Noland v. Cromwell

4 Munf. 155, 18 Va. 155, 1814 Va. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 26, 1814
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 4 Munf. 155 (Noland v. Cromwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noland v. Cromwell, 4 Munf. 155, 18 Va. 155, 1814 Va. LEXIS 19 (Va. 1814).

Opinion

the Judges pronounced their opinions.

Judge Coai.tkr.

In this case the appellant, who states that he has been about 20 years in possession of a tract of land,and has made valuable improvements thereon, seeks to be relieved from a judgment in ejectment, recovered against him by the appellee, who had obtained a prior patent therefor, and to vacate and annul that patent, as being fraudulently obtained, against his prior and superior equitable right.

The appellant makes three objections to the claim of the appellee ; 1st, that he, the appellant, had purchased a warrant from the office of Lord Fairfax for 400 acres, including the Rock Lick, &c. and which he had placed in the hands of Rigg, one of his lordship’s surveyors, who, although frequently pressed, refused and failed to survey until the warrant was out of date, when he informed the appellee thereof, who immediately obtained a warrant for the same land, and the bill therefore suggests fraud and combination between these parties 2d, that finding the tract contemplated by the above warrant, (viz. the Rock Lick Tract,) had already been granted, he purchased a warrant for some lands adjoining, and which he has had surveyed and patented ; but that the appellee had procured a plat to be made out for the same lands, although it was not the land called for by her warrant, (without any survey being actually made thereof,) upon which her elder patent issued, and to his astonishment and surprize, had brought her ejectment aforesaid, 8cc.

[158]*158The defendant, now appellee, denying the fraud, &c. contends that her warrant covers the land in controversy, and that the lands were surveyed, &cv

- The Chancellor directed three facts to be ascertained by an issue : — 1st, whether any fraud was practised by the appellee in procuring the warrant for the lands claimed by her; —:2d, whether a survey was ever made ; and, if so, 3d, whether it was made pursuant to the warrant, or on lands called for by it.

‘ The verdict of the jury found that no fraud was practised in obtaining the warrant; but said nothing as to the other points ; which the Judge thereupon directed should be enquired into by another jury ; but he subsequently discharged so much of the order as directed that enquiry, and dismissed the plaintiff’s bill.

This proceeding in the Chancery Court is now justified, because the appellant had failed to file his caveat to prevent the grant issuing to the appellee, and had not shewn that he was prevented by fraud or accident from pursuing that remedy : and whether that principle was the foundation of the decree in question, or not, we are now' stopped in the threshold of the cause ir, this court, on this ground. The first great enquiry therefore will be, whether the dismission of the bill can he justified on the ground of its containing no equity whereon to found the jurisdiction of the Chancery Court: and the correct mode, therefore, to test the principle contended for, will be to consider this case on the bill alone, as though a demurrer had been filed thereto for want of equity.

In determining the previous question, therefore, and which is the only one that has been argued, it will be proper to suppose as favourable a case as the appellant could possibly make out according to the pleadings ; to wit, that the appellee and surveyor had combined to defraud him in postponing his survey until his warrant had run out of date, so as to enable the appellee to slip in and procure a warrant; that then, finding they had embraced patent land in the warrant so procured, they returned a plat, (without having made a survey [159]*159thereof,) covering other lands, viz. those of the appellant; and upon which supposed survey, a grant had been obtained for lands not authorised by the warrant: — and then the question arises, whether a grant, consummating this tissue of frauds, is to prevail, because it is prior in date, over the grant to a fair purchaser, accompanied with long possession, and valuable improvements made, because that party (who it no where appears ever knew, until after their close, of these fraudulent proceedings,) did not file a caveat to arrest them.

It is said wo are bound, by the former decisions of this court, to affirm this decree on this ground, although it may work sxxch manifest injustice as that above stated.

My opinion is that no decision of this court, and that none of the known and acknowledged principles establishing the jurisdiction of courts of equity, compel me to give a decision in this case so contrary to my ideas of right and justice. I think the great current of decisions in this court, will bear me out in the opinion which I have formed on this previous question as applicable to this case; and I feel confident that the great and acknowledged principles of equity jui’isdiction, together with the positive statutes of the country, will be found also to accord with my ideas on this subject.

In considering this question, the decision in which will apply to many cases now pending, it must be borne in mind, that the party against whom the principle contended for is to be applied, is one who has proceeded regularly, under the acts of assembly, to procure his warrant, and make his location thereof, with sufficient precision to notify subsequent adventurers ; and that his prior right, thus fairly gained, has never been relinquished, forfeited or abandoned, and is a clear subsisting equitable claim, except so far as it may have been impaired by a subsequent adventurer, either know ■ ingly, and by actual fraud, as in this case, or carelessly, and so fraudently, interfering with it, and the failure of the par • ty to slate s.v,A firove that he was prevented by fraud or acci dent from filing a caveat.

Before I proceed to examine the decisions of this court, k may not be improper to take a short view of the mode of

[160]*160acquiring land in this country, and of the origin and nature of this proceeding by Caveat, as also of such g eneral principles of Eqqity Jurisdiction as may be applicable to the case.

The governor and council alone had the right (under the colonial government) to grant lands,

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Bluebook (online)
4 Munf. 155, 18 Va. 155, 1814 Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noland-v-cromwell-va-1814.