McCarty v. Carolina Lumber Co.

134 Tenn. 35
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 134 Tenn. 35 (McCarty v. Carolina Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarty v. Carolina Lumber Co., 134 Tenn. 35 (Tenn. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. TurNer, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an ejectment suit by the devisees of one N. B. McCarty brought November 17, 1911, by bill in chancery court in Unicoi county, Tennesee, against the defendant, Carolina 'Lumber Company, to recover a large boundary of mountain land alleged to be situated in Unicoi cpunty, Tennessee, adjoining the line between the States of Tennessee and North Carolina; also to enjoin the defendant from committing acts of trespass and waste on said land. Service of process was made by a Tennessee officer upon an agent or •employee of the defendant, and the defendant made a special appearance and filed two special pleas: First, denying the court’s jurisdiction over the defendant, on the ground that process had been served by a Tennessee officer in the State of North Carolina; and second, denying the jurisdiction of the court over the subject-matter on the ground that the lands sued for are located, not in the State of Tennessee, but in the State of North Carolina. No issue is made upon the complainants’ title. They have, however, deraigned title from certain Tennessee grants, with intermediate conveyances down to themselves. The sole issue in the case as now presented is one of fact, to wit, the true location of the State line between Tennessee and North Carolina fixing the boundary between the lands [39]*39of the complainants and the defendant. Each party contends for a different location of this line, the one claimed by complainants being referred to as the “water shed” line, running about a mile or more east of the line insisted on by the defendant, known as the line surveyed and located by the North Carolina com■missioners in 1799. Large volumes of evidence have been taken upon this issue, which has been thoroughly considered by the court, but it would be too tedious to recite all of its details in this opinon. Therefore we will content ourselves by stating the most material and controlling facts which are determinative of this issue.

The Act of 1789 (chapter 3) of North Carolina, ceding its western territory to the United States, the deed made pursuant thereto, and the constitution of Tennessee adopted in 1796 (article 11, section 32), upon which this western territory so ceded by North Carolina to the United States was admitted to the Union as the State of Tennessee, all agree in their descriptions of that boundary line between North Carolina and this ceded territory, now the State of Tennessee, as follows:

“Beginning on the extreme height of the Stone Mountain, at the place where the Virginia line intersects it, running thence along the extreme height of said mountain, to the place where Wautaugo river breaks through it; thence a direct course to the top of the Tellow Mountain where Bright’s road crosses the same; thence along the ridge of said mountain between [40]*40the waters of Doe river and the waters of Rock creek, to the place where the road crosses the Iron Mountain, from thence along the extreme height of said mountain, to where the Nolachucky river runs through the same, thence to the top of the Bald Mountain; thence along the extreme height of the said mountain to the Painted Rock, on French Broad river; thence along the highest ridge of said mountain, to the place where it is called the Great Iron or Smoky Mountain; thence along the extreme height of the said mountain, to the place where it is called the Unicoy or Unaka Mountain, between the Indian towns of Cowee and Old Chota; thence along the main ridge of the said mountain, to the southern boundary of this State.”

The particular part or call of this boundary line involved in this case is the line from the top of Iron Mountain where the Nolachucky river runs through the same to the top of Bald Mountain.

In 1796, soon after the State of Tennessee was admitted to the Union, North Carolina passed an act (Laws 1796, chapter 18) providing for accurately and distinctly running, marking, and permanently establishing the boundary line between these States, and named Joseph McDowell, Mussendine Matthews, and David Vance as commissioners to meet commissioners to be appointed by the State of Tennessee for that purpose and directed them, in conjunction with said Tennessee commissioners, to fix and permanently establish the boundary line between the two States, and the same to mark and ascertain as distinctly as [41]*41possible agreeable, to the true intent and meaning of the Cession Act aforesaid, and to cause an accurate plot or plan of the boundary line to be made specifying courses, distances, natural and artificial marks-, and return the same to the next general assembly to be preserved among the archives of the State. It was also directed that a copy of this act be certified to the governor of the State of Tennessee, with request that she appoint commissioners for a like purpose, and then provided that if it should so happen that the State of Tennessee should fail to appoint commissioners, or such commissioners after appointment should fail or refuse to act with the North Carolina commissioners, the latter were authorized, empowered, and required singly and by themselves to proceed to take all such measures as under the laws and constitution of the State and of the United States may be taken or had for effecting the purposes intended by this act. It further provided that the State of North Carolina would at all times ratify and be-bound by the action of these commissioners. It does not appear that Tennessee took any action in this matter. On May 22, 1799, the North Carolina commissioners undertook the location o£ AhÍs~bóundary line, ancTon October 15, 1799;--certified and reported their action to North Carolina. They did not run and locate the entire boundary-line. They began at the Virginia line as directed, and ran the line to the top of a high pinnacle of the Smoky Mountain beyond the French Broad river, where they stopped. On December 30, [42]*421802, Governor ■ Roane of Tennessee by letter requested Of Governor James Turner of North Carolina to certify for Tennessee’s use, a copy of the report and plot of the North Carolina commissioners, showing the location and calls of this line. This request was complied with, and the secretary of state of North Carolina, on July 10, 1803, certified such a copy and it appears to have been transmitted to the governor of Tennessee and filed with her secretary of State. The copy of this report and map, appearing in this record, is certified from the Tennessee archives.

No act of the legislature of either State appears ratifying this action of the commissioners, but on November 4, 1805-, the Tennessee legislature passed an act (Laws 1805, chapter 47), reciting that it was- believed that the North Carolina commissioners in running said line had left the main Bald Mountain and took a ridge running westwardly to the lower Painted Rock on French Broad river, contrary to the true intent and meaning of.the Cession Act, and appointing certain commissioners to meet commissioners of the State of North Carolina thereafter to be appointed to re-run or locate that part of the boundary line and ItiTectmg a report of 'their- action to be made to the next succeeding legislature. No action appears to to have been taken under this act either hy 1'Nrth Carolina or by the Tennessee commissioners thereby appointed. The part of the line there indicated did not involve that part of the line now in dispute in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
134 Tenn. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarty-v-carolina-lumber-co-tenn-1915.