Miller v. Page

6 Va. 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1806
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Va. 28 (Miller v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Page, 6 Va. 28 (Va. Ct. App. 1806).

Opinion

TUCKER, Judge.

Carter Page entered a caveat in June 1797, against Millér in the district court for 1300 acres of land lying in Buckingham county, and assigned six reasons against the emanation of a patent. I shall pass over the first, and proceed to the second, reason assigned, viz : ‘ ‘Because Miller’s entries are too vague, indefinite, and uncertain; and are not made with the precision required by law.”

The law requires, that every person desirous of locating a land warrant on any particular waste and unappropriated lands, shall lodge the warrant with the chief surveyor of the county, and direct the location thereof so especially and precisely, as that others may be enabled, with certainty, to locate other warrants on the adjacent residuum, (1779, ch. 3). The meaning of the legislature evidently appears, from the terms of this act, to have been, to give every purchaser of a land warrant an equal right to locate the same to the best advantage, without difficulty, and without interfering with each other, giving to the first applicant the preference: and, by a subsequent provision, giving to each subsequent applicant the right of inspecting any prior entry supposed to be *made for the same lands ‘by' any other person. The object of which provision evidently was to enable each subsequent applicant to make locations so special and precise with reference to former locations as that any future applicant might pursue the same course as to his; and thereby interfering claims and numberless law suits be prevented. That such was the intention of the law, cannot, I think, be doubted, if we consider either the directing part, that the location shall be made specially and precisely ; or the reason assigned for such precision, that others might be enabled to locate, with certainty, the adjacent residuum. These last words shew, that the legislature contemplated the probability that, in the rich and fertile spots particularly, locations would be made contiguous to each other. It would, therefore, be inconsistent with the spirit of the law to suppose, that it should countenance such vague and uncertain locations as might deter others from making contiguous en[1074]*1074tries on the adjacent residuum, from the uncertainty of the course which the first locator might think proper to pursue in making his survey. If a locator, desirous of entering for lands lying upon a narrow creek, should designate a particular tree, or rock, as the beginning of his location for a thousand acres of land, without any other description, how could any person desirous of locating the adjacent residuum, proceed to make his entry? The former might extend the base of his survey, east, west, north or south, or to any of the intermediate points; and until he should think proper to make his survey, no other locator could, with any safety, or certainty, approach the spot. I therefore concur, not only in the opinion delivered in Hall v. Hunter, 1 Call, 209, that locators are to be held to a reasonable degree of strictness in their entries; since without, infinite confusion and difficulty, as well as delay, must ensue to the prevention of the execution of the law; which certainly had respect to the settlement and improvement of the country, as well as to any revenue to be derived from so trifling a price for the lands; but even carry my interpretation of the law still further, as appears to have been *done in the case of Wilson v. Mason, I Cranch, 99; and concur with the supreme court of the United States in thinking, that “from the circumstances under which the act for establishing the land office passed, as well as from the expressions of the act, it is apparent that the entry was intended to give complete notice to other purchasers, that the land located was already appropriated.”

On the 15th of August, 1791, John Milter, the appellant, made an entry with the surveyor of Buckingham county, for “1000 acres of land, between the lines of Henry Cary deceased, on both sides of Hatcher’s creek, beginning on the same.”

The jury find, that the lines of Henry Cary’s inclusive patented land, cross Hatcher’s creek six times, and that there are two corners near the creek: and from an inspection of the plat of survey filed in this cause, it appears that it is more than a mile and a half from the spot where one of Henry Cary’s lines crosses Hatcher’s creek in one place to where it crosses it in another.

It was asked by the caveator’s counsel, at which of these spots, or at which of the four intermediate spots, where the lines of Henry Cary cross the creek, did the locator intend to fix his beginning? I cannot pretend to answer the question for him; nor do I consider it as answered by his counsel, who said there were but few spots on Hatcher’s creek, where the beginning is called for by the entry, where he might have made his beginning. The verdict shews there might have been twelve different spots; and the plat shews that the distance between the two most remote is at least a mile and a half, as I have before stated.

But this want of precision is supposed to be helped by the decision of this court in the case of Field v. Culbreath, 2 Call, 547. In that case, however, the entry was for all the vacant lands between the lines described: whereas, here it is for a thousand acres; and there might have been ten times that quantity. Miller’s own survey shews there were 1300 acres within those lines. Now, with what certainty *could any person desirous of entering for the adjacent residuum of 300 acres, have made his entry? Until the survey was actually made, which was not done for more than five years after this entry, no person could know in what part of the 1300 acres, Miller’s 1000 acres would be laid off, or the 300 acres be left. Consequently, this case differs from that of Field v. Culbreath, most essentially. Nor can I find, either in adjudged cases in our country, or in the law, any principle which will justify the suspension of another’s right to enter for these vacant lands, until Mr. Miller should have determined his will, where to fix the beginning and the course of his location. For, although the beginning was known, yet unless it were also known what course was to be run from that beginning, no holder of a land warrant could be able with certainty, to locate the same on the adjacent residuum. Neither do I know of any mdans, (except by making a subsequent entrj', and proceeding to survey the lands and obtain a patent,) by which the first locator could be compelled to make and return his survey. For, although the law originally allowed twelve months only, within which it must have been done, yet it is well known that, except for one or two very short periods, the time has been uniformly prolonged. So that the first entries made under the act might have been kept in force, without any survey, down to this time, unless the law had permitted subsequent entries to be made, where the first were not sufficient to give complete notice that the land was appropriated. The common law, we are told, abhors uncertainty; and this statute appears to me to be framed in the same spirit. Miller’s entry of the 15th of August, 1791, was, therefore, I conceive, as to all persons holding land warrants, and desirous of locating the same, void on account of its uncertainty.

On the 30th of June, 1791, previous to any survey made by Miller, Carter Page made his entry for 1200 acres of land, designating the beginning; the lines of Henry Cary’s former patent; the distance and termination of those lines, with their several courses, as described in Cary’s patent. *It is objected, that these are now impossible lines, on account of the variations of the magnetic needle, since the year 1736, the date of Craig’s patent.

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Related

Wilson v. Mason
5 U.S. 45 (Supreme Court, 1801)
Hunter v. Hall
5 Va. 178 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1798)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Va. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-page-vactapp-1806.