniting with Hinkston, forms, the *135 south fork of Licking, and passes Riddle’s station with that name. The river, from the junction between Stoner and Hinkst'on, seems to have been known both by the name of the South Fork and of Hinkston’s Fork. .

All these traces were, in fáct, hunters’ traces; but eadh of them, except that leading to Mastin’s station, was distinguished by some name peculiar to itself, generally by the station or place to which it led, as Riddle’s trace, the Blue Lick trace, &c.; and no one of them, except that leading to Mastin’s', was notoriously and pre-eminently called “ the Hunter’s trace.” There is some testimony that this was also known by the name of Mastin’s trace; but the great mass of testimony in the cause proves, incontrcvertibly, that this trace was known and distinguished, generally, by the peculiar appellation of “ the Hunter’s trace.” It is on this trace that the location was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 U.S. 130, 4 L. Ed. 53, 1 Wheat. 130, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matson-v-hord-scotus-1816.