Paxton v. Griswold

122 U.S. 441, 7 S. Ct. 1216, 30 L. Ed. 1143, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2122
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 27, 1887
Docket293
StatusPublished

This text of 122 U.S. 441 (Paxton v. Griswold) 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
Paxton v. Griswold, 122 U.S. 441, 7 S. Ct. 1216, 30 L. Ed. 1143, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2122 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Beadley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment for 405 acres of land in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, brought by the heirs-at-law of John Griswold, the defendants in error, against George W. Paxton and others, plaintiffs in error, to which the defendants below pleaded not guilty. The cause was tried at Philadelphia before Judge McKennan, and the jury, by direction of the court, found a verdict for the plaintiffs below, and judgment was entered accordingly. That judgment is now before us for review. The questions of law in the case arise upon a bill of exceptions taken at the trial, which shows the following proceedings. The plaintiffs, besides showing by certain depositions, that they were the heirs-at-law of John Griswold, adduced in evidence, 1st, a warrant granted to him, dated May 23, 1848, for 400 acres of land, adjoining lands surveyed to other persons named, situate in the townships of Dickinson and South Middleton, in the county of Cumberland, acknowledging payment for the same to the treasurer of the commonwealth ; 2dly, a survey made on said warrant, dated December 26, 1853, containing 405 acres 138 perches, returned into the land office; 3dly, a patent to John Griswold for the said land, describing the same according to the plot of the survey; 4thly, the writ of ejectment issued in the cause, for the purpose of proving that the defendants were in possession of the land claimed m the writ.

The defendants then made the following offer : A. "W arrant to Thomas Cookson, dated 26th August, 1751; B. Certificate *443 of payment of purchase money by Cookson on 27th August, 1751.

They also offered to prove that a survey was actually made immediately after the date of the warrant and 1264 acres located upon it.

That this location and survey was known to the- proprietaries, and recognized and approved by their officers.

That a subsequent warrant was issued by the proprietaries, calling for this location in favor of Cookson.

That this land was assessed for taxes in 1765, in 1770, and subsequently.

That the same land was conveyed by different deeds and by various legal proceedings down to the year 1846, when it vested in Geisse and Kropff, who mortgaged it to the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank of Philadelphia, to secure part of the purchase money.

That the land was sold on the mortgage on 13th November, 1849, purchased by the said bank, and by them conveyed to the defendants and those under whom they claim.

That Griswold, under whom plaintiffs claim, was a clerk in the employ of Geisse and Kropff, and made an application in 1848 for this land, and therein set out that it was for the use of Geisse and Kropff.

That Griswold left the state immediately after that date, 1848, and never returned, and the title by return of survey and by patent was completed by the defendants in the name of Griswold, because it was the custom of the land officer at that day to issue the patent in the name of the applicant, Griswold having died in 1860.

This offer was objected to by the plaintiffs, on the following grounds, to wit: That no survey was ever made upon it by any proof that is adduced before this court in any shape or form by any official; that the offer does not propose to show an official survey, or survey made by direction of the proprietaries; that any other survey is immaterial and irrelevant in this case; that finding lines of an old survey, upon the ground does not prove that they are made by official authority, or that they were any more than trespasses upon the land of *444 the proprietaries; that such a survey unreturned gives no right to a warrantee under the proprietaries claiming land by virtue of a warrant issued under the proprietary system; that under the act of 1784 no more than four hundred acres could be surveyed upon one warrant, and that a survey made prior to the act of 1779 was never returned into the land department. Conceding that they had the right to perfect their title under the act of assembly, they could not have surveyed or patented under that survey more than 400 acres.

Further, that the defendants cannot set up an equitable title in this action.

The court admitted A and B; the rest of the offer was rejected.

For the rejection of the rest of their offer, the defendants excepted.

The defendants then put in evidence (A) the warrant to Thomas Cookson, which was as follows:

A.

By the Proprietaries. Pennsylvania, ss:

Whereas Thomas Cookson, of the county of Cumberland, hath requested that we would grant him to take up one hundred and fifty acres of land on a branch of Yellow Breeches, in the said county of Cumberland, for which he agrees to pay to our use at the rate of fifteen pounds ten shillings, current money of this Province, for one hundred acres, and the yearly quit-rent of one half-penny sterling for every acre thereof:

These are, therefore, to authorize and require you to survey, or cause to be surveyed, unto the said Thomas Cookson, at the place aforesaid, according to the method of townships appointed,the said quantity of 150 acres, if not already surveyed or appropriated, and make return thereof into the secretary’s office in order for further confirmation, for which this shall be your sufficient warrant. Which survey, in case the said Thomas Cookson fulfil the above agreement within six months from the date hereof, shall be valid ; otherwise void.

Given, under my hand and the seal of the land office, by virtue of certain powers from the said proprietaries, at Phila-. *445 delphia, this twenty-sixth day of August, anno Domini one thousand seven hundred and fifty-one,

James Hamilton. [Seal.]

To Nicholas Scull, surveyor .general.

The defendants also put in évffience (B) the following evidence of payment of purchase money by Cookson, to wit:

B.

(Certified' extract from "Ledger of Department of Internal Af . fairs of Pennsylvania,.)

Thomas Cookson, Dr.

1751.

Aug. 27. 44. To land (2W. S.^on Yellow Breeches creek............. 43

1874v..

Aug. 21. 218'.'a’s'31 p’s pat. to the Mt. Holly Paper Có.Vat-.vo.-.' .'......... 86119

Contra Cumberland, Cr.

Aug. 27. 44. By cash ten pounds & £7 10 . . .54 £17 10

This being all the evidence in the case, the court, as before stated, charged the jury to find a. verdict for the plaintiffs for the land embraced in the warrant, survey, and patent given in evidence in their behalf ; to which instruction the defendants excepted.

It will be perceived that the case turned upon the failure of the defendants to show that any official survey had ever been made under the vague • and indescriptive warrant granted to Thomas Cookson, or that any survey had ever been returned to the land office.

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Bluebook (online)
122 U.S. 441, 7 S. Ct. 1216, 30 L. Ed. 1143, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paxton-v-griswold-scotus-1887.