McArthur v. Phœbus

2 Ohio 415
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1826
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio 415 (McArthur v. Phœbus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McArthur v. Phœbus, 2 Ohio 415 (Ohio 1826).

Opinion

^Opinion of the court, by

Judge Burnet:

The complainant claims under an entry in .the name of Bobert Means, made May 23,1808, in the following words: Bobert Means, assiguee, enters two thousand six hundred and sixty-six and two-thirds acres of land, on military warrant No. 5,387, on the waters of Deer creek, beginning at three elms, southeasterly corner to Baron Steuben’s survey, No. 2,698, running north thirty, east two hundred and ninety-six poles, etc. On the margin of this entry is the following memorandum: fifteen hundred acres withdrawn from the northeast end (entered 147).

This entry was surveyed June 14, 1809, recorded August 12,. [389]*3891811. Patent obtained October 7, 1812, in the name of complainant, assignee, etc.

Steuben’s survey, No. 2,698, was made June 30, 1796, and in the following words: Surveyed for Major General Steuben eleven hundred and fifty acres of land, on part of military warrant No. 104, on the northwest of the Ohio, and on Deer creek, a branch of the Scioto, beginning at an ash, a white oak, and a maple, northeast corner to James Innis’ survey, No. 1,727, running with Innis’ line, south twenty, west four hundred poles, crossing Deer creek, at one hundred and eight poles to a stake, southeast corner to Innis’, thence south twenty-one, east three hundred and seventy-four poles to three small , thence north sixty-nine, east three hundred and twenty poles, crossing the creek at sixteen poles, to three elms, thence north eighteen, west six hundred and seventy poles to a stake, thence south sixty-nine, west eighty-four poles to the beginning.

The survey of James Innis was made on the same day (June 30, 1796), and calls for Deer creek.

The defendants, Doolittle and Thomas, claim under an entry in the name of Thomas Chilton, made on April 27, 1807, in the words following: Thomas Chilton, heir at law to John Chilton, deceased, enters five hundred and forty-one acres of land, on part of military warrant No. 1,249, on the waters of Deer creek, a branch of the Scioto river, on a branch emptying in on the upper side, by some called Opossum, and by others called Plum run, beginning, by survey made, at three elms and a *large white oak, running south nineteen, west twenty poles, south sixty, west forty poles, to three pin oaks, marked as a corner, north thirty, west one hundred and sixty poles, north sixty, east forty-four poles, north two hundred and ten, east two hundred and sixty, south thirty, east sixty-two, south fifty-seven, east one hundred and twenty, south forty-five, west one hundred and forty-five, thence, and from the beginning, south seventy, west for quantity. This entry was surveyed August 30, 1810, and a patent was granted to Doolittle, July 27, 1812.

The defendants, Dunlap, McHenry, Phcebus, and Senate, claim, ■under an entry in the name of John Stokes, made November 8, 1807, in the following words: John Stokes enters four hundred acres of land on part of warrant No. 1,390, on Opossum or Plum ¿run, a branch of Deer creek, beginning on the run, where the [390]*390lower line of Thomas Chilton’s entry crosses the same, running down the run, with the meanders thereof, four hundred and eighty-poles, when reduced to a straight line, thence, and from the beginning, at right angles to the general course of the run, on each side, to include an equal quantity on each side, by parallel lines, to the general course thereof. This entry was surveyed December 10, 1811, recorded January 1, 1812, and patented April 8, 1812.

As the defendants have the first entries, and are in possession' under the oldest patents, they may protect' themselves by showing the sufficiency and legality of their own locations, or the insufficiency and illegality of the location, under which the complainant holds. If they have succeeded in establishing either of these propositions, or if the complainant has failed in sustaining the validity of Means’ entry, he is not entitled to a decree. But before I proceed to examine the evidence which has a direct bearing on those points, it will be proper to notice some collateral questions, which have been discussed by counsel in the course of the argument.

1. It is alleged, on the part of the defendants, that there is no proof of the entries and surveys mentioned in the pleadings, or that Steuben’s survey is numbered 2,698.

This objection does not appear to be true in point of fact, and probably would not have been taken, if the connection of-entries and surveys, from the records in Col. Anderson’s office, had been carefully inspected. In the voluminous file *of papers appertaining to the cause, this document must have been overlooked, because it contains certified copies of all the entries and surveys referred to in the pleadings, and was received as evidence without objection. It does not appear on what ground this exception was taken. If it be predicated on a supposed defect, or informality in the mode of authentication, the objection comes too late. The document was received as evidence — the defendant took no exception to it at the time — the complainant has relied on it, and it. would be a mischievous precedent to permit an objection to be-, taken at this stage of the proceedings.

2. It is urged that Steuben’s entry and survey depend on Innis’' entry and survey, the situation of which is not shown.

This objection would have some weight, if the complainant could be required to show that Steuben’s entry was precise and. certain, at the time it was made. This, however, is not the case. [391]*391It is immaterial to him, whether that location can be sustained or not, because a survey of a void entry may be a good special call in a subsequent entry, if the survey called for has obtained general notoriety before the entry calling for it is made. This being the settled principle, the complainant is not required to show the situation of Innis’ entry nor survey. He may safely admit that Innis has neither entry nor survey, and that Steuben’s entry had neither certainty nor precision, at the time it was made. The reason why Steuben’s survey is a good call, if it shall be found to be such, is, that it had become an object of notoriety, and on that account, might be readily found by a subsequent locator; and that when found, it would, by reasonable attention, lead an inquirer to the beginning of the entey calling for it. A burning spring, if generally known, would be a good call, not because it had become a valid landmark to a former location, but because it would enable a subsequent locator to find the entry calling for it. On the same principle, if Steuben’s survey, at the date of Means’ entry, had become an object of general notoriety, it was a good call on that account, whether the entry of Steuben was a valid appropriation of the land or not. Steuben may have lost his land for want of precision and certainty *in his call, and yet Means, by calling for Steuben’s survey, may secure his land, on the ground that his call was sufficiently certain, precise, and notorious to identify the land intended to be appropriated, and to enable subsequent locators easily to find it.

3. The next objection is, that the complainant has not shown his right to the entry of E. Means.

To this it may be replied : 1. That the assignment of the entry to the complainant is averred in the bill, and impliedly admitted in some of the answers, if not in all. 2. That a patent having regularly issued to the complainant, as assignee of E. Means, is prima fade

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcarthur-v-phbus-ohio-1826.