Schraeder Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Packer

129 U.S. 688, 9 S. Ct. 385, 32 L. Ed. 760, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1720
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
Docket118
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 129 U.S. 688 (Schraeder Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Packer) 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
Schraeder Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Packer, 129 U.S. 688, 9 S. Ct. 385, 32 L. Ed. 760, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1720 (1889).

Opinion

Me. Justice Lamar

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit for timber felled and carried away, originally brought in .the Common Pleas Court of Bradford County,. Pennsylvania, where, after certain amendments of the record with respect to the parties thereto, the case stood as Elisha A. Packer, Plaintiff, v. The Schraeder Mining and Manufacturing Company. A judgment of that court, on a verdict in favor of the defendant,■ háving been reversed by, the Supreme Court of the State, and ■the cas,e remanded for a new trial, (97 Penn. St. 379,) and three other verdicts having' been set aside by the trial court, the case was, on application of the plaintiff, removed into ithe Circuit-Court of the United States for the Western District of *690 Pennsylvania on the ground'' of diverse citizenship of the parties. ,

■ Thé declaration averred that the defendant, by its agents and employés, entered upon plaintiff’s lands in the,years 1867, 1868 and 1869, and cut down and took therefrom over two millions of feet of timber, amounting in value to $15,000.

The defences pleaded to the action were (1) that defendant did not commit any of the trespasses complained of on plaintiff’s land; (2): that the land on which the alleged trespass was committed did hot belong to the plaintiff, but was the property of the defendant itself. It was also contended by the defen4ant that the plaintiff, through his agent, had aided, by consent and acquiescence, in establishing a boundary between the two contiguous tracts of the parties, up to which lie, the plaintiff, agreed that defendant’s agents and officers .could'cut and carry away as much timber as they pleased. Issue having been joined upon these pleas, the case was tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict in' favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $8000, upon which judgment was rendered’. The defendant sued out this writ of error.

Upon the trial the plaintiff, in support of his claim to the land in dispute, introduced evidence deducing his title from'a warrant granted by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to one George Moore, for a.tract of 375 acres of land. The official return shows that the warrant was issued on the 27th of April, 1792, and that the survey was made for the said George Moore on the 21st of November, 1792. The survey is thus described in the official return:

“.A certain tract situated on' the waters- of Towanda Creek, Luzerne County, beginning at a post; thence by land of Joseph B„etz and Henry Betz north twenty-nine degrees east, three hundred and eighteen perches'to a hemlock.; thence by'vacant land north sixty-one degrees west, two hundred perches to a.post; thence by -the same and land of General Byodhead- south twenty-nine degrees west, three hundred and ■eighteen perches to a post; and thence by land of Samuel Cooley south sixty-one degrees east, two hundred perches to the beginning, containing three hundred and seventy-five acres’ arid allowance of six.per cent for roads,” etc.

*691 As evidence to sbow that the. land in dispute is part of this George Moore tract, the plaintiff produced copies of the returns of these surveys, called for as.adjoinders, the location .of which, it is claimed, was fixed by the evidence beyond dispute. And in connection, with that evidence he called several surveyors, who gave testimony, with maps and other returns, tending to show, by identifying the hemlock northeast corner, and other marks on the ground corresponding with the survey, that the Moore tract, located, according, to its calls, embraced the land in dispute.

The defendant, on his part, introduced evidence to show that the land in dispute was a portion of a tract of about 409 acres, surveyed March 24, 1794, in the warranty name. df Andrew Tybout. He introduced.a copy of a warrant and return of the Tybout .tract and a patent from the State to one Daniel Brodhead for that tract. Evidence was also given ..by defendant showing that original marks were found on certain trees on the north, east and south lines of the Tybout survey, and that,the hemlock northeast corner, the sugar southeast, corner, and the hemlock sapling southwest corner, called for in the return, were marked respectively as corners in 1794. The hemlock sapling had disappeared, but the defendant’s surveyor determined the age of the corner by a witness found there, and by other signs.

Defendant also introduced evidence, of certain surveyors, tending to show that no marks upon the ground had ever been found for the Moore survey on the line north from the hemlock sapling corner, or on the line west from the hemlock northeast corner thereof, which bore the date of such survey. In this connection, it put in evidence certain official maps from the land office of Pennsylvania, showing the location of what is known as the General Brodhead lands, lying west of the west line of the Moore survey extended southerly; and also produced evidence tending to show that a line bearing marks dating 1792 was found from the sugar tree, the southeast corner of the Tybout tract, to the hemlock sapling corner mentioned, and that the sugar tree was marked as a corner of 1792, and that a corner of 1792' was found at the hemlock sap *692 ling corner. Other evidence was introduced by the defendant designed to show the non-existence of an actual survey of the Moore warrant according to .the official return .thereof, the details of which need, not be stated here.

In connection with this contention the defendant offered to give further evidence, founded upon examinations made upon the ground by surveyors, to show that the Moore warrant was not actually surveyed on the ground according to its return of survey, but was surveyed, together with the Cooley and other warrants to the south of it, in one block, of which. the Moore was the northern member; that the north line of that blocjc, if actually surveyed upon the ground in 1792, was run between the hemlock ■ sapiing and sugar corners, corresponding to what was claimed by the defendant to be the south line of thó Andrew Tybout tract; that no line of 1792 was surveyed on the ground for the Moore warrant north from the hemlock sapling corner, nor west from the hemlock northeast corner of the Tybout tract; apd that the line south from the hemlock northeast corner aforesaid was run for warrants to the east of said' line, and was merely adopted by the return • of the Moore survey. To this evidence the plaintiff objected on the ground that twenty-one years and upwards having .elapsed from. the date 'of the Moore survey, there was a presumption juris ét de jure that the said • survey had been made as returned, and that the evidence was, therefore, inadmissible. The-court sustained this objection and excluded the evidence so offered, to which ruling the defendant excepted.

The defendant also contended on the trial of the case that the plaintiff was estopped from' setting up any claim to the' land in dispute, by reason of certain alleged acts and declarations of his, and. of his duly authorized agent,' one Jacob ■DeWitt.

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Bluebook (online)
129 U.S. 688, 9 S. Ct. 385, 32 L. Ed. 760, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schraeder-mining-manufacturing-co-v-packer-scotus-1889.