Stuart v. Easton

170 U.S. 383, 18 S. Ct. 650, 42 L. Ed. 1078, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1553
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 9, 1898
Docket197
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 170 U.S. 383 (Stuart v. Easton) 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
Stuart v. Easton, 170 U.S. 383, 18 S. Ct. 650, 42 L. Ed. 1078, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1553 (1898).

Opinion

*391 Mr. Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The errors assigned are misdirection in instructing the jury to render a verdict for the defendant and wrongful exclusion of the offered evidence. We at once dismiss the latter assignments from consideration. The evidence offered to aid in the construction of the patent was clearly incompetent, as the patent, being a written instrument, its construction and legal effect were a matter for the court, and, even if an estoppel had been pleaded, the excluded evidence could not have estopped the county from asserting that the patent of 1761 had the meaning contended for. As regards the evidence offered to establish that the rights of the proprietaries, if any, in the property in question had not been cut off by the Divesting Act, the evidence, if not cumulative, was clearly not material, if by the terms of the patent, as we hold to be the case, no interest in the land granted thereby remained. in the grantors.

Did the trial court improperly direct a verdict for the defendant ?

This question requires an interpretation of the grant contained in the patent of 1761; and, as the question arising on such ¡construction relates to the title to real property, we must, in reaching a conclusion, be guided by the local law of Pennsylvania, the State in which the land is situated.

We premise our examination of the terms of the patent with the following extract from the opinion delivered by Kennedy, J., in Ingersoll v. Sergeant, 1 Wharton, 337, 348:

“ King Charles the 2nd, in granting the Province of Pennsylvania to William Penn and his heirs, gave it to be held in free and common socage, and by fealty only, for all services. And by the seventeenth section thereof, William Penn, his heirs and assigns had full and absolute power given to them, at all times thereafter, and forever,'to assign,' alien, grant, demise or enfeoff such parts and parcels thereof to such persons as might be willing to purchase the same, their heirs and assigns, in fee simple, fee tail, for term of life, lives or years, *392 to be held of the said William Penn,.his heirs and assigns as of the seigniory of Windsor by such services, customs and rents as should seem fit, to the said William Penn, his heirs and assigns, and not immediately of the said King Charles, his heirs or successors. And, again, by the 18th section, it was further provided, that the purchasers from William Penn, his heirs or assigns, should hold such estates as might be granted to them, either in fee simple, fee tail, or otherwise, as to the said William Penn, his heirs or assigns, should seem expedient, the statute of quia emjqtores terrarum in anywise notwithstanding.”

The proper construction of the patent in question is free frbm difficulty when construed in connection with the act of the assembly to which the patent refers. The act of 1752 constituted the authority of the trustees for acquiring the land in question, and that authority was to the individuals named in the act to purchase and take assurance to them and their heirs of a piece of land situate in some convenient place in the said town of Easton, in trust and for the use of the inhabitants of the said county.” The inhabitants of the county of Northampton not being a corporation,, were unable to take a direct conveyance of the land, but the clear intention of the statute was that while the legal estate in fee in the land should be acquired by the trustees, the beneficial use or equitable estate was to be in the inhabitants of the county.' The provision following the authorization to acquire the land, “ and thereon to erect and build a court house and prison,” was no more than a direction to the trustees as to the mode of • use to be made of the land after it had been purchased;

The authority to the trustees being to “purchase,” adds force to the clear implication that it was the intention of the assembly that a title in fee simple should be acquired. When, therefore, we find a recital in the patent that it -is conveyed upon a named consideration, and the patent expressly refers to the act of the assembly as the authority from which the patentees derived the power to take and hold the property, we. naturally infer an intention of the parties on the one hand to convey, and on the other to receive, just such an estate in *393 the land as the act contemplated. It is true that'the consideration is apparently nominal, but, at common law, in a deed like the one in question, a pecuniary consideration, however small, was sufficient to divest the title. Queen v. Porter, 1 Rep. 22, 26; Van Der Volgen v. Yates, 9 N. Y. 219.

The patent expressly purports to convey the fee, the reservation of an annual quitrent of a red.rose being merely a feudal .acknowledgment .of tenure, Marshall' v. Conrad, 5 Call, 364, 398, which was in effect annulled by the Revolution and acts of the assembly of Pennsylvania subsequently passed, declaring- all lands within the Commonwealth tto be held by a title purely allodial. In the premises the grant is to the trustees by name “ and their heirs,” while the habendum is to the individuals theretofore referred to as the trustees, “ their heirs and assigns forever. In trust, nevertheless, to and for the erecting thereon a court house for the public use and service of the said county, and to and for no other use, intent or purpose whatsoever.” This last clause, it is claimed, qualifies the prior grant of an estate- in fee, and limits the duration of the estate in the land to the period while the land was used as the site .of a court house. But, it will be remembered, that the act of 1752 authorized the acquisition qf a lot upon which the trustees were directed to build a court house and prison, and the act of 1753 recited that the amount authorized by the act of 1752 to be expended for a court house and prison had already been expended for building a prison, and authority was given to assess and levy a further sum for' the erection of a court house. The patent of 1764 recited the fact, that another lot of ground had. been laid out for a prison site, and it may be well in reason considered that had the act of 1752 authorized solely the erection of a court house instead of a court house and prison, that the clause to. which we have referred would have simply recited that the patentees were to hold the land for the uses and purposes mentioned in the act-of the assembly. In the condition in which matters stood, however, the recital that thé land was to be held in trust for the object stated may well be treated as having been inserted with the intent of showing, that the grant related alone .to one *394 of the purposes covered by the law, the court house, and not to both therein expressed; that is, the prison and the court house.

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Bluebook (online)
170 U.S. 383, 18 S. Ct. 650, 42 L. Ed. 1078, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuart-v-easton-scotus-1898.