Satterlee v. Matthewson

27 U.S. 380, 7 L. Ed. 458, 2 Pet. 380, 1829 U.S. LEXIS 433
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 24, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by189 cases

This text of 27 U.S. 380 (Satterlee v. Matthewson) 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
Satterlee v. Matthewson, 27 U.S. 380, 7 L. Ed. 458, 2 Pet. 380, 1829 U.S. LEXIS 433 (1829).

Opinion

Mr Justice WashingtoN

delivered the opinion-of the Court.

This is a writ of error to the supreme court of Pennsylvania, An ejectment was commenced by the defendant in error in the court of common pleas against' Elisha Satterlee to recover the land in controversy, and upon the motion of tfré plaintiff in error, hé was admitted as her landlord, a defendant to the suit. The plaintiff, at the trial, set up a title under a warrant dated the 10th of January 1812, founded upon an improvement in the year 1785, which it was admitted was under a Connecticut title, and a patent bearing date the 19th of February 1813.

■The defendant claimed title under a patent issued to Wharton in the year 17P1, and a conveyance by him to John F. Satterlee in April 1812. It was contended on the part of the plaintiff, that admitting the defendant’s title to .be the oldest and best, yet he was stopped from setting it. up in that suit, as it appeared in evidence that he had come into possession as tenant to the plaintiff sometime in the year *408 1790. The court of common pleas decided in favour of the plaintiff upon the ground just stated; and judgment was accordingly rendered for her. Upon a writ of error tó the supreme court of that state, that court decided, in June 1825, 13 Serg. & Rawle, 133, that by the settled law of Pennsylvania, the Relation, of landlord and tenant could not subsist under, a Connecticut title ; , upon which ground the judgmént was reversed and a venire, facias de novo was awarded.

On the Sth of April. 1826, and before the second trial of. this cause took place, the legislature of that state, passed a láwin substance as follows,'viz. ,fthat the relation of'landlord and tenant shall exist, and be held as fully and effectually between Connecticut settlers and Pennsylvania claimants, as' between other citizens of this commonwealth, on the trial of any cause now pending, or hereafter to be brought within this,commonwealth, any law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.”

Upon the retrial of this cause in the inferior court in May 1826, evidence was given conducing to prove, that the land in dispute was, purchased of Wharton by Elisha Satterlee, the father of John F. Satterlee, and that by his direction, the conveyance was made to the son. It further appeared in evidence, that the son brought an ejectment against; his father in the year 1813, and’by some contrivance between .those parties,, alleged by the plaintiff below to be merely colourable,and fraudulent, for the purpose of depriving: her of her possession, obtained .a judgment and execution thereon, under which the possession was delivered to. the plaintiff in that suit, who immediately afterwards leased the premises to the father for two lives," at a tent of one "dollar per annum. The fairness of the transactions was made a question on the trial,' and it was asserted by the plaintiff that, notwithstanding the eviction of Elisha Satterlee under the above proceedings, he still continued to be her tenant.

The judge, after noticing in his charge the decisiofi of the supreme court in 1825,. arflj:the act of assembly before recited", stated to the jury the general principle of law, which prevents a tenant from controverting the title of his *409 landlord ;by-showing it to be defectivo, the exception to that principle where the landlord claims under a Connecticut title, as laid down by. the.above decision, and the effect of the act of assembly upon that decision, which act he pronounced to be binding on the Court. He therefore concluded, and so charged the jury, that if they should be satisfied.from the evidence, that the transactions between, the two SatterT lees before mentioned, were bona fide, arid that John F. Satterlee was the actual, purchaser of the land; then the der fe adapts might set up the eviction as a bar to the plaintiff’s'1 recovery as landlord. But that if the jury should be satisfied that.those transactions were; collusive,, and thatJElisha Sat-teriee >was in fact the .real purchaser, and the. name of ..his son insetted in the deed, fori the fraudulent, purpose of destroy.ing.thérightofthe.plaintifEas landlord; then the merely claiming under a Connecticut title, wóuld not deprive her of her .right to recover m that suit.

To this charge, of which the substance. only has .been stated, an exception was taken, and the whole of it is spread upon the. record- The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff; and judgment being rendered for her, the cause was .again taken to .the supreme court by a writ of error.'..

The only question which occurs in this cause,, which it. is competent to this .Court to decide is, whether the statute of Pennsylvania which has been mentioned,, of the 8th of April 1826, is or is not objectionable, on the ground of its repug-nancy, to the constitution, of the United States.1? . But before this inquiry .is gone into, it will be proper to dispose of a preliminary objection made to the jurisdiction of this Court, upon the ground that there is nothing apparent on this record to raise that question, or. otherwise to bring this case within any of the provisions of the 25th section of the. judiciary act of 1789.

Questions of this nature ¡have , frequently occurred in this Court, and- have given occasion for a1 critical examination of the above section, whíchhas resulted in the adoption of certain principles of construction applicable to it, by which the objection now. to be considered may, without much difficulty, be.-decided. 2 Wheaton, 363. 4 Wheaton, 311. 12 *410 Wheaton, 117. One of those principles is, that if it sufficiently appear from the record itself, that, the repugnancy of a statute of á state to the constitution of the United States was drawn into question, or that that question was applicable to thé case, this Court has jurisdiction of 'tjie cause under the section of the act referred toalthough the record should not, in terms, state a misconstruction , of the constitution of the United States', or that the repugnancy of the statute of the state to any part of that constitution was drawn into question.

Now it is manifest from this record, not only that the constitutionality of the statute of the 8th of April 1826, was drawn into question, and Was applicable to the.case, but that it was so applied by the judge, and formed the basis of his opinion to the jury, that they should find in favour of the plaintiff, if in other respects she was entitled to a verdict. It is equally manifest that the right of the plaintiff to recover in that action depended on that statute; the effect of which was to change the law, as the supreme court had decided it to be in this very case in the year 1825. 13 S. & R. 133.

That the'Charge of the judge forms a part of this record is unquestionable. It was made so by the .bill of exceptions, and would have been so without it,, under the statute of the 24th of February 1806, of that state ; which directs, that in all cases in which the opinion of the Court shall be delivered, if either party require if, it is made the duty of the judges to reduce the opinion, with their reasons therefor, to writing, and to file the same of record in the cause. In the case of Downing vs. Baldwin, 1 Serg. & Rawle,

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Bluebook (online)
27 U.S. 380, 7 L. Ed. 458, 2 Pet. 380, 1829 U.S. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/satterlee-v-matthewson-scotus-1829.