Price v. Johnston

1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 390
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 390 (Price v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Johnston, 1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 390 (Ohio 1853).

Opinion

Ranney, J.

The bill in this caso is prosecuted to compel the defendants, Johnston and wife, to surrender to the complainants, the heirs of William Price, late of Richmond, Virginia, the legal title to one thousand acres of land, included in survey No. 10,030 in the Virginia military district. Price died in 1808, intestate, leaving a widow and five children, all minors. At the time of his death, he was the owner of a large quantity of land in this district; some in his own right exclusively, and some in company with one Robert Means; and held partly by warrant, partly by entry and survey, and partly by patent. Means died in the same year, leaving a will; and some time after his death his executor instituted proceedings for partition in one of the courts of Virginia, which resulted in aparting to the heirs of Price 15,890 acres, including the lands in controversy. So far as this tract is concerned, neither the entry ■or survey had been made at the death of Means. He held the warrant at that time, and the entry and survey were afterwards made in his name.

[337]*337The estate of Price being greatly embarrassed with debts, certain creditors of his, in the year 1821, filed in the superior court of Yirginia their bill in chancery praying a sale of these lands in the' State of Ohio, for the purpose of paying the debts of the estate. The administrator, widow, and heirs of Price were made parties defendant. One of these heirs, Wm. D. Price, had, at that time, arrived at majority ; the others were minors. Such proceedings wereafterwards had that, in November of the same year, a decree by consent for the sale of the lands was taken ; the minors consenting by their guardians. At the sale afterwards made in pursuance of the-decree, Joseph Carter became the purchaser of the tract in question for the sum of $1,500 ; paid the purchase money; and on the 22nd of December, 1853, obtained a patent for the land. In 1827 he conveyed to William Duval, and Duval, *in 1828, conveyed to Samuel and David Dunn, who died, leaving the defendant, Julia, now intermarried with William E. Johnston, their sole heir at law.

Upon this state of the facts, it is claimed for the complainants that they were the equitable owners of this tract of land, and that the judicial proceedings in Yirginia resulting in its sale are void, and have in no way affected their interests, and consequently they have a right to demand the legal title from Johnston and wife.

Eor them it is denied that the complainants ever had an equitable title to this property; and it is insisted that the entry and survey made after the death of Means in his name are absolute nullities; but, in any event, it is further claimed, that the ancestors-of the defendant, Julia, must be regarded as innocent purchasers without notice, and protected as such. To this, it is replied, that, even if the entry was void, she can not take advantage of it, as she claims under the same entry, aud procured the legal title by virtue of it; and that her ancestors were not purchasers without notice, as the patent refers to the void judicial proceedings by which the-warrant was assigned.

That the decree of the Yirginia court was entirely inoperative to transfer or affect any interest, either legal or equitable, that the complainants had to lands lying in Ohio, is a proposition too clear for argument. Salmon v. Price, 13 Ohio, 368. Lessee of Blake v. Davis, 20 Ohio, 231.

On the other hand, it is equally clear that the holder of a warrant, before location or entry, has no such specific equity to any particular tract of land as a court can notice or enforce. As stated [338]*338by Chief Justice Marshall, in Hoofnagle v. Anderson, 7 Wheat. 217: “ The entry, and not the warrant, has always been considered as the commencement of title and by Chief Justice Hitchcock, in Lessee of Latham v. Oppy, 18 Ohio, 110: “ The’equitable interest of the locator commences with the entry, his equity is merged in the’ legal title when the patent emanates.”

*These propositions, being undoubted, bring us to the inquiry: Had these complainants, before or at the time the patent issued under which the defendants claim, the equitable title to this land? The solution of the question thus stated must depend ■entirely upon the answer to be given to another, viz.: Did the ■entry and survey made in the name of Means, after his death, appropriate the land, or was it a nullity?

The complainant’s counsel rely upon the proviso in the first section of the act of Congress, of March 2,1807 (2 U. S. Stat. at Large, ■424), to extend the time for locating Virginia military warrants, etc., •and insist that it confirms and makes valid all such entries. It reads thus: “ Provided, that no locations, as aforesaid, within the .above-mentioned tract shall, after the passing of this act, be made •on tracts of land for which patents had previously been issued, or which had been previously surveyed, and any patent which may nevertheless be obtained for land located contrary to the provisions ■ of this section shall be considered null and void.”

It is not doubted by them that, independent of this proviso, isuch an entry would be void ; and I shall therefore confine myself to an examination of such decisions as have involved its construc■tion.

The question in this state was first raised in the case of the Lessee of Wallace v. Saunders, 7 Ohio, pt. 1, 174. It was there expressly •decided that an entry made in the name of a dead man was void, and not helped by the proviso in the act of 1807. The court say: “It was was intended to protect such surveys as were defective, and which might be avoided for irregularity. But it could not have been intended, as we apprehend, for the protection of such surveys as were absolutely void, or, in other words, such surveys as could not, at any time after they were made, be, consistently with law, carried into grants.”

This decision was followed and expressly approved in Lessee of Sullivant v. Weaver, 10 Ohio, 275, and in Lessee of Latham v. Oppy, 18 Ohio, 104.

[339]*339*One of the earliest cases in the supreme court of the United States, in which the construction of this proviso was drawn in question, is Jackson v. Clark, 1 Pet. 628. The question there was whether an entry and survey upon a warrant already satisfied by another location, after the land had passed into the possession of third persons, was protected against a subsequent entry. The court ¡held that it was; and in answer to the argument that the statute did not protect void surveys, Chief Justice Marshall says : “ If it be conceded that this proviso was not intended for the protection of surveys which were in themselves absolutely void, it must be admitted that it was intended to protect those which were defective, and which might be avoided for irregularity. If this effect be denied to the proviso, it becomes itself a nullity.” After stating the conclusion of the court to be that the survey, although irregular, “ was not an absolute nullity,” he adds: “ Lands surveyed are as completely withdrawn as lands patented from subsequent location.” “ It may be that the defendants may never be able to perfect their title. The land may be yet subject to the disposition of Congress. It is enough for the present case to say that, as we understand the act of Congress, it was not liable to location when the plaintiff’s entry was made.”

In the case of Galt v. Galloway, 4 Pet.

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

Related

Hoofnagle v. Anderson
20 U.S. 212 (Supreme Court, 1822)
Blight's Lessee v. Rochester
20 U.S. 535 (Supreme Court, 1822)
Jackson v. Clark
26 U.S. 628 (Supreme Court, 1828)
James M'Donald's Heirs v. Smalley
31 U.S. 261 (Supreme Court, 1832)
Lindsey and Others v. the Lessee of Miller
31 U.S. 666 (Supreme Court, 1832)
Galloway v. Finley
37 U.S. 264 (Supreme Court, 1838)
McArthur's Heirs v. Dun's Heirs
48 U.S. 262 (Supreme Court, 1849)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-johnston-ohio-1853.