United States v. Hiawassee Lumber Co.

238 U.S. 553, 35 S. Ct. 851, 59 L. Ed. 1453, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1585
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 21, 1915
Docket133
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 238 U.S. 553 (United States v. Hiawassee Lumber Co.) 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
United States v. Hiawassee Lumber Co., 238 U.S. 553, 35 S. Ct. 851, 59 L. Ed. 1453, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1585 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pitney,

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

In order to simplify matters, we will dispose at the outset of a point that was ruled by the Circuit Court of Appeals in favor of plaintiff in error. As tending to sustain the ruling of the trial judge in directing a verdict for defendant, it was and is insisted that the 640 acre grants which figure in defendant’s chain of title have priority over the 5,000 acre grant to which the deeds in plaintiff’s chain of title refer. It is said that the lands were entered under the Cherokee land law, Laws 1852, chap. 169; Code of 1883, §§ 2464, et seq.; that the 5,000 acre grant is invalid for non-compliance with certain formalities prescribed by the law, and that even if valid it is subordinate to the 16 grants of 640 acres each, because, as is said, grants of this nature have effect according to the dates of the. respective land entries, and the 16 grants were based upon entries antedating that upon which the 5,000 acre grant rests. We do not stop to examine the statutes upon which this contention rests, because we agree with the Court of Appeals that it is quite immaterial whether the 5,000 acre grant, independently considered, was valid or invalid. It is admitted that the 16 grants cover the same land, and all the grants were made to the same grantee upon the same day. It results that, in one mode or another, Olmsted on that day acquired the title of the State of North Carolina to the 5,000 acres. His deed to Stevens described that tract by its metes and bounds, as well as by reference to the grant number. If that deed is otherwise valid as *558 against defendant it conveys his title to the tract thus described, whether that title was derived from the State through Grant No. 3110 or through the other 16 grants.

The principal controversy turns upon the probate and registration of the deed from Olmsted- to Stevens. The trial court held that under the laws of North Carolina the registration of 1869 was invalid as notice or for any purpose, but admitted in evidence the registration of 1896. The direction of a verdict in favor of defendant was based upon the theory that because the deed from Kope Elias, Commissioner, to Rosenthal was registered prior to the registration in 1896 of the deed from Olmsted to Stevens, Rosenthal thereby acquired the legal title as a purchaser for value without notice, and that his rights and the rights of those claiming under him were not affected by the registration of the Olmsted and Stevens deeds in the year 1896. The Circuit Court of Appeals, apparently deeming that there was no distinction, so far as registration was concerned, between the status of the Olmsted-Stevens deed and that of the deed made by Stevens to the United States; considered the question with respect to the latter deed, and, finding that its registration prior to 1896 (erroneously assumed to have been made in Clay County in 1871), was not valid, and no title passed thereby, concluded that the same was true of the registration of the Olmsted-Stevens deed in Clay County in the year 1869. But it so happens that between the acknowledgment of the Olmsted deed in February, 1868, and the acknowledgment of the Stevens deed in March, 1869, the law of North Carolina was changed in a material respect; and, for this and other reasons that will appear, we deem it proper to consider the earlier deed first.

The deed from Olmsted to Stevens was dated and acknowledged February 7, 1868. At that time the provisions of law governing the acknowledgment, proof, and registration of deeds were those found in Rev. Code 1855, *559 chap. 37, “Deeds and Conveyances,” and chap. 21, “Commissioners of Affidavits and Probate of Deeds.” We set forth the material portions in the margin. 1

*560 There is no question that the Olmsted deed was duly and properly acknowledged before a North Carolina commissioner in the District of Columbia, and the acknowledgment duly certified by him; so that, under the law as it then stood, upon the presentation of the deed with the accompanying certificate to the court of pleas and quarter sessions of Clay County, or to one of the judges of the Supreme Court or of the Superior Courts of North Carolina, a fiat for its registration would have followed, as of course.

*561 After the deed was acknowledged, but before it was registered, the change to which we have referred was produced by the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure in the month of August, 1868. Of that Code, Title XIX applies to Probate Courts, and its second chapter relates to the Probate of Deeds. 1 It required that deeds conveying lands in the State “must be offered for probate, or a certified probate thereof must be exhibited before the Judge of Probate of the county, in which the real estate is situated,” and it applied this to deeds acknowledged before North Carolina commissioners in other States or in the District of Columbia, at the same time requiring an adjudication that the deed was duly acknowledged, etc.

The query at once arises, whether this act can be fairly construed to apply to deeds previously executed and acknowledged in accordance with the requirements of the prior law. The Act is a Code of Civil Procedure, and § 429 prescribes the mode in which the probate of deeds shall be made and the certified probate thereof passed upon. There is nothing in this section, nor, so far as we *562 have observed, is there anything in the Act of which it forms a part, that attempts expressly to regulate or impose conditions upon the registration of deeds or other instruments. We are referred to no decision by the courts of North Carolina that makes the new procedure a condition precedent to registration of a deed previously made and acknowledged and thereafter registered within two years after its date, pursuant to Rev. Code 1855, chap. 37, § 1.

But we deem it unnecessary to pass upon the question here suggested, for reasons that will presently appear.

It will be observed that in the Code of 1855 a very different effect was given by § 5 of chapter 37 to a certificate of acknowledgment taken by one of the commissioners appointed by the Governor under Chapter 21, from the effect given to the proceedings of a commissioner or commissioners specially appointed under § 4 of chapter 37. Proceedings before a special commissioner, being returned to the court, simply formed the basis upon which the court might proceed to adjudge that the deed was duly acknowledged or proved. But an acknowledgment taken by a standing commissioner (an official commissioned by the Governor and holding office during his pleasure), being duly .certified, was not to be reviewed judicially before being ordered to registration. So it was expressly held by the Supreme Court of North Carolina in Johnson v. Lumber Co. (1908), 147 N. Car. 249, 251. And see, to the same effect, Cozad v. McAden, 148 N. Car. 10, 12; S. C., 150 N. Car. 206, 209, 210.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the Estate of Alexander
63 A.D.2d 612 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1978)
Williams v. North Carolina State Board of Education
201 S.E.2d 889 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1974)
Bangor-Hydro Electric Company v. Johnson
226 A.2d 371 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1967)
In Re the Will of Marks
130 S.E.2d 673 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1963)
Chase National Bank v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.
164 Misc. 508 (New York Supreme Court, 1934)
Champion Fibre Co. v. Cozad
183 N.C. 600 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)
Fibre Co. v. . Cozad
112 S.E. 810 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)
Estate of Winton v. Amos
51 Ct. Cl. 284 (Court of Claims, 1916)
National Bank of Goldsboro v. Hill
226 F. 102 (E.D. North Carolina, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 U.S. 553, 35 S. Ct. 851, 59 L. Ed. 1453, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hiawassee-lumber-co-scotus-1915.