Pillow v. Roberts

54 U.S. 472, 14 L. Ed. 228, 13 How. 472, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 872
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 27, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 54 U.S. 472 (Pillow v. Roberts) 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
Pillow v. Roberts, 54 U.S. 472, 14 L. Ed. 228, 13 How. 472, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 872 (1852).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Roberts, t-lie defendant in error, was plaintiff below, in an action of ejectment for 160 acres of land. Pillow, the defendant below, pleaded the general issue, and two special pleas: The first, setting forth a sale of the land in dispute, for taxes more than five years before suit brought: The second, pleading the statute of limitation of ten-years. These pleas were overruled' on special demurrer, as informal and insufficient; and the judgment of the court on this subject-is here alleged as error. But as the same matters of defence were afterwards offered to be laid before the jury on the trial of the general issue and over *473 ruled by the court, it will be unnecessary to further notice the pleas; as the defence set up by them, if valid and legal, should have been received and submitted to. the jury on the trial. In the action of ejectment, (with the exception, perhaps, of a plea to the jurisdiction,) any and every defence to the plaintiff’s recovery may be given' in evidence under the general issue. And as the decision of' the court on the bills of exception will reach every question appertaining to the merits of the cáse, it will be unnecessary to decide whether those merits were sufficiently set forth in the special pleas, to which the defendant was not bound to resort for the purpose of having the.benefit of his defence.

On the trial, the plaintiff below gave in evidence a patent for the land in dispute, from the United States to Zimri V. Henry, dated 7th May, 1835; and then offered a deed from said Henry to himself, dated 10th November, 1849. This deed purported to be acknowledged before the clerk of the Circuit Court of Walworth county, in the State of Wisconsin, and was objected to, 1st. Because there was no proof, of the identity of the grantor with the patentee other 'than the certificate contained in the ácknówlédgmént. 2dly. Because the certificate of acknowledgment was not on the same piece of paper that. contained the deed, but on a paper attached to it .by wafers. And 3dly. Because the seal of the Circuit Court authenticating the acknowledgment was an impression stamped on paper, and not “ on wax, wafer, or any other adhesive or tenacious substance.”

The^ first two of these grounds of objection have not been urged in this court, and very properly abandoned as untenable. The third has been insisted on, and deserves some niore attention. Formerly vVax was the most convenient; and the only material used to receive and retain the impression of a seal. Hence it was said: “ Sigillum est cera impressa; quia cera, sine impressione, non. est sigillum.” - But this is not an allegation, that an impression without wax is not a sea1. And for .this reason courts have held, that an impression' made on. wafers or other adhesive substance-capable of receiving an impression, will come within'the definition of “ cera impressa.” If, then, wax be'construed to be merely a general term including within it any substance capable of receiving and retaining the impression of a seal, we' cannot perceive why paper, if it have that capacity, should riot as well be included in the category. ■ The simple and powerful machine, now used to impress public seals, does not require any soft or adhesive substánce to receive or retain their' impression. The impression made by such a power on paper is as well defined, as durable, and less likely to be destroyed or defaced by vermin,,accident, or intention, than that made on *474 wax. It is the seal which authenticates, and not the substance on which it is impressed;. and where the court can recognize its identity, they should not be called upon to analyze the material which exhibits it. In Arkansas, the presence of wax is not necessary to give validity to a seal; and the fact that the public officer in Wisconsin had not thought proper to use it, was sufficieiit to raise the presumption that such was the law or custom in Wisconsin, till the contrary was proved. It is time that such objections to the validity of seals should cease. The court did not err, therefore, in overruling the objections to the deed offered by the plaintiff.

After the plaintiff had closed his testimony, the defendant offered in evidence two certain deeds from Miller. Irwin, sheriff of Phillips county, and assessor and collector of taxes therein, to Richard Davidson, dated on the 22d of October, 1844; one for the north half, and the other for the south half of the quarter section of land now in dispute. On objection, the court refused to permit these deeds to be received, and sealed a bill of exceptions. The defendant then offered the same deeds to Davidson, and in connection therewith, a deed from Davidson to Armstrong, and also a deed front Armstrong to the defendant; and to accompany them with proof of possession by himself and those under whom he claims, for more than ten years, as to the south half of said land, and more than five years as to the whole of it. The plaintiff objected to this evidence. “ And it was by the -roúrt ruled, that the possession of such deeds, accompanied by possession of the land, was not sufficient to prove such possession of the land to.be adverse to the plaintiff ánd his grantor without further proof that the defendant or his grantors claimed adversely; so the court refused to permit any deeds to be read in evidence to the jury.”

These bills of exception may be considered together. They present two questions, 1st.. Whether, by the law of Arkansas, the deeds offered in evidence (arid which were regularly acknowledged and recorded according to law) should have been permitted to go to the jury as evidence of a regular, sale of the land mentioned therein for taxes. And 2dly. Whether, without regard to their validity as elements of a good legal title per se, they should not have been received for the purpose of showing color of title, in connection with possession by.the persons claiming under them, for a length of time sufficient by .law to bar the entry of plaintiff.

I. In considering these questions, it will not be necessary, to set forth at length all the provisions of the revenue laws of Arkansas.for compelling the payment of taxes assessed on land. A brief recapitulation of their most proiriinent provisions will *475 suffice. These laws make it the duty of the collector, on or before the 15th of September of each year, to make a list of lands assessed to persons non-resident, ánd the tax due thereon, with a penalty or addition of 25 per cent., and to file this list with the' county clerk. He is directed, also, to set up a copy of the same at the court-house, and to publish it in a- newspaper at least four weeks before the first Monday of November, giving notice that unless the taxes shall be paid on or before that day, the land will be sold. On that day, the collector is authorized to offer for sale, at public auction, such tracts or lots of land, or so much of them as will be sufficient to raise the taxes and penalty assessed and unpaid, and to continue the sales from day to day.' The purchaser to pay down forthwith the amount of taxes, &c., and receive a certificate describing the land purchased, directing, if necessary, the public surveyor to lay off the part pur-, chased by metes and bounds after one year allowed for redemption.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 U.S. 472, 14 L. Ed. 228, 13 How. 472, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pillow-v-roberts-scotus-1852.