Snowden v. Loree

122 F. 493, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4716
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 19, 1902
DocketNo. 15
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 F. 493 (Snowden v. Loree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snowden v. Loree, 122 F. 493, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4716 (circtwdpa 1902).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, District Judge.

This is an action of ejectment brought by Fannie B. Snowden and others against L. F. Eoree, receiver of the Pittsburgh & 'Western Railway Company, to recover a rectangular strip of land situate at the southwest corner of Grant and South avenues, Allegheny City, Pa. The land is about 160 feet in width on South avenue, and some 940 odd feet on Grant avenue, and fronts on the Allegheny river. The defendant by itself or through its alienees being in possession of the land, the burden rests on the plaintiffs to show a complete title on their part, irrespective of what claim or title the defendant may have; the principle being well established that the right of the plaintiff to recover in ejectment depends on the strength of his own, and not on the weakness of his adversary’s, title. “In an action of ejectment the plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his own title. The weakness of his adversary’s cannot avail him.” McNitt v. Turner, 16 Wall. 362, 21 L. Ed. 341. The first question, therefore, is as to the validity of the plaintiff’s title. In the abstract filed by the plaintiffs, August 5, 1901, the only title claimed by them is that based upon a patent of the commonwealth to Duke Eoomis, dated August 15, 1837, enrolled in Patent Book H, vol. 37, p. 547, which, it was therein alleged, conveyed the property in dispute. Subsequently by amendment they set up that their grantors “entered into constructive possession of the land in dispute 9th day of July, A. D. 1822, or thereabouts, and into actual possession about the 15th day of August, A. D. 1837; and that plaintiffs and their grantors held continuous, uninterrupted, hostile, and notorious possession of the same from said times up to the year 1881, when they were ousted by the defendant’s grantors.” The plaintiffs’ claim, therefore, rests on the Loomis patent and on a title based upon adverse possession.

The question of the validity of that patent involves an examination of the legislation, plan, and original grants and conveyances of the Reserve Tract upon which the city of Allegheny stands. The Act of March 12, 1783, 2 Smith’s Laws, p. 62, provided for the sale of land north of the Ohio, west of the Allegheny, and south of a line running from the mouth of Mahoning creek, a tributary of the Allegheny, to the western boundary of the state. From the fact that provision was made in said act that payment could be made in certificates of depreciation given to the officers and soldiers of the Pennsylvania line, this section became known as “Depreciation Lands.” [495]*495A reservation was made in this act of, inter alia, the site of Allegheny City in the following words: “Reserving to the use of the state three thousand acres, in an oblong of not less than one mile in depth from the Allegheny and Ohio rivers, and extending up and down the said rivers, from opposite Fort Pitt, so far as may be necessary to include the same.” It will be noted that what is hete reserved is an oblong or solid body of land, that it extends in depth “from the Allegheny and Ohio rivers,” and that it extends “up and down the said rivers,” and that such language would not include islands. The act of September xi, 1787, 2 Smith’s Laws, p. 414, provided that upon said reserved land a town, in lots, with a suitable number of outlots, be laid out and surveyed, and enacted, “and the streets, lanes and alleys of the said town and outlots shall be common highways forever.” In pursuance thereof a survey was made and a plan adopted by the state in which there was laid out a lane or street, afterwards known as “Bank Lane,” extending along the north shore of the Ohio and Allegheny rivers, and fronting the south line of outlots 21 to 31, both inclusive. The lots at both ends of the lane were plotted as bounded by the river. ' The east end of the lane, as indicated on the plan, began at a turn of the inward bend of the stream caused by the water passing around an island depicted on the plan map. The island was not laid out or plotted in lots, and, so far as the plan indicates, was not treated or regarded as a part of the Reserve Tract. No provision existed by law at that time for the sale of islands in the Allegheny and Ohio rivers, and by the act of-April 8, 1785, 2 Smith’s Laws, p. 322, § 13, they were excepted from appropriation; and the Reserve Tract being, as we have seen, “in depth from the Allegheny and Ohio rivers,” and “extending up and down the said rivers,” the state’s surveyor must have acted upon the assumption that the island was not a part of the Reserve Tract, and that the south boundary of the tract opposite the island was-the water course between it and the mainland. The deeds for the several outlots mentioned recite the plan; describe the lots as situated “on the north side of Bank lane, on the river Ohio,” and as extending south “to Bank lane as aforesaid; thence along the said lane as it extends up the river Ohio.” That there was an island as indicated on the plan map, that its separation from the mainland was of such marked character as to make it known as an island and not a part of the mainland with intervening marsh land, is we think fully evidenced by the fact that it was a topographical feature worthy of note as an island by contemporaneous travelers and writers. In an article by Judge Breckenridge in the first number of the Pittsburgh Gazette, dated July 29, 1786, and reprinted in Craig’s History of Pittsburgh, p. 190, the island is noted as located about 70 yards from the shore, and having a lofty hill upon it. The statement is as follows:

“At the distance of about four or five hundred yards from the head of the Ohio is a small island, lying to the northwest side of the river, at the distance of about seventy yards from the shore. It is covered with wood, and at the lowest part is a lofty hill famous for the number of wild turkeys which inhabit it. The island is not more in length than one-quarter of a mile, and in. [496]*496breadth about 100 yards. A small space on the upper end Is cleared and overgrown with grass. The savages had' cleared it during the late war, a party of them attached to the United States having placed their wigwams and raised corn there. The Ohio, at the distance of about one mile from its source, winds around the lower end of the island and disappears.”

In a volume of travels written by E. Cuming, and printed at Pittsburgh by Cramer, Spear & Eichbaum, 1810, entitled “Sketches of a Tour,” the island is referred to as seen from the point:

“Continuing to turn to the right from our original center, the point, we see the Ohio for about two miles, with Elliot’s Mills or Saw Mill Run, below Coal Hill on the left, an amphitheater of lower hills above Chartiers creek and McKee’s farm to Brunot Island in front, and Robinson’s Point and Smoky Island at the mouth of the Allegheny on the right.”

It will thus be seen that, as a fact, the southern boundary of the Reserve Tract opposite this island was this inner channel of the Allegheny. Indeed, in the case of Allegheny v. Reed, 25 Pa. 335, it was said by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania:

“The river and the islands in it lie outside of the reserved tract. * * * ' An authority to survey the tract of land, bounded by a river, does not authorize the survey of the islands in the river, although they are opposite to the tract surveyed.”

It will also appear that the plan of the town and the conveyances of outlots 21 to 31, inclusive, were made on such assumption.

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Related

United States Steel Corp. v. Monongahela & Ohio Dredging Co.
16 Pa. D. & C.2d 523 (Alleghany County Court of Common Pleas, 1958)
Snowden v. Loree
128 F. 419 (Third Circuit, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 F. 493, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snowden-v-loree-circtwdpa-1902.