Neilson v. Lagow

53 U.S. 98, 13 L. Ed. 909, 12 How. 98, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 640
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 53 U.S. 98 (Neilson v. Lagow) 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
Neilson v. Lagow, 53 U.S. 98, 13 L. Ed. 909, 12 How. 98, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 640 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes here by a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of Indiana. The record shows that Lagow, the defendant in error, instituted an action of disseisin in a Circuit Court of the State of Indiana, whereby he sought to recover of Neilson, the plaintiff' in error, a tract of land described in the counts. The tenant having pleaded the general issue, the case was committed to a jury. At the trial, it appeared that Lagow, together with Nathaniel Ewing, John D. Hay, and Caroline Smith, whose title, if any, Lagow is alleged to have afterwards acquired, were in possession of the demanded premises in the *103 year 1820, claiming to own the same, and upon this evidence of title he rested his case.. The defendant then introduced a deed, bearing date September 19th, 1821, from Lagow, Ewing, Hay, and Smith, conveying to the Bank of Vincennes, the State Bank of Indiana, the lands in controversy, excepting a certain square therein described. He also put in evidence another deed ffom the bank to Badollett, Harrison, and Buntin, conveying the same lands acquired'by the bank under the deed last mentioned, and also transferring to the grantees some equitable title to the square excepted out of that deed. This conveyance is made to the grantees and their successors in the trusts declared by the deed, which' are: “ until the sale hereinafter authorized shall be made, the trustees, or a majority of them, or their successor or successors herein appointed, or who may hereafter be appointed agreeably to the mode hereinafter directed, shall and may demise or lease the whole or any part of the said lands, lots, and houses, until such time or times as a sale or sales thereof can be made, and receive and take the rents and profits thereof, also foreclose the said mortgages and collect the said notes; in trust nevertheless, for the use of the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States in extinguishment of the debt due by the said Bank of Vincennes tq the United States; and upon this further trust and confidence that the said trustees, or a majority of them, and their survivor or survivors herein appointed, or which shall hereafter be appointed, agreeably to the mode hereinafter directed, shall and do, whenever thereto requested by the -Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, for the best price that can be got, sell and dispose of, for cash or on credit, on such terms, and in such parts or parcels, as to them shall seem most advantageous, all or any part of the above-described and conveyed lands, tenements, and hereditaments, to any person or persons who may be inclined to purchase the same; and to execute and to acknowledge, in due form of law, deed or deeds of conveyance, unto the purchaser or purchasers, his heir or their heirs and .assigns in fee-simple absolute and upon the further trust that they, the said trustees, or a majority of them, or the survivors of them herein appointed, or hereafter to be appointed agreeably to the mode hereinafter directed, shall and do pay and apply, of and every the sum and sums of money or other proceeds to be raised or paid by the rents or sales of the said lands and collections of the said notes, or any.part or parts thereof, to the proper use of the United States, until the sum of one hundred and twenty thousand three hundred and eight dollars, which is now agreed upon by the said parties, of the first .part, of the one part; and the Honorable Jesse B. Thomas, as the legally authorized agent of the United States, of the other part, as the sum now due, together with in *104 terest on the said sum of money, at the rate of six per centum per annum until paid; retaining thereout, however, their, the said trustees’, expenditures, and a reasonable compensation for their trouble and services, returning and paying the overplus, if any, to the said President, Directors, and Company of the said Bank of Vincennes, their successors or assignees ; and also upon this further trust, as to all such parts of the said lands and premises, either in fee' or under mortgage, as shall remain unsold, that they, the said trustees, and their successors, shall stand seized thereof to the use of the United States, until the debt aforesaid shall be fully paid and discharged, and there afterwards to the use of the said President, Directors, and Company, their successors and "assigns forever, provided always, and it is hereby expressly agreed and declared by and between the parties of these presents, that in case of the death of either or any one or more of the said trustees hereinbefore named, or of any trustees hereafter to be appointed, it shall and may be lawful, to and for the said Secretary of the Treasury of the United States for the time being, at any time or times thereafter, by deed duly executed, to fill" up such vacancies; and the said, trustees, when so appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury as aforesaid, shall all of them have the like power and authority to act in the several trusts according to the true intent and meaning of these presents, as fully and amply, to all intents and purposes, as if such new or other trustee or trustees had been actually named herein by the said President, Directors, and Company-of the said Bank of Vincennes; and provided, also, that no trustee now appointed, or to be hereafter named and appointed as above directed, shall in any event be liable for any more than he shall receive, nor for any" loss or damage not occasioned wilfully and designedly by such trustee, or through his gross and wilful negligence.”

Neither the habendum nor the grant in this need contains the word heirs.

The tenant further, offered in evidence, proceedings under a judicial sale of the title to the excepted square above mentioned, by which'Badollett, Harrison, and Buntin, the trustees under the deed of the bank, became the purchasers of the legal title to that square, which was conveyed to them in fee-simple in 1827, and also introduced evidence to show that he was in possession under the trustees with a contract to purchase of them the' entire tract of land demanded.

The plaintiff then put in evidence the récord of a quo warranto against the bank, by which it appeared that in July, 1822, a judgment of forfeiture was rendered against that corporation, and all its franchises and property seized intojthe possession of the State; and he offered proof that Badoliett, Harrison, and *105 Buntin purchased the legal title to the reserved square as trustees, and that the money paid by them was from the funds of the United States, supplied by the order of the Secretary of the Treasury, and that all the trustees were deceased, when the action was brought.

At the request of the plaintiff the court gave the followihg instructions:

1. That on the proof of possession as owners by the Steam-Mill Company in 1820, and of the conveyance by, the company to Lagow, of June, 1827, Lagow, the plaintiff, is entitled to recover, unless the defendant has shown a better title.

2. That the 7th section of the act of Congress of 1st of May, 1820, forbids “ the purchase of any land on account of the United States,” unless authorized by act of Congress.

3. That the term purchase of land ” in law, and in the act of Congress, means any and every mode of acquiring an interest in real estate other than by inheritance.

4.

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Bluebook (online)
53 U.S. 98, 13 L. Ed. 909, 12 How. 98, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neilson-v-lagow-scotus-1851.