Stringer v. Lessee of Young

28 U.S. 320, 7 L. Ed. 693, 3 Pet. 320, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 543
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 28 U.S. 320 (Stringer v. Lessee of Young) 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
Stringer v. Lessee of Young, 28 U.S. 320, 7 L. Ed. 693, 3 Pet. 320, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 543 (1830).

Opinion

Mr Chief Justice. Marshall

delivered the opinión of the Court.

. This was an ejectment brought in the court of the United States for the western district of Virginia. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs, on which the judgment of the court was rendered j which judgment has been brought to .this court by writ of error. At the trial, three bills T>f exception were taken to opinions, given by the court to the jury, and the cause depends on the correctness of these opinions. The first bill of exceptions is in substance; the plaintiffs at the trial of this cause produced a grant, (setting it forth in words .and figures therein.) This grant is issued to" John. Young, dated the 10th of June 1786, for four thousand acres, bounded as follows•: Beginning.at a black oak corner to land entered by George Jackson, and running thence'N. 3° W. 1001 poles, crossing waters of. Stone Coal creek to a beech, thence N 80° E 641 poles, crossing a branch of said creek to a white oak S. 3° E. 1001 poles, by lands surveyed for Thomas Laidjey, to' a white, oak, and thence S. 80° W. 660 poles, crossing, waters by lands of said waters to the beginning. AIs© the plat-and report of the surveyor, Thomas Haymond, made in this cause, in pursuance of an order, &c. The plaintiff also offered in evidence a number of entries of recent date, made by the defendant Stringer within the bounds of the tract of land designated on said report as John Young’s four thousánd acres, being the land claimed by the plaintiffs; and attempted- to . prove by a witness, that Young, when *337 he made said entries, had heard of the plaintiffs’ claim to the land in controversy. The defendants thereupon offered to introduce as evidence, official copies of entries made by other and third persons, since the date of the plaintiffs’ grant, for the purpose of proving a general opinion that the lands contained in the report and diagram of the surveyor, made in this cause, were vacant at the date of such entries, and to disprove notice to Stringer of the identity of the plaintiffs’ claim when he made the entries under which the defendants claim; but the court declared its opinion to be that the said evidence was inadmissible, and rejected the same.

The testimony offered by. the defendants was unquestionably irrelevant. Entries made subsequent to the plaintiffs’ grant, whatever might be the impression under which they were made, could not possibly affect the title, and were therefore clearly inadmissible. This principle has never been controverted; but the plaintiffs in error insist that they had a right to introduce this testimony, in order to rebut other .equally irrelevant testimony which had been offered by the plaintiffs in ejectment. This testimony was the recent entries made by Stringer, and the witness who proved that at the time of making them, he had no notice of the plaintiffs’ claim. This testimony was undoubtedly irrelevant, and had it been opposed, could not have been prqperly admitted. Had the defendant moved the court to instruct the jury that it must be utterly disregarded, that it must not be considered by them as testimony, and this instruction had been refused, the refusal to give it would have been error. The defendant, however, has not taken this course; but has chosen ro repel the testimony by other evidence, which was clearly inadmissible. Whether a case may exist in which improper testimony m'ay be calculated to make such an impression on the jury that no instruction given by the judge can efface it, and whether in such a case testimony not otherwise admissible may be introduced, which is strictly and directly calculated to disprove it, are questions on .which this court does not mean to indicate any opinion. It is unnecessary, because the testimony rejected by .the court is not of this character. En *338 tries mad© subsequent to the plaintiffs’, grant by others* can have,no.tendency to disprove the evidence of notice by the defendant when his entries were made.

The*second bill of exceptions is in these words. Upon the trial of this cause, the plaintiffs, in support of the issue on their part, introduced a grant to the lessor of the-plaintiffs in .the word's end figures following“ Patrick Henry, &ci” The defendants thereupon offered to introduce the surveyor’s book of Monongalia county, to prove no such, survey had ever been -returned to the office of said surveyor, and recorded in the book of said office* and further, offered to introduce evidence that Henry Fink, the deputy upon whose survey said grant purports to have issued, resided at the date of the said Survey in Harrison county* and was not a deputy surveyor of Monongalia coúnty. The. defendants offered said evidence to prove the said grant issued without any survey having been made, and that the register of the land office issued said grant without proper authority,, and that the. same was therefore Void. To the giving of which evidence the plaintiffs, by their counsel, objected, and:the court declared its opinion to be, that such evidence could not be given for the purposes aforesaid, and rejected the same. Whereupon the defendants, by their counsel, offered the same evidence to disprove the identity of the land contained in theplaintiffs’ grant with that now claimed by the plaintiffs, and represented by the figure ih the said surveyor’s report. But the court declared its opinion to be, .that the said évidence ought not to be received for the last mentioned purpose.

In rejecting this testimony, the court decided that the non appearance of the survey on which the grant of the plaintiffs had been, issued on the book of the surveyor of Monongalia county, where it ought to have been recorded; and the fact that the person who made the survey was not at the time a deputy surveyor of Monongalia county* could not avoid the patent; and that the evidence of those facts was consequently inadmissible.

The land law of Virginia directs that within three months after a survey is. made, the surveyor shall enter the plat and *339 certificate thereof in a book, well bound, to be provided by the court of his county, at the county charge. After prescribing- this among other duties, the law proceeds to enact, that any surveyor failing in any of the duties aforesáid, shall be liable to be. indicted, &c.- The law, however, does not declare that the validity of such survey shall depend in any degree on its being recorded.

The act also direct?, that the surveyor. “ shall, as soon as it can conveniently be done, and within thrée months at the farthest after making the survey, deliver to his employer or his order, a fair and true plat and certificate of such survey,” &c. This plat and certificate is to be returned into the land office within twelve months at farthest. It may.be returned immediately, and consequently may be returned to the land office before the expiration of the three months allowed to the surveyor for recording it in his book. This plat and certificate of survey is an authority to the register to issue a patent.

The. surveyor undoubtedly negjfects his duty, if he fails to record the plat and certificate of survey, and is punishable for this neglect,; but the act furnishes no foundation for the opinion that the validity of the survey ox of the patent is in any degree affected by it.

This point occurred in the case or Taylor vs. Brown, 2 Cranch, 234.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 U.S. 320, 7 L. Ed. 693, 3 Pet. 320, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stringer-v-lessee-of-young-scotus-1830.