Miller v. Shaw

7 Serg. & Rawle 129
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 15, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 7 Serg. & Rawle 129 (Miller v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Shaw, 7 Serg. & Rawle 129 (Pa. 1821).

Opinion

Tilghman, C. J.

[After stating the points.]—The opi-. nions of the Court of Common • Pleas on these three points, are complained of by the plaintiffs. They are, therefore, to be considered by this Court.

1. The plaintiffs say that the effect of Donnel’s acts and conversations with the defendant was matter of law, and ought not to have been left to the j’ury. But I do not see how the Court could have decided it. The facts were not sufficiently clear. It did not appear by what authority, or at whose request, Donnel entered and made the survey ►-«nor, whether there was an intent to enter, in order to interrupt the defendant’s possession. It was decided, in Ford v. Lord Grey, 6 Mod. 44, that it was necessary to prove the entry to have been made animo clamandi. Whether it was so made in the present case, or whether Donnel was authorised by the plaintiffs to make it, was by no means certain. The Court could not take on itself to decide a doubtful fact; of necessity therefore, it was left to the jury. The same observations will apply to the conversations between Donnel [134]*134and the defendant. There was no express recognition of the plaintiffs’ title. The defendant talked of going to the plaintiffs or some of them, and purchasing, if they had good title. There was no fact clearly proved, from which the Court could deduce the law.

2. As to the levy and sale by the Sheriff, the plaintiffs have no reason to complain of their being submitted to the jury. From any thing that appears on the record, that point ought to have been decided against the plaintiffs. It does not appear that the Sheriff ever entered. He returned, that he had levied “ on 1000 acres of land in Nippenose valley, adjoining Jonathan Walker.” No mention is made of the defendant, nor is the land described by the Sheriff, as being in possession ®f the defendant, or having been improved by him. It would be too much, to construe such a proceeding to be an entry, sufficient to interrupt the course of the Act of Limitations.

3. The third point is of great importance, but it is not new. If I am not mistaken, it has occurred, and been decided in this Court, in the Courts of several other States, and in the Supreme Court of the United States.. The law of possession is not quite the same in countries long settled and thickly inhabited, and in those where lands in a state of nature are purchased of the Government, very often, with a view of retaining them in an uncultivated state, until they can be vended to advantage, or where the original purchaser, although he wishes to sell, may not find an opportunity for many years. This is the case with what are called our Back-lands. The original purchaser pays his money to the Government, has his land ascertained by survey, and pays taxes on it. With regard to such lands, it has been found expedient, to establish it as a principle, that the owner is in actual possession, although neither he, nor any one under him, be actually residing on the land. In this situation stood the person under whom the plaintiffs derive title, at the time the defendant entered and began his improvement. The defendant entered without title, or even colour of title ; how then could he take away from the plaintiff,- the possession of any more than he actually cultivated, or inclosed ? If he took more, how much was it, and what was its limits ? There is no ground for a constructive possession beyond the bounds [135]*135of the defendant’s inclosure. He had no pretence, or colour of title, to the whole tract surveyed for William Nichols. If he had claimed that identical tract, by title either of descent or purchase, (although his title turned out bad,) and had entered on-part of it, in assertion of his claim, neither the plaintiffs nor any other person under them being on the land, the case would have been very different. But he made no such claim. He set himself down as a settler, although he was in truth a trespasser, and nothing more. For, there is no law or custom of this State, authorising a settlement on land which has been appropriated by survey. But, it is complained of, as a very hard thing, that a man who expends his time and labour on a tract of woodland, should be confined to the limits of his inclosure—nay, that even within these limits, he should be unable to acquire title,' by less than twenty-one years possession. This is looking only on one side of the question. Is it not also hard, that a man who has bought and paid for his land, should be deprived of it without consideration ? If the settler, knows of the prior appropriation, he acts 'dishonestly, in attempting to acquire title by the Act of Limitations. If he is ignorant of it, he is unfortunate, but his misfortune is owing to his own negligence—for, with proper diligence, he might have known it. Still, I have strong feelings for persons in that situation. The hardship of their case, is entitled to great consideration from the owner of the land, but must not be suffered to shake the principles of the law. Another reason, why a settler should not gain possession by construction, beyond the bounds of his inclosure, is, that he is under no obligation to take any definite quantity, nor to lay out his land in any particular shape. In the present case, for instance, the defendant seated himself on the tract surveyed for William Nichols. But there were two other tracts adjoining, (in all, 1000 acres.) Now in what direction, was the defendant’s possession to diverge from the point where he erected his first cabin and commenced his cultivation? And as he proceeded in his cultivation, what notice had the plaintiffs of the shape in which he intended to lay out his land, or of the quantity he intended to take ? Instead of taking the whole of William Nichols’s tract, he might have taken part of that, and part of one of the others. The more the matter is considered, the [136]*136more are we convinced of the difficulties attending this constructive possession contended for by the defendant. These difficulties have induced Courts of Justice to reject it as unjust and inexpedient, as I shall proceed to shew. In Cluggage (in error) v. Duncan’s Lessee, 1 Serg. & Rawle, 111, this Court affirmed the opinion of the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon county, that the Act of Limitations was a bar, as to all land within the defendant’s inclosure, and no more. In Burns (in error) v. Swift, 1 Serg. & Rawle, 436, this Court was of opinion, “ that the law threw upon the plaintiff, the possession of all the land within the bounds of his survey, and when the defendant who claimed under an application founded on an improvement subsequent to the plaintiff’s survey, entered and took possession of part, and inclosed it, the possession of the part inclosed was completely adverse and exclusive, so that the plaintiff had no pretence to say it remained in him. But as to the other part, the plaintiff was not ousted of his possession, and having the better right, the possession should remain in him although claimed by the defendant.” In this case of Burns v. Swift, the opinion of the Court was delivered by me, and assented to by the late Judge Ye ates who was present; and it is of importance to observe, that in that opinion I mentioned, that I understood, C. J.'M‘Kean and Judge Yeates had recognised the same principle in decisions at Nisi Prius.

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7 Serg. & Rawle 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-shaw-pa-1821.