McArthur's Heirs v. Dun's Heirs

48 U.S. 262, 12 L. Ed. 693, 7 How. 262, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 347
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 24, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 48 U.S. 262 (McArthur's Heirs v. Dun's Heirs) 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
McArthur's Heirs v. Dun's Heirs, 48 U.S. 262, 12 L. Ed. 693, 7 How. 262, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 347 (1849).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court;

This case comes before this court upon a certificate of division of opinion between the judges of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Ohio, upon a bill of review exhibited in- that court. ‘ The character of the cause as made upon the pleadings and evidence, and the question on which the judges were divided in opinion,'-are so succinctly and at the same time so clearly disclosed in the statement of the judges, that they will be best presented by a simple repetition of that statement in these words: —

This cause having been remanded from the Supreme Court of the United States to this court, for a further order touching the point upon which the opinions of the judges of this court upon.the hearing thereof were opposed, in compliance with said mandate of said Supreme Court, the said point of disagreement of said judges is now ordered to be restated more specially and .at large. The said point of disagreement arose out of the following facts, stated and set forth in the original bill of said Walter Dun, and admitted to be true by the demurrer of said Duncan McArthur thereto, who was the respondent to said original bill, viz.: That said McArthur, on the 3d of January, A. D. 1825, obtained a patent for the tract of land in controversy, which is situate in the Yirginia military reservation, in the State of Ohio, on an entry made on a Virginia military land-warrant, in the name of Robert Means, assignee, on the 23d of November', A. D. 1822, followed by a survey of said entry, made in the name of the said Robert Means, assignee, on the 18th of March, A. D. 1823; which said Robert Means before' said entry, and as early as the year A. D. 1808, had departed this life. And that, on the 4th day of April, 1825, another patent *267 for the same tract of land was issued to one James Galloway, on an entry thereof made in the' name of said Galloway, on the iOth of December, A. D. 1824, on another Virginia military land-warrant, and which was duly surveyed in. his (said Galloway’s) name, on the 15th of the same month of December, Á. D. 1824, and which tract of land was subsequently conveyed by said Galloway to said Walter Dun. Upon which said state of facts, touching the titles of the said parties , to said tract of land, this point was raised by the counsel for the complainant in said bill of review, upon the hearing and argument thereof, viz.: — Whether .the said location and survey of .said traét of land in.thé .name of said Galloway, .and the patent issued to him for the same, are not null and void, as being made and done in contravention of the proviso to the second. section of the act of Congress of the 1st of March, A. D. 1823, entitled ‘An act extending the .time for locating Virginia militáry land-warrants and returning surveys thereon to the General Land Office.’ ”

Thus it will appear that the only question for consideration here arises on the proper construction of the proviso contained in the second section of the act of Congress above mentioned. This áct — after providing in the first section that the officers and soldiers of the Virginia line or Continental establishment, their heirs or assigns, entitled to bounty, lands within the country reserved by the State of Virginia, between the Little Miami and Scioto Rivers, shall be allowed a further time of two years from the 4th day of January, 1823, to obtain warrants and complete their locations, and the further time of four years from the. same period to return their surveys and warrants to the General Land Office to obtain patents — contains in the second section a proviso in the following words: — “ Provided, that no locations as aforesaid in virtue of this or the preceding section of this act shall be made on tracts of lands for which patents had previously been issued, or which had been previously surveyed ; and any patent which may nevertheless be obtained for land. located contrary to. the provisions of this act shall be considered null and void.” 3 Stat. at Large, 773. .Upon this proviso, which appears to be a' literal transcript of the proviso contained in the first section of the act of 1807, the question for oqr consideration, as has been' already remarked, is presented. . .

On behalf of the complainants in the bill of review (the heirs of Duncan McArthur) and the holders of the elder patent, it'is insisted, that, not only is their title under-the prior entry and survey in the name of Means, and the patent issued in pursuance thereof, protectedJsy the operation of the proviso *268 just mentioned, but that the effect of that proviso, nay, its express language, renders absolutely void the claim of title set up by the heirs of the junior patentee, Dun ; denying to it, and to all similar clauses, any foundation on which legally or equitably such claims can be founded. The heirs of Dun contend that the patent to McArthur having been granted upon a location and survey made in the name of Means, when in fact Means had been dead fourteen years anterior to the entry, and thirteen years previously to the survey in his name, this entry and survey, and the patent issued to. McArthur thereon, were of no' legal efficacy, and should be superseded by the patent to James Galloway, upon an entry made by said Galloway in 1824, under which patent the heirs of Dun derive title by purchase. In support of this position, it' is said that an entry in the name óf a dead man is, on general principles, void, as was ruled by the cases of Galt v. Galloway, 4 Peters, 345, and of McDonald’s Heirs v. Smalley, 6 Peters, 261. These cases, though express to the single point for which they have been cited, are nevertheless by no means decisive of the question certified, if indeed they are at all applicable thereto ; that question not involving simply the validity of an entry made in the name of a dead man, but embracing the legality of locations made since the enactment of the proviso, upon lands previously patented or surveyed, without reference to the circumstance of the death or life of those in whose names such previous patents may have been granted or surveys made.

The language of the proviso is broad and comprehensive enough to comprise patents and surveys in the names of persons either living or dead, and it expressly declares to be null all patents posterior in time to those surveys and. patents, thus generally described and protected by that language. The proviso, then, if the natural and common meaning of its terms be adopted, must extend to and protect-alike patents, entries, and surveys of either description, so far as this end is accomplished by preventing the possibility of conflict with locations and patents coming into existence after its date. Its operation and effect must be thus comprehensive, unless they can be understood to have been limited and controlled by some clear and authoritative exposition. Have they been so limited ?- It cannot be necessary here to discuss the competency of Congress in reference either to the power of imposing -a limitation upon the time within which locations .upon the ceded lands should bo made, or as to the conditions -on which further time might be extended to persons who had been excluded by the limitation first laid on locations. Those subjects have been, treated with clearness by Chief Justice Marshall, in,the case of *269 Jackson v.

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Bluebook (online)
48 U.S. 262, 12 L. Ed. 693, 7 How. 262, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcarthurs-heirs-v-duns-heirs-scotus-1849.