Polk's Lessee v. Wendell

18 U.S. 293, 5 L. Ed. 92, 5 Wheat. 293, 1820 U.S. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 18 U.S. 293 (Polk's Lessee v. Wendell) 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
Polk's Lessee v. Wendell, 18 U.S. 293, 5 L. Ed. 92, 5 Wheat. 293, 1820 U.S. LEXIS 256 (1820).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court. Both these titles are founded on what are called removed warrants, and priority of entry is altogether immaterial to the issue. But the existence of an entry, it is contended on behalf of the plaintiff, is indispensable to the issuing of a warrant of survey, and to the validity of grants, which ought by law to have their origin in such entries. With a view, therefore, to impeach the prior grant to Sevier, under which these defendants claim, the plaintiff proposes to prove, that there never were in fact any entries made to justify the issuing of the warrants under which their title had its inception. It has been also suggested, that his intention further was to prove the warrants themselves forgeries. But this does not appear from the bill of exceptions, as will be more particularly shown when we come to analyze it, with a view of determining what evidence appears to have been rejected in the Circuit Court, *

*302 .vRhuiity of local decisions oFrea/properOoJu lhis Deoisiou of c.'3 9 Trandi, 87, reconciled with the pie-sent case-.

The evidence offered in the Court below, with a view to invalidating Sevier’s grant, was rejected, and on the writ of error to this Court, one general question arises, whether any, and if any, what evidence of facts, prior to the issuing of a grant, shall he received to invalidate it ?

When the case was before this Court, in the year ^ J 1015, the same question was brought to its notice^ an(l received its most earnest and anxious attention. Long experience had satisfied the mind of every member of the Court, of the glaring impolicy of ever admitting an inquiry beyond the dates of the grants under which lands are claimed. But the peculiar situation of Kentucky and Tennessee, with relation to the parent States of Virginia and North Carolina, and the statutory provisions and course of decisions that have grown out of that relation, has imposed upon this Court the necessity of pursuing a course which nothing but necessity could have reconciled to its ideas of law or policy. The sole object for which jurisdiction of cases, between citizens of different states, is vested in the Courts of the United States, is to secure to all the administration of justice, upon the same principles on which it is administered between citizens of the same State. Hence, this Court has never hesitated to conform to the settled doctrines of the States on landed property, where they are fixed, and can be satisfactorily ascertained ; nor would it ever he led to deviate from them, in ariy case that bore the semblance of impartial JUStlCe.

It has been supposed, that in the former decision . 4 4 7 alluded to in this case, this Court has gone beyond 7 o ^ *303 the decisions of the Courts of Tennessee, in opening the door to inquiries into circumstances occurring prior to the issuing of a grant.

An attentive perusal of that decision will detect the error; or prove, if it has done so, it has done it oh principles that cannot be controverted.

It is obvious from the report of the decision, that it was at that time presented under an aspect somewhat different from that in which it now appears. The forgery of the warrants constituted a part of the case which the plaintiff was precluded from making out in evidence. And to collect the purport of the decision, ajt that time rendered, the best resort will be to the words in which it is delivered.

Two sentences will give the substance of that decision. They are expressed in the following words ; “But there are cases in which a grant is absolutely void; as where the State has no title to the thing granted, or where the officer had no authority to issue the grant. In such cases, the validity of the grant is necessarily examinable at law.” And “ If, as the plaintiff offered to. prove, the entries were never, made, and the warrants were forgeries, then no right accrued under the act of 1777 ; no purchase of the land was made from the State; and independent of the act of cession to the United States, the grant is void by the express words of the law.”

These two sentences comprise the substance of that decision. For, as to the doubts expressed in the last paragraph of the opinion, relative to the inception of a right in the ceded territory prior to the cession, it is but a doubt, and is removed by a reference *304 to the 6th section of the act of 1734. As to the question what evidence shall be sufficient to prove the existence of the entry, the Court is silent. As to what validity shad he given to the grants emanating from North Carolina, the decision places it upon the statutes of North Carolina. And although an opinion is expressed that North Carolina could make no new grants after the cession, who could have entertained a doubt upon that question ? The right reserved to her was to perfect incipient grants ; but what restraint is imposed upon her discretion ? or what doubt suggested of her good faith in exécuting that power ?

It will be perceived, that as to irregularities committed by the officers of government prior to the grant, the Court does not express a doubt but that the government, and not the individual, must bear the consequences resulting from them. On the contrary, it declares, that the existence of the grant is, in'itself, a sufficient ground, from which every man may infer that every prerequisite has been performed. All, then, that it decides is, that an entry was indispensable as the inceptiou of a title to Sevier; that if an original grant had issued to him after the cession, or a title had been perfected where there was no incipient title before the cession, as in the case of a grant on a forged warrant, and no entry, that it would be void. But, in admitting that the1 grant shall support the presumption that every prerequisite existed, it necessarily admits, that a warrant shall be evidence of the existence of an entry. Nor is it by ány means com elusive to the contrary} that the entry does not appear *305 upon the abstract of entries in Washington county, recorded in the Secretary’s office. On the contrary, if the warrants issued are signed by the entry-taker, it is conclusive that the locations were received by him, and if he omitted to enter them, his neglect ought not to prejudice the rights of him in whose favour the warrants were issued.

That an entry is necessary to give validity to these grants, we think not only perfectly deducible from the statutory provisions in force in Tennessee, but also, from the legal adjudications of their Courts. Nay, they have not assumed the principle, that the issuing of the grant shall be deemed a recognition of the legal sufficiency of air entry; but have decided a grant void which emanated from an entry not sanctioned by the statutes of North Carolina, though, the grant was issued when it might have lawfully issued. (Jackson v. Honeycut, 1 Tenn. Rep. 30.) And, in the case of Dodson v.. Cock and Stewart, so' much relied on in the argument, the legal validity of a grant is expressly referred to the' validity of the entry at the time it was made.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

(PC) Coffer v. Mannix
E.D. California, 2025
Walker v. Miyamoto
N.D. California, 2024
(HC) Martinez Santoyo v. Boyden
E.D. California, 2024
Grizzle v. San Diego, County of
S.D. California, 2019
Friedman v. Bloomberg L.P.
Second Circuit, 2017
Schlittler, David
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2015
Jackson v. Rhee
District of Columbia, 2011
Millard v. United States
967 A.2d 155 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2009)
United States v. Bukis
17 F. Supp. 77 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1936)
State v. Arluno
268 N.W. 179 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1936)
United States v. Bass
64 F.2d 467 (Seventh Circuit, 1933)
Stockard v. McGary
120 Tenn. 180 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1907)
Ayres v. United States
42 Ct. Cl. 385 (Court of Claims, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 U.S. 293, 5 L. Ed. 92, 5 Wheat. 293, 1820 U.S. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polks-lessee-v-wendell-scotus-1820.