Torrey v. Beardsly

24 F. Cas. 65, 4 Wash. C. C. 242
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1818
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 65 (Torrey v. Beardsly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torrey v. Beardsly, 24 F. Cas. 65, 4 Wash. C. C. 242 (circtdpa 1818).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice.

The plaintiff comes before the jury with a regular paper title to the land in controversy, founded on two warrants for four hundred acres each, dated in 1793, granted in the names of Walter Kemble and Eliza Kemble; described as lying on the head waters of the north-east branch of Lacowaxen, to include an open meadow. The surveys bear date in July, 1794, and are of different tracts of land from those described in the warrants, to which they were [66]*66removed on account of the prior appropriation of the tracts for which they called. The surveys were returned into the office, and accepted in January, 1797. On the 13th of August, 1796, deeds were executed by Walter and Eliza Kemble to Jason Torrey, by which they conveyed to him all their right and title to the above warrants, and the lands surveyed, or to be surveyed under them, for the consideration of £20, being the amount of the original purchase money paid to the state for the warrants. In March, 1802, an order of resurvey was granted, on the application of Jason Torrey, and the whole quantity, not comprehended within prior surveys, was found to amount to three hundred and seventy-two acres, for which a patent was granted to Jason -Torrey on the 1st of January, 1810, who in September, 1818, conveyed the same to the lessor of the plaintiff. The defendant claims the possession as tenant under Walter Kemble, and disputes the plaintiff’s title upon the ground of fraud, in obtaining from him and Eliza Kemble the conveyances stated. Jason Torrey acted as deputy surveyor in the district where these surveys were made; and he is charged with having fraudulently concealed from Walter Kem-ble the fact, that the survey of the land in dispute had been made at the time he purchased the warrants from him, and with having deceived him by a representation that there was no vacant land on which to lay them. The court has permitted the defendant to go into proof to establish the alleged fraud, and if he has done so to your satisfaction, he is entitled to your verdict, it being agreed, that the lessor of the plaintiff purchased from his brother Jason, with full notice of the above charge, and that upon this ground a verdict had been rendered against him in an ejectment brought by Kemble against him in the state court.

I shall first lay before you a summary of the most material parts of the evidence on 'each side (taxing your memories with a recollection of those not deemed very material by the court), and will then lay down those principles of law which apply to the case. Mordecai Roberts has deposed, that the warrants in question, together with thirty others belonging to the witness, were placed in the hands of Mr. Beard, the surveyor, in the year 1793, to be surveyed; that Roberts’s warrants being elder in date than Kemble’s, were accordingly surveyed in that year by Jason Torrey. In consequence of these locations, as was stated to you by other witnesses, the land which Kemble’s warrants described was appropriated, and could not be laid according to their calls. This witness further stated that, in the summer of 1790, Jason Torrey mentioned Kemble's warrants to him as being lost, and advised him to purchase them, which he declined, stating that Kemble suspected him of some improper conduct in appropriating the land his warrants designated, and, on that account, would not sell them to him; but he, Roberts, advised Torrey to become the purchaser, which he did in the course of that day. In 1806, the witness heard for the first time, that Kemble’s warrants had been located by Torrey on the land in dispute. He further states, that after the location of his thirty warrants in 1793, he advised Kemble to lay his warrants on other vacant lands, which he refused to do, declaring that, unless he could obtain the land described in his warrants, he would have none. Schoonover, Benjamin and Charles Kemble, were also examined on behalf of the defendant, — who have deposed that in the summer of 1796 they were present when Jason Torrey called upon Kemble, and stated to him that he did not think he could find any vacant land on which to lay his warrants, as it had been appropriated, and inquired what was to be done with them? Kemble answered, that he supposed he must lose the land, but presumed he could get back the money which he had paid for the warrant. Torrey stated that this could not be done, and then offered to purchase the warrants from him for what they had cost him, as on account of money which he owed at the office, they would answer his purpose. This proposition was agreed to, and was accordingly carried into execution.

The conclusions of fact drawn by the defendant’s counsel from this evidence, are, 1. That though these warrants were not surveyed according to their calls, still they were surveyed by Jason Torrey on other vacant land, in the year 1794, long before his purchase of them from Walter Kemble. 2. That he stated to Kemble that there was no vacant land on which they could be laid. And, 3. That he did not communicate to Kemble the fact that they had actually been surveyed. If these conclusions are fairly drawn, it will be difficult for Jason Torrey to escape from the charge of a fraudulent concealment of a material fact, known to himself, and of which Kemble was ignorant; a fact which, if true, would not fail to have had an important influence upon the mind of Kemble in deciding upon the value of the warrants, and a concealment which gave to the transaction a higher taint of fraud, from the circumstance of its being practiced by a public officer, especially charged with the duty of executing warrants placed in his hands. But the jury will bear in mind that this charge of fraud rests essentially upon the asserted fact, that Kemble’s warrants were really laid on the land in dispute, a.t the time the surveys bear date, or at some period prior to that when the purchase was made. If not so, then the fact asserted to have been concealed did not exist, and could not therefore be concealed. As to the alleged misrepresentation in stating to Kemble that there were no vacant lands on which to lay these warrants, the jury will judge from the whole of the evidence taken together, whether Torrey could have intend[67]*67ed to say, or whether Kemble could so have understood him, that there was no vacant land on- which to lay lost warrants; or whether both parties did not understand the information as applying to the specific land ■called for in these warrants; if the latter, and the plaintiff’s witnesses are believed, then Torrey was guilty of no misstatement, as the land described in these warrants had been appropriated.

I come now to the evidence given on the part of the plaintiff. Mr. Beard, the survey- or, has deposed, that after he had executed ■ Roberts’s thirty warrants, there remained no . vacant land on any part of the north • east branch of Lacowaxen to satisfy the calls of Kemble’s warrant, which fact he stated on the ground to Mr. Roberts, and which was assented to by him. This being the fact, the witness considered Kemble’s as lost warrants, the meaning of which the court understands to be, warrants which, being descriptive upon their face, lost their character as such, in consequence of the previous appropriation of the land for which they called. But though lost and ineffectual as to the particular land described in them, still they may assume a new character, and like warrants general and in-descriptive in their origin, may be laid upon any other land not then appropriated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 65, 4 Wash. C. C. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torrey-v-beardsly-circtdpa-1818.