Stockard v. McGary

120 Tenn. 180
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 Tenn. 180 (Stockard v. McGary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockard v. McGary, 120 Tenn. 180 (Tenn. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Beard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an ejectment bill. The complainant deraigns title to the land in question from a grant to himself and Thomas Voorhees, bearing- date 7th day of January, 1887. This grant contains the recital that it was issued “in consideration of an entry made in the entry taker’s office of Lewis county on the 29th of December, 1886,” and it described the land as being in the Eighth civil district of Lewis county.

[182]*182The defendant deraigns title through mesne conveyances from a grant to James E. and W. E. Voorhees. dated the 10th day of August, 1889, based on an entry made in the entry taker’s office of Wayne county on the 5th day of March, 1888. While having a younger entry and grant, the 'defendant insists that complainant’s action must fail, because the weight of the extrinsic testimony in the case is that at the time his entry was made and grant issued, and up to the year 1897, thereafter, the land covered by these grants lay within the limits of Wayne county, and therefore that complainant’s entry was void, and this being so, the grant based thereon was equally void.

From the year 1844, when the county of Lewis was established by legislative act, up to the year 1897, the record shows that there was much confusion in the minds both of the officers of Lewis county and of the citizens of both that county and of Wayne as to the exact location of that part of the line separating these two counties which ran in the immediate neighborhood of the property in controversy. It is evident that many persons living in the immediate community understood that this land and the land surrounding it were within the limits of Lewis county, while others believed that the boundary line between these two counties divided this tract with other tracts in that vicinity. That the entry taker who received the entry upon which the grant of complainant was issued believed that this tract lay across this line and in both these counties is evident, [183]*183not only from the entry itself, but also from tbe fact that, having noted the entry in his office in Lewis county, soon thereafter he mailed or sent it either to the entry taker or surveyor of Wayne county to he there entered. We are satisfied that this was done before the issuance of the grant to complainant and Yoorhees, yet the record leaves it in great doubt, if in fact it does not make it certain, that the entry was never recorded in the entry taker’s office of Wayne county.

While we cannot say with absolute certainty .on this record that no part of this tract lay in Lewis county, yet we think we must concede that the weight of the testimony is that it wasi situated altogether within the limits of Wayne county, and therefore that the entry taker of Lewis county was without authority to receive and record the entry in his office. The question then presented is: Can the defendant in this action at law avail himself of this fact to avoid complainant’s grant? In other words, in the face of a grant, issued by officers representing the State, conveying confessedly vacant and unappropriated land, authenticated by the great seal of the State, will the defendant, a junior grantee, be permitted to avoid the older grant upon the ground that the entry with regard to which it purports to be issued was made in the office of an entry taker not empoAvered to receive it?

' The counsel for the defendant — the appellant in this case — maintains that these questions are conclusively answered in favor of his contention by the leading case [184]*184of Polk v. Wendal et al., which was twice decided by the supreme court of the United States; the opinion on the first appeal being delivered by Chief Justice Marshall and on the second by Mr. Justice Johnson, and the first opinion reported in 9 Cranch, 87, 8 L. Ed., 665, and the last in 5 Wheat., 293, 5 L. Ed., 92. This case involved a controverted question of land law arising upon certain statutes of the State of North Carolina, and the two opinions delivered therein have always been regarded as of great authority, especially in the courts of Tennessee and North Carolina. In that case the plaintiff claimed under a grant for five thousand acres issued by the State of North Carolina in the year 1800 to William Polk. The defendants claimed under a grant for twenty-five thousand acres issued by the same State in 1795 to John Sevier. No question was made upon the plaintiff’s grant, other than it was younger than that from which' the defendants deraigned their title. Upon the trial of the case in the United States circuit court for the district of Tennessee, the offer of the defendants to read the Sevier grant as evidence of their title was resisted upon a number of grounds. Over the objection of the plaintiff the grant went to the jury, and, the trial having resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, the case was carried by writ of error to the supreme court ,of the United States, and there was first decided in 1815; the opinion at that time, as has been stated, being-delivered by Chief Justice Marshall and reported in 9 [185]*185Cranch, 87, 8 L. Ed., 665. Alter stating at very considerable length the yarions statutes of- North Carolina providing for the opening of the land office in the State and directing the appointment of entry takers, the court proceeded to dispose of certain grounds of exceptions which it is unnecessary here to set out, and, holding that there was no error in permitting the Sevier grant to go to the jury, then said: “The remaining exceptions were taken after the grant was before the jury, and are for causes not apparent on its face. They present one general question of great importance to the landholders of the State of Tennessee. It is this: Is it in any, and, if in any, in what, cases allowable in an ejectment to impeach a grant for cause anterior to its being issued?”

Before coming to the consideration of these exceptions, and an answer to the question, this eminent-judge laid down certain general principles which it was assumed would give aid in disposing of these exceptions and making answer to this question. The court said: “The laws for the sale of public lands provide many guards to secure the regularity of grants, to protect the incipient right of individuals, and also to protect the State from impostors. Officers are appointed to superintend the business, and rules are framed prescribing their duty. These rules are, in general, directory; and when all the proceedings are completed by a patent issued by the authority of the State, the compliance with these rules is presupposed. That every prerequisite has been performed-is an inference [186]*186properly deducidle, and which every man has a right- to draw, from the existence of the grant itself. It would, therefore, be extremely unreasonable to avoid a grant-in any court for irregularity in the conduct of those who are appointed by the government to supervise the progressive course from its commencement to its consummation. . . . But there are cases in which a grant is absolutely void, as where the State had 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.”

There is no contention in the present case that the State was without title to the land in controversy when the grant was issued in 1887 to the complainant and Yoorhees. So it is that their grant is not void by reason of the proposition stated in the first clause of the sentence last above set out.

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Related

Biggs v. Beeler
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127 Tenn. 575 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
120 Tenn. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockard-v-mcgary-tenn-1907.